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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>QUOTES AND IMAGES FROM GEORGE MEREDITH</title>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+
+<style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ body {background:#faebd7; margin:10%; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-top: .75em;
+ margin-bottom: .75em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; }
+ HR { width: 33%; text-align: center; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; }
+ .figleft {float: left;}
+ .figright {float: right;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 15%; margin-bottom: 0em;}
+ CENTER { padding: 10px;}
+ PRE { font-family: Times; font-size: 97%; margin-left: 15%;}
+ // -->
+</style>
+
+</head>
+<body>
+
+<h2>QUOTES AND IMAGES FROM GEORGE MEREDITH</h2>
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Quotes and Images From The Works of George
+Meredith, by George Meredith, Edited and Arranged by David Widger
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
+
+
+Title: Quotes and Images From The Works of George Meredith
+
+Author: George Meredith
+ Edited and Arranged by David Widger
+
+Release Date: August 29, 2004 [EBook #7550]
+[Last updated on February 19, 2007]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUOTES FROM MEREDITH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br>
+
+
+
+<center><h1>THE WORKS OF GEORGE MEREDITH</h1></center>
+<br><br>
+<center><h2>PROSE</h2></center>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<center><a name="frontpiece2"></a><img alt="frontpiece2.jpg (27K)" src="images/frontpiece2.jpg" height="695" width="515">
+</center>
+
+
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<center><a name="frontpiece"></a><img alt="frontpiece.jpg (37K)" src="images/frontpiece.jpg" height="492" width="650">
+</center>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<center><h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<p><a href="#frontpiece2">George Meredith in 1893</a></p>
+<p><a href="#frontpiece">The Sitting Room, Flint Cottage&mdash;May 18th 1909</a></p>
+<p><a href="#age35">Age 35</a></p>
+<p><a href="#age68">Age 68</a></p>
+<p><a href="#age69">Age 69</a></p>
+<p><a href="#age72">Age 72</a></p>
+<p><a href="#age80">Age 80</a></p>
+
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+<br><br>
+<hr>
+<br><br>
+
+
+
+
+<center>
+<table summary="MEREDITH">
+<tr>
+<td><a name="age35"></a><img alt="age35.jpg (13K)" src="images/age35.jpg" height="648" width="400">
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<a name="age68"></a><img alt="age68.jpg (31K)" src="images/age68.jpg" height="594" width="400">
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<a name="age69"></a><img alt="age69.jpg (17K)" src="images/age69.jpg" height="931" width="400">
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<a name="age72"></a><img alt="age72.jpg (33K)" src="images/age72.jpg" height="575" width="400">
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<a name="age80"></a><img alt="age80.jpg (44K)" src="images/age80.jpg" height="655" width="400">
+
+<td>
+<pre>
+A lover must have his delusions, just
+as a man must have a skin
+
+A madman gets madder when you talk
+reason to him
+
+A night that had shivered repose
+
+A dash of conventionalism makes the
+whole civilized world kin
+
+A string of pearls: a woman who goes
+beyond that's in danger
+
+A wound of the same kind that we are
+inflicting
+
+A tear would have overcome him&mdash;She had
+not wept
+
+A tragic comedian: that is, a grand
+pretender, a self-deceiver
+
+A fleet of South-westerly rain-clouds
+had been met in mid-sky
+
+A bone in a boy's mind for him to gnaw
+and worry
+
+A kind of anchorage in case of
+indiscretion
+
+A cloud of millinery shoots me off a
+mile from a woman
+
+A woman's at the core of every plot man
+plotteth
+
+A witty woman is a treasure; a witty
+Beauty is a power
+
+A high wind will make a dead leaf fly
+like a bird
+
+A kindly sense of superiority
+
+A young philosopher's an old fool!
