Joellen > Joellen's Quotes

Showing 1-5 of 5
sort by

  • #1
    Jane Austen
    “...it is indeed a street of so impertinent a nature, so unfortunately connected with the great London and Oxford roads, and the principal inn of the city, that a day never passes in which parties of ladies, however important their business, whether in quest of pastry, millinery, or even (as in the present case) of young men, are not detained on one side or other by carriages, horsemen, or carts. This evil had been felt and lamented, at least three times a day, by Isabella since her residence in Bath...”
    Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey
    tags: humor, wit

  • #2
    Jane Austen
    “I am come, young ladies, in a very moralizing strain, to observe that our pleasures in this world are always to be paid for, and that we often purchase them at a great disadvantage, giving ready-monied actual happiness for a draft on the future, that may not be honored.”
    Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey

  • #3
    Anne Brontë
    “O Reader! If there were less of this delicate concealment of facts- this whispering ''Peace, Peace," when there is no peace- there would be less of sin and misery to the young of both sexes who are left to wring their bitter knowledge from experience.”
    Anne Brontë, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall

  • #4
    Fyodor Dostoevsky
    “There is only one thing that I dread: not to be worthy of my sufferings.”
    Fyodor Dostoevsky

  • #5
    Dorothy L. Sayers
    “For whatever reason God chose to make man as he is— limited and suffering and subject to sorrows and death—He had the honesty and the courage to take His own medicine. Whatever game He is playing with His creation, He has kept His own rules and played fair. He can exact nothing from man that He has not exacted from Himself. He has Himself gone through the whole of human experience, from the trivial irritations of family life and the cramping restrictions of hard work and lack of money to the worst horrors of pain and humiliation, defeat, despair and death. When He was a man, He played the man. He was born in poverty and died in disgrace and thought it well worthwhile.”
    Dorothy L. Sayers, Creed or Chaos? and Lost Tools of Learning



Rss