Rose in Bloom Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Rose in Bloom (Eight Cousins, #2) Rose in Bloom by Louisa May Alcott
24,143 ratings, 4.05 average rating, 854 reviews
Rose in Bloom Quotes Showing 1-22 of 22
“Keep good company, read good books, love good things and cultivate soul and body as faithfully as you can.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“To me, love isn't all. I must look up, not down, trust and honor with my whole heart, and find strenght and integrity to lean on”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
tags: love
“A very precious and lovely part, but not all,” continued Rose. “Neither should it be for a woman: for we’ve got minds and souls as well as hearts; ambition and talents as well as beauty and accomplishments; and we want to live and learn as well as love and be loved. I’m sick of being told that is all a woman is fit for! I won’t have anything to do with love till I prove that I am something besides a housekeeper and baby-tender!”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“No woman should give her happiness into the keeping of a man without fixed principles...”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“Mac looked up with the oddest of all his odd expressions”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“What right have I to more gay gowns, when some poor babies have none; or to spend time making myself fine, while there is so much bitter want in the world?”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“The fun and fame do not last, while the memory of a real helper is kept green long after poetry is forgotten and music silent.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“for it is the small temptations which undermine integrity unless we watch and pray and never think them too trivial to be resisted.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“Do you consider shoes unhealthy?" he asked, surveying the socks with respectful interest”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“Neither should it be for a woman: for we’ve got minds and souls as well as hearts; ambition and talents as well as beauty and accomplishments; and we want to live and learn as well as love and be loved.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“Yes, Phebe was herself now, and it showed in the change that came over her at the first note of music. No longer shy and silent, no longer the image of a handsome girl, but a blooming woman, alive and full of the eloquence her art gave her, as she laid her hands softly together, fixed her eye on the light, and just poured out her song as simply and joyfully as the lark does soaring toward the sun.
"My faith, Alec! that's the sort of voice that wins a man's heart out of his breast!" exclaimed Uncle Mac, wiping his eyes after one of the plaintive ballads that never grow old.
"So it would!" answered Dr. Alec, delightedly.
"So it has," added Archie to himself; and he was right: for just at that moment he fell in love with Phebe. He actually did, and could fix the time almost to a second: for at a quarter past nine, he thought merely thought her a very charming young person; at twenty minutes past, he considered her the loveliest woman he ever beheld; at five and twenty minutes past, she was an angel singing his soul away; and at half after nine he was a lost man, floating over a delicious sea to that temporary heaven on earth where lovers usually land after the first rapturous plunge.
If anyone had mentioned this astonishing fact, nobody would have believed it; nevertheless, it was quite true: and sober, business-like Archie suddenly discovered a fund of romance at the bottom of his hitherto well-conducted heart that amazed him. He was not quite clear what had happened to him at first, and sat about in a dazed sort of way; seeing, hearing, knowing nothing but Phebe: while the unconscious idol found something wanting in the cordial praise so modestly received, because Mr. Archie never said a word.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“I know I ought to be contented, but I'm not. My life is very comfortable, but so quiet and uneventful, I get tired of it and want to launch out as the others have, and do something, or at least try. ... I'd like to know what my gift is," said Rose ....
"The art of living for others so patiently and sweetly that we enjoy it as we do the sunshine, and are not half grateful enough for the great blessing." [said Uncle Alec.]”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“I thought it was only a habit, easy to drop when I liked: But it is stronger than I; and sometimes I feel as if possessed of a devil that will get the better of me, try as I may”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“Finish it if you choose only remember, my girl, that one may read at forty what is unsafe at twenty, and that we never can be too careful what food we give that precious yet perilous thing called imagination.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“My little girl, I would face a dozen storms far worse than this to keep your soul as stainless as snow; for it is the small temptations which undermine integrity, unless we watch and pray, and never think them too trivial to be resisted.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom: A Sequel to Eight Cousins
“.....and I shall think her very mean indeed if she does not give me some of her gloves, for she has many of them, I've seen them myself.......and as you can see, I took the hint.......but not much love went into THAT package did it, my dear?”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“I'll behave like a Turveydrop see”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“about her in a long conversation with Professor Stumph, the learned geologist. Rose did not care, for one dance proved to her that that branch of Mac's education had been sadly neglected, and she was glad to glide smoothly about with Steve, though he was only an inch or two taller than herself. She had plenty of partners, however, and plenty of chaperons, for all the young men were her most devoted, and all the matrons beamed upon her with”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“I don't know how others feel, but, to me, love isn't all. I must look up, not down, trust and honor with my whole heart, and find strength and integrity to lean on.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“Do my best all-round keep good company, read good books, love good things, and cultivate soul and body as faithfully and wisely as I can.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“Even the swift needle charmed him, the little brooch which rose and fell with her quiet breath, the plain work she did, and the tidy way she gathered her bits of thread into a tiny bag.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom
“Chide me not, laborious band, For the idle flowers I brought: Every aster in my hand Goes home laden with a thought.”
Louisa May Alcott, Rose in Bloom