+
+A bird that won't roast or boil or stew
+
+A woman, and would therefore listen to
+nonsense
+
+A male devotee is within an inch of a
+miracle
+
+A great oration may be a sedative
+
+A very doubtful benefit
+
+A generous enemy is a friend on the
+wrong side
+
+A woman is hurt if you do not confide
+to her your plans
+
+A woman who has mastered sauces sits on
+the apex of civilization
+
+A style of affable omnipotence about
+the wise youth
+
+A maker of Proverbs&mdash;what is he but a
+narrow mind wit
+
+A fortress face; strong and massive,
+and honourable in ruin
+
+A dumb tongue can be a heavy liar
+
+A common age once, when he married her;
+now she had grown old
+
+A share of pity for the objects she
+despised
+
+A woman rises to her husband. But a
+man is what he is
+
+A stew's a stew, and not a boiling to
+shreds
+
+A marriage without love is dishonour
+
+A plunge into the deep is of little
+moment
+
+A sixpence kindly meant is worth any
+crown-piece that's grudged
+
+A man to be trusted with the keys of
+anything
+
+A free-thinker startles him as a kind
+of demon
+
+A female free-thinker is one of Satan's
+concubines
+
+A wise man will not squander his
+laughter if he can help it
+
+A man who rejected medicine in
+extremity
+
+A lady's company-smile
+
+A country of compromise goes to pieces
+at the first cannon-shot
+
+A youth who is engaged in the
+occupation of eating his heart
+
+A whisper of cajolery in season is
+often the secret
+
+A superior position was offered her by
+her being silent
+
+A contented Irishman scarcely seems my
+countryman
+
+Abject sense of the lack of a
+circumference
+
+Above all things I detest the writing
+for money
+
+Above Nature, I tell him, or, we shall
+be very much below
+
+Absolute freedom could be the worst of
+perils
+
+Accidents are the specific for averting
+the maladies of age
+
+Accounting his tight blue tail coat and
+brass buttons a victory
+
+Accounting for it, is not the same as
+excusing
+
+Accustomed to be paid for by his
+country
+
+Acting is not of the high class which
+conceals the art
+
+Active despair is a passion that must
+be superseded
+
+Add on a tired pipe after dark, and a
+sound sleep to follow
+
+Adept in the lie implied
+
+Admirable scruples of an inveterate
+borrower
+
+Admiration of an enemy or oppressor
+doing great deeds
+
+Admires a girl when there's no married
+woman or widow in sight
+
+Adversary at once offensive and
+helpless provokes brutality
+
+Advised not to push at a shut gate
+
+Affected misapprehensions
+
+Affectedly gentle and unusually
+roundabout opening
+
+After forty, men have married their
+habits
+
+After five years of marriage, and
+twelve of friendship
+
+After a big blow, a very little one
+scarcely counts
+
+Agostino was enjoying the smoke of
+paper cigarettes
+
+Ah! how sweet to waltz through life
+with the right partner
+
+Ah! we're in the enemy's country now
+
+Ah! we fall into their fictions
+
+Aimlessness of a woman's curiosity
+
+Alike believe that Providence is for
+them
+
+All of us an ermined owl within us to
+sit in judgement
+
+All concessions to the people have been
+won from fear
+
+All passed too swift for happiness
+
+All women are the same&mdash;Know one, know
+all
+
+All that Matey and Browny were
+forbidden to write they looked
+
+All are friends who sit at table
+
+All flattery is at somebody's expense
+
+Allowed silly sensitiveness to prevent
+the repair
+
+Although it blew hard when Caesar
+crossed the Rubicon
+
+Always the shout for more produced it
+("News")
+
+Am I ill? I must be hungry!
+
+Am I thy master, or thou mine?
+
+Americans forgivingly remember, without
+mentioning
+
+Amiable mirror as being wilfully
+ruffled to confuse
+
+Among boys there are laws of honour and
+chivalrous codes
+
+Amused after their tiresome work of
+slaughter
+
+An edge to his smile that cuts much
+like a sneer
+
+An obedient creature enough where he
+must be
+
+An angry woman will think the worst
+
+An incomprehensible world indeed at the
+bottom and at the top
+
+An instinct labouring to supply the
+deficiencies of stupidity
+
+An old spoiler of women is worse than
+one spoiled by them!
+
+And now came war, the purifier and the
+pestilence
+
+And so Farewell my young Ambition! and
+with it farewell all true
+
+And he passed along the road, adds the
+Philosopher
+
+And, ladies, if you will consent to be
+likened to a fruit
+
+And her voice, against herself, was for
+England
+
+And one gets the worst of it (in any
+bargain)
+
+And it's one family where the dog is
+pulled by the collar
+
+And not any of your grand ladies can
+match my wife at home
+
+And to these instructions he gave an
+aim: "First be virtuous"
+
+And not be beaten by an acknowledged
+defeat
+
+And never did a stroke of work in my
+life
+
+And life said, Do it, and death said,
+To what end?
+
+Anecdotist to slaughter families for
+the amusement
+
+Anguish to think of having bent the
+knee for nothing
+
+Anticipate opposition by initiating
+measures
+
+Any man is in love with any woman
+
+Any excess pushes to craziness
+
+Appealed to reason in them; he would
+not hear of convictions
+
+Appetite to flourish at the cost of the
+weaker
+
+Arch-devourer Time
+
+Are we practical?' penetrates the bosom
+of an English audience
+
+Aristocratic assumption of licence
+
+Arm'd with Fear the Foe finds passage
+to the vital part
+
+Arrest the enemy by vociferations of
+persistent prayer
+
+Art of despising what he coveted
+
+Art of speaking on politics tersely
+
+As when nations are secretly preparing
+for war
+
+As to wit, the sneer is the cloak of
+clumsiness
+
+As secretive as they are sensitive
+
+As the Lord decided, so it would end!
+"Oh, delicious creed!"
+
+As well ask (women) how a battle-field
+concerns them!
+
+As faith comes&mdash;no saying how; one
+swears by them
+
+As if she had never heard him
+previously enunciate the formula
+
+As little trouble as the heath when the
+woods are swept
+
+As if the age were the injury!
+
+As for titles, the way to defend them
+is to be worthy of them
+
+As fair play as a woman's lord could
+give her
+
+As for comparisons, they are flowers
+thrown into the fire
+
+As in all great oratory! The key of it
+is the pathos
+
+As becomes them, they do not look ahead
+
+Ashamed of letting his ears be filled
+with secret talk
+
+Ask not why, where reason never was
+
+Ask pardon of you, without excusing
+myself
+
+Assist in our small sphere; not come
+mouthing to the footlights
+
+At the age of forty, men that love love
+rootedly
+
+At war with ourselves, means the best
+happiness we can have
+
+Attacked my conscience on the cowardly
+side
+
+Automatic creature is subject to the
+laws of its construction
+
+Avoid the position that enforces
+publishing
+
+Back from the altar to discover that
+she has chained herself
+
+Bad laws are best broken
+
+Bad luck's not repeated every day Keep
+heart for the good
+
+Bade his audience to beware of princes
+
+Bandied the weariful shuttlecock of
+gallantry
+
+Barriers are for those who cannot fly
+
+Be philosophical, but accept your
+personal dues
+
+Be politic and give her elbow-room for
+her natural angles
+
+Be what you seem, my little one
+
+Be on your guard the next two minutes
+he gets you alone
+
+Be good and dull, and please everybody
+
+Be the woman and have the last word!
+
+Bear in mind that we are
+sentimentalists&mdash;The eye is our servant
+
+Beauchamp's career
+
+Beautiful servicelessness
+
+Beautiful women in her position provoke
+an intemperateness
+
+Beautiful women may believe themselves
+beloved
+
+Beauty is rare; luckily is it rare
+
+Because you loved something better than
+me
+
+Because he stood so high with her now
+he feared the fall
+
+Because men can't abide praise of
+another man
+
+Becoming air of appropriation that made
+it family history
+
+Bed was a rock of refuge and fortified
+defence
+
+Began the game of Pull
+
+Beginning to have a movement to kiss
+the whip
+
+Behold the hero embarked in the
+redemption of an erring beauty
+
+Being heard at night, in the nineteenth
+century
+
+Being in heart and mind the brother to
+the sister with women
+
+Belief in the narrative by promoting
+nausea in the audience
+
+Believed in her love, and judged it by
+the strength of his own
+
+Bent double to gather things we have
+tossed away
+
+Better for men of extremely opposite
+opinions not to meet
+
+Between love grown old and indifference
+ageing to love
+
+Beware the silent one of an assembly!
+
+Beyond a plot of flowers, a gold-green
+meadow dipped to a ridge
+
+Bitten hard at experience, and know the
+value of a tooth
+
+Borrower to be dancing on Fortune's
+tight-rope above the old abyss
+
+Botched mendings will only make them
+worse
+
+Bound to assure everybody at table he
+was perfectly happy
+
+Bounds of his intelligence closed their
+four walls
+
+Boys, of course&mdash;but men, too!
+
+Boys are unjust
+
+Boys who can appreciate brave deeds are
+capable of doing them
+
+Braggadocioing in deeds is only next
+bad to mouthing it
+
+Brains will beat Grim Death if we have
+enough of them
+
+Brief negatives are not re-assuring to
+a lover's uneasy mind
+
+British hunger for news; second only to
+that for beef
+
+Brittle is foredoomed
+
+Brotherhood among the select who wear
+masks instead of faces
+
+But I leave it to you
+
+But a woman must now and then
+ingratiate herself
+
+But great, powerful London&mdash;the new
+universe to her spirit
+
+But to strangle craving is indeed to go
+through a death
+
+But the flower is a thing of the
+season; the flower drops off
+
+But you must be beautiful to please
+some men
+
+But they were a hopeless couple, they
+were so friendly
+
+But the key to young men is the
+ambition, or, in the place of it.....
+
+But love for a parent is not merely
+duty
+
+But a great success is full of
+temptations
+
+But what is it we do (excepting
+cricket, of course)
+
+But is there such a thing as happiness
+
+But had sunk to climb on a firmer
+footing
+
+By our manner of loving we are known
+
+By forbearance, put it in the wrong
+
+By resisting, I made him a tyrant
+
+By nature incapable of asking pardon
+
+Cajoled like a twenty-year-old yahoo at
+college
+
+Call of the great world's appetite for
+more (Invented news)
+
+Calm fanaticism of the passion of love
+
+Can you not be told you are perfect
+without seeking to improve
+
+Can believe a woman to be any age when
+her cheeks are tinted
+
+Can a man go farther than his nature?
+
+Cannot be any goodness unless it is a
+practiced goodness
+
+Canvassing means intimidation or
+corruption
+
+Capacity for thinking should precede
+the act of writing
+
+Capricious potentate whom they worship
+
+Careful not to smell of his office
+
+Carry explosives and must particularly
+guard against sparks
+
+Carry a scene through in virtue's name
+and vice's mask
+
+Causes him to be popularly weighed
+
+Centres of polished barbarism known as
+aristocratic societies
+
+Challenged him to lead up to her
+desired stormy scene
+
+Charges of cynicism are common against
+all satirists
+
+Charitable mercifulness; better than
+sentimental ointment
+
+Charity that supplied the place of
+justice was not thanked
+
+Chaste are wattled in formalism and
+throned in sourness
+
+Cheerful martyr
+
+Childish faith in the beneficence of
+the unseen Powers who feed us
+
+Chose to conceive that he thought
+abstractedly
+
+Circumstances may combine to make a
+whisper as deadly as a blow
+
+Civil tongue and rosy smiles sweeten
+even sour wine
+
+Claim for equality puts an end to the
+priceless privileges
+
+Clotilde fenced, which is half a
+confession
+
+Cock-sure has crowed low by sunset
+
+Cold curiosity
+
+Cold charity to all
+
+Come prepared to be not very well
+satisfied with anything
+
+Comfortable have to pay in occasional
+panics for the serenity
+
+Command of countenance the Countess
+possessed
+
+Commencement of a speech proves that
+you have made the plunge
+
+Common voice of praise in the mouths of
+his creditors
+
+Common sense is the secret of every
+successful civil agitation
+
+Compared the governing of the Irish to
+the management of a horse
+
+Comparisons will thrust themselves on
+minds disordered
+
+Compassionate sentiments veered round
+to irate amazement
+
+Complacent languor of the wise youth
+
+Compliment of being outwitted by their
+own offspring
+
+Compromise is virtual death
+
+Conduct is never a straight index where
+the heart's involved
+
+Confess no more than is necessary, but
+do everything you can
+
+Confident serenity inspired by evil
+prognostications
+
+Consciousness of some guilt when vowing
+itself innocent
+
+Consent to take life as it is
+
+Consent of circumstances
+
+Conservative, whose astounded state
+paralyzes his wrath
+
+Consign discussion to silence with the
+cynical closure
+
+Constitutionally discontented
+
+Consult the family means&mdash;waste your
+time
+
+Contempt of military weapons and
+ridicule of the art of war
+
+Contemptuous exclusiveness could not go
+farther
+
+Continued trust in the man&mdash;is the
+alternative of despair
+
+Convict it by instinct without the
+ceremony of a jury
+
+Convictions we store&mdash;wherewith to
+shape our destinies
+
+Convictions are generally first
+impressions
+
+Convincing themselves that they
+impersonate sagacity
+
+Cordiality of an extreme relief in
+leaving
+
+Could we&mdash;we might be friends
+
+Could peruse platitudes upon that theme
+with enthusiasm
+
+Could not understand enthusiasm for the
+schoolmaster's career
+
+Could the best of men be simply&mdash;a
+woman's friend?
+
+Could have designed this gabbler for
+the mate
+
+Could affect me then, without being
+flung at me
+
+Country can go on very well without so
+much speech-making
+
+Country enclosed us to make us feel
+snug in our own importance
+
+Country prizing ornaments higher than
+qualities
+
+Courage to grapple with his pride and
+open his heart was wanting
+
+Cover of action as an escape from
+perplexity
+
+Cowardice is even worse for nations
+than for individual men
+
+Crazy zigzag of policy in almost every
+stroke (of history)
+
+Creatures that wait for circumstances
+to bring the change
+
+Critical fashion of intimates who know
+as well as hear
+
+Critical in their first glance at a
+prima donna
+
+Cupid clipped of wing is a destructive
+parasite
+
+Curious thing would be if curious
+things should fail to happen
+
+Dahlia, the perplexity to her sister's
+heart, lay stretched....
+
+Damsel who has lost the third volume of
+an exciting novel
+
+Dangerous things are uttered after the
+third glass
+
+Dark-eyed Renee was not beauty but
+attraction
+
+Days when you lay on your back and the
+sky rained apples
+
+Dead Britons are all Britons, but live
+Britons are not quite brothers
+
+Death is always next door
+
+Death within which welcomed a death
+without
+
+Death is only the other side of the
+ditch
+
+Death is our common cloak; but Calamity
+individualizes
+
+Debit was eloquent, he was unanswerable
+
+Decency's a dirty petticoat in the
+Garden of Innocence
+
+Decent insincerity
+
+Decline to practise hypocrisy
+
+Dedicated to the putrid of the upper
+circle
+
+Deeds only are the title
+
+Deep as a mother's, pure as a virgin's,
+fiery as a saint's
+
+Defiance of foes and (what was harder
+to brave) of friends
+
+Delay in thine undertaking Is disaster
+of thy own making
+
+Depending for dialogue upon perpetual
+fresh supplies of scandal
+
+Depreciating it after the fashion of
+chartered hypocrites.
+
+Desire of it destroyed it
+
+Despises hostile elements and goes
+unpunished
+
+Despises the pomades and curling-irons
+of modern romance
+
+Determine that the future is in our
+debt, and draw on it
+
+Detestable feminine storms enveloping
+men weak enough
+
+Detested titles, invented by the
+English
+
+Developing stiff, solid, unobtrusive
+men, and very personable women
+
+Dialectical stiffness
+
+Dialogue between Nature and
+Circumstance
+
+Did not know the nature of an oath, and
+was dismissed
+
+Didn't say a word No use in talking
+about feelings
+
+Dignitary, and he passed under the
+bondage of that position
+
+Dignity of sulking so seductive to the
+wounded spirit of man
+
+Discover the writers in a day when all
+are writing!
+
+Discreet play with her eyelids in our
+encounters
+
+Disqualification of constantly
+offending prejudices
+
+Dissent rings out finely, and approval
+is a feeble murmur
+
+Distaste for all exercise once
+pleasurable
+
+Distinguished by his not allowing
+himself to be provoked
+
+Distrust us, and it is a declaration of
+war
+
+Dithyrambic inebriety of narration
+
+Divided lovers in presence
+
+Do I serve my hand? or, Do I serve my
+heart?
+
+Do you judge of heroes as of lesser
+men?
+
+Dogmatic arrogance of a just but
+ignorant man
+
+Dogs die more decently than we men
+
+Dogs' eyes have such a sick look of
+love
+
+Dose he had taken was not of the
+sweetest
+
+Drank to show his disdain of its powers
+
+Dreaded as a scourge, hailed as a
+refreshment (Scandal-sheet)
+
+Dreads our climate and coffee too much
+to attempt the voyage
+
+Drink is their death's river, rolling
+them on helpless
+
+Dudley was not gifted to read behind
+words and looks
+
+Earl of Cressett fell from his coach-box
+in a fit
+
+Eating, like scratching, only wants a
+beginning
+
+Eccentric behaviour in trifles
+
+Effort to be reticent concerning Nevil,
+and communicative
+
+Efforts to weary him out of his project
+were unsuccessful
+
+Elderly martyr for the advancement of
+his juniors
+
+Embarrassments of an uncongenial
+employment
+
+Emilia alone of the party was as a blot
+to her
+
+Eminently servile is the tolerated
+lawbreaker
+
+Empanelled to deliver verdicts upon the
+ways of women
+
+Empty stomachs are foul counsellors
+
+Empty magnanimity which his uncle
+presented to him
+
+Enamoured young men have these notions
+
+Enemy's laugh is a bugle blown in the
+night
+
+Energy to something, that was not to be
+had in a market
+
+England's the foremost country of the
+globe
+
+English antipathy to babblers
+
+English maids are domesticated savage
+animals
+
+Enjoys his luxuries and is ashamed of
+his laziness
+
+Enthusiasm struck and tightened the
+loose chord of scepticism
+
+Enthusiasm has the privilege of not
+knowing monotony
+
+Enthusiast, when not lyrical, is
+perilously near to boring
+
+Envy of the man of positive knowledge
+
+Equally acceptable salted when it
+cannot be had fresh
+
+Everlastingly in this life the better
+pays for the worse
+
+Every failure is a step advanced
+
+Every woman that's married isn't in
+love with her husband
+
+Every church of the city lent its iron
+tongue to the peal
+
+Everywhere the badge of subjection is a
+poor stomach
+
+Exceeding variety and quantity of
+things money can buy
+
+Excellent is pride; but oh! be sure of
+its foundations
+
+Excess of a merit is a capital offence
+in morality
+
+Excited, glad of catastrophe if it but
+killed monotony
+
+Expectations dupe us, not trust
+
+Explaining of things to a dull head
+
+Externally soft and polished,
+internally hard and relentless
+
+Exuberant anticipatory trustfulness
+
+Exult in imagination of an escape up to
+the moment of capture
+
+Eyes of a lover are not his own; but
+his hands and lips are
+
+Face betokening the perpetual smack of
+lemon
+
+Failures oft are but advising friends
+
+Faith works miracles. At least it
+allows time for them
+
+Fantastical
+
+Far higher quality is the will that can
+subdue itself to wait
+
+Fast growing to be an eccentric by
+profession
+
+Fatal habit of superiority stopped his
+tongue
+
+Father and she were aware of one
+another without conversing
+
+Father used to say, four hours for a
+man, six for a woman
+
+Favour can't help coming by rotation
+
+Fear nought so much as Fear itself
+
+Feel no shame that I do not feel!
+
+Feel they are not up to the people they
+are mixing with
+
+Feeling, nothing beyond a lively
+interest in her well-being
+
+Feigned utter condemnation to make
+partial comfort acceptable
+
+Fell to chatting upon the nothings
+agreeably and seriously
+
+Feminine pity, which is nearer to
+contempt than to tenderness
+
+Feminine; coming when she willed and
+flying when wanted
+
+Festive board provided for them by the
+valour of their fathers
+
+Few feelings are single on this globe
+
+Few men can forbear to tell a spicy
+story of their friends
+
+Fiddle harmonics on the sensual strings
+
+Fine eye for celestially directed
+consequences is ever haunted
+
+Fine Shades were still too dominant at
+Brookfield
+
+Finishing touches to the negligence
+
+Fire smoothes the creases
+
+Fires in the grates went through the
+ceremony of warming nobody
+
+Fit of Republicanism in the nursery
+
+Flashes bits of speech that catch men
+in their unguarded corner
+
+Flung him, pitied him, and passed on
+
+Foamy top is offered and gulped as
+equivalent to an idea
+
+Foe can spoil my face; he beats me if
+he spoils my temper
+
+Foist on you their idea of your idea at
+the moment
+
+Fond, as they say, of his glass and his
+girl
+
+Foolish trick of thinking for herself
+
+For 'tis Ireland gives England her
+soldiers, her generals too
+
+Forewarn readers of this history that
+there is no plot in it
+
+Forgetfulness is like a closing sea
+
+Fortitude leaned so much upon the irony
+
+Forty seconds too fast, as if it were a
+capital offence
+
+Found by the side of the bed,
+inanimate, and pale as a sister of
+death
+
+Found it difficult to forgive her his
+own folly
+
+Found that he 'cursed better upon
+water'
+
+Fourth of the Georges
+
+Frankness as an armour over wariness
+
+Fretted by his relatives he cannot be
+much of a giant
+
+Friend he would not shake off, but
+could not well link with
+
+Friendship, I fancy, means one heart
+between two
+
+From head to foot nothing better than a
+moan made visible
+
+Frozen vanity called pride, which does
+not seek to be revenged
+
+Full-o'-Beer's a hasty chap
+
+Fun, at any cost, is the one object
+worth a shot
+
+Further she read, "Which is the coward
+among us?"
+
+Generally he noticed nothing
+
+Gentlefolks like straight-forwardness
+in their inferiors
+
+Gentleman who does so much 'cause he
+says so little
+
+Gentleman in a good state of
+preservation
+
+Get back what we give
+
+Giant Vanity urged Giant Energy to make
+use of Giant Duplicity
+
+Give our courage as hostage for the
+fulfilment of what we hope
+
+Give our consciences to the keeping of
+the parsons
+
+Given up his brains for a lodging to a
+single idea
+
+Glimpse of her whole life in the horrid
+tomb of his embrace
+
+Gone to pieces with an injured lover's
+babble
+
+Good and evil work together in this
+world
+
+Good nature, and means no more harm
+than he can help
+
+Good nerve to face the scene which he
+is certain will be enacted
+
+Good-bye to sorrow for a while&mdash;Keep
+your tears for the living
+
+Good maxim for the wrathful&mdash;speak not
+at all
+
+Good jokes are not always good policy
+
+Goodish sort of fellow; good horseman,
+good shot, good character
+
+Gossip always has some solid
+foundation, however small
+
+Government of brain; not sufficient
+Insurrection of heart
+
+Gradations appear to be unknown to you
+
+Graduated naturally enough the finer
+stages of self-deception
+
+Grand air of pitying sadness
+
+Gratitude never was a woman's gift
+
+Gratuitous insult
+
+Gravely reproaching the tobacconist for
+the growing costliness of cigars
+
+Greater our successes, the greater the
+slaves we become
+
+Greatest of men; who have to learn from
+the loss of the woman
+
+Grief of an ill-fortuned passion of his
+youth
+
+Grimaces at a government long-nosed to
+no purpose
+
+Grossly unlike in likeness (portraits)
+
+Habit had legalized his union with her
+
+Habit of antedating his sagacity
+
+Habit, what a sacred and admirable
+thing it is
+
+Had got the trick of lying, through
+fear of telling the truth
+
+Had come to be her lover through being
+her husband
+
+Had Shakespeare's grandmother three
+Christian names?
+
+Had taken refuge in their opera-glasses
+
+Half-truth that we may put on the mask
+of the whole
+
+Half a dozen dozen left
+
+Half designingly permitted her trouble
+to be seen
+
+Happiness in love is a match between
+ecstasy and compliance
+
+Happy the woman who has not more to
+speak
+
+Happy in privation and suffering if
+simply we can accept beauty
+
+Hard to bear, at times unbearable
+
+Hard enough for a man to be married to
+a fool
+
+Hard men have sometimes a warm
+affection for dogs
+
+Haremed opinion of the unfitness of
+women
+
+Hated one thing alone&mdash;which was
+'bother'
+
+Hated tears, considering them a clog to
+all useful machinery
+
+Hates a compromise
+
+Haunted many pillows
+
+Have her profile very frequently while
+I am conversing with her
+
+Having contracted the fatal habit of
+irony
+
+He was not alive for his own pleasure
+
+He, by insisting, made me a rebel
+
+He bowed to facts
+
+He grunted that a lying clock was
+hateful to him
+
+He has been tolerably honest, Tom, for
+a man and a lover
+
+He kept saying to himself, 'to-morrow I
+will tell'
+
+He postponed it to the next minute and
+the next
+
+He prattled, in the happy ignorance of
+compulsion
+
+He was in love, and subtle love will
+not be shamed and smothered
+
+He thinks that the country must be
+saved by its women as well
+
+He is in the season of faults
+
+He had his character to maintain
+
+He squandered the guineas, she
+patiently picked up the pence
+
+He neared her, wooing her; and she
+assented
+
+He judged of others by himself
+
+He is inexorable, being the guilty one
+of the two
+
+He had to shake up wrath over his
+grievances
+
+He had gone, and the day lived again
+for both of them
+
+He gave a slight sign of restiveness,
+and was allowed to go
+
+He loathed a skulker
+
+He clearly could not learn from
+misfortune
+
+He thinks or he chews
+
+He would neither retort nor defend
+himself
+
+He whipped himself up to one of his
+oratorical frenzies
+
+He put no question to anybody
+
+He took small account of the operations
+of the feelings
+
+He began ambitiously&mdash;It's the way at
+the beginning
+
+He never explained
+
+He never acknowledged a trouble, he
+dispersed it
+
+He was the prisoner of his word
+
+He wants the whip; ought to have had it
+regularly
+
+He had wealth for a likeness of
+strength
+
+He was a figure on a horse, and naught
+when off it
+
+He did not vastly respect beautiful
+women
+
+He sinks terribly when he sinks at all
+
+He was not a weaver of phrases in
+distress
+
+He lies as naturally as an infant sucks
+
+He tried to gather his ideas, but the
+effort was like that of a light dreamer
+
+He runs too much from first principles
+to extremes
+
+He gained much by claiming little
+
+He had by nature a tarnishing eye that
+cast discolouration
+
+He was too much on fire to know the
+taste of absurdity
+
+He smoked, Lord Avonley said of the
+second departure
+
+He had no recollection of having ever
+dined without drinking wine
+
+He stormed her and consented to be
+beaten
+
+He will be a part of every history (the
+fool)
+
+He was the maddest of tyrants&mdash;a weak
+one
+
+He had to go, he must, he has to be
+always going
+
+He never calculated on the happening of
+mortal accidents
+
+He had expected romance, and had met
+merchandize
+
+He condensed a paragraph into a line
+
+He lost the art of observing himself
+
+He had neat phrases, opinions in
+packets
+
+He's good from end to end, and beats a
+Christian hollow (a hog)
+
+Hear victorious lawlessness appealing
+solemnly to God the law
+
+Heart to keep guard and bury the bones
+you tossed him
+
+Heartily she thanked the girl for the
+excuse to cry
+
+Hearts that make one soul do not
+separately count their gifts
+
+Heathen vindictiveness declaring itself
+holy
+
+Heights of humour beyond laughter
+
+Her intimacy with a man old enough to
+be her grandfather
+
+Her vehement fighting against facts
+
+Her peculiar tenacity of the sense of
+injury
+
+Her feelings&mdash;trustier guides than her
+judgement in this crisis
+
+Her final impression likened him to a
+house locked up and empty
+
+Her aspect suggested the repose of a
+winter landscape
+
+Her singing struck a note of grateful
+remembered delight
+
+Her duel with Time
+
+Here, where he both wished and wished
+not to be
+
+Here and there a plain good soul to
+whom he was affectionate
+
+Hermits enamoured of wind and rain
+
+Hero embarked in the redemption of an
+erring beautiful woman
+
+Heroine, in common with the hero, has
+her ambition to be of use
+
+Herself, content to be dull if he might
+shine
+
+Hesitating strangeness that sometimes
+gathers during absences
+
+Himself in the worn old surplice of the
+converted rake
+
+His aim to win the woman acknowledged
+no obstacle in the means
+
+His idea of marriage is, the taking of
+the woman into custody
+
+His gaze and one of his ears, if not
+the pair, were given
+
+His ridiculous equanimity
+
+His alien ideas were not unimpressed by
+the picture
+
+His restored sense of possession
+
+His wife alone, had, as they termed it,
+kept him together
+
+His equanimity was fictitious
+
+His fancy performed miraculous feats
+
+His violent earnestness, his imperial
+self-confidence
+
+His apparent cynicism is sheer
+irritability
+
+Holding to the refusal, for the sake of
+consistency
+
+Holding to his work after the strain's
+over&mdash;That tells the man
+
+Holy images, and other miraculous
+objects are sold
+
+Honest creatures who will not accept a
+lift from fiction
+
+Hope which lies in giving men a dose of
+hysterics
+
+Hopeless task of defending a woman from
+a woman
+
+Hopes of a coming disillusion that
+would restore him
+
+Hosts of men are of the simple order of
+the comic
+
+How angry I should be with you if you
+were not so beautiful!
+
+How Success derides Ambition!
+
+How many degrees from love gratitude
+may be
+
+How immensely nature seems to prefer
+men to women!
+
+How little a thing serves Fortune's
+turn
+
+How to compromise the matter for the
+sake of peace?
+
+How many instruments cannot clever
+women play upon
+
+How little we mean to do harm when we
+do an injury
+
+Hug the hatred they packed up among
+their bundles
+
+Human nature to feel an interest in the
+dog that has bitten you
+
+Humour preserved her from excesses of
+sentiment
+
+Huntress with few scruples and the game
+unguarded
+
+Hushing together, they agreed that it
+had been a false move
+
+I do not defend myself ever
+
+I have learnt as much from light
+literature as from heavy
+
+I have and hold&mdash;you shall hunger and
+covet
+
+I cannot get on with Gibbon
+
+I could be in love with her cruelty, if
+only I had her near me
+
+I married a cook She expects a big
+appetite
+
+I want no more, except to be taught to
+work
+
+I detest anything that has to do with
+gratitude
+
+I know nothing of imagination
+
+I haven't got the pluck of a flea
+
+I hate old age It changes you so
+
+I would cut my tongue out, if it did
+you a service
+
+I can't think brisk out of my breeches
+
+I look on the back of life
+
+I never pay compliments to transparent
+merit
+
+I always respected her; I never liked
+her
+
+I give my self, I do not sell
+
+I cannot live a life of deceit. A life
+of misery&mdash;not deceit
+
+I was discontented, and could not speak
+my discontent
+
+I laughed louder than was necessary
+
+I had to cross the park to give a
+lesson
+
+I cannot delay; but I request you, that
+are here privileged
+
+I ain't a speeder of matrimony
+
+I beg of my husband, and all kind
+people who may have the care
+
+I rather like to hear a woman swear.
+It embellishes her!
+
+I can confess my sight to be imperfect:
+but will you ever do so?
+
+I do not think Frenchmen comparable to
+the women of France
+
+I take off my hat, Nan, when I see a
+cobbler's stall
+
+I would wait till he flung you off, and
+kneel to you
+
+I had to make my father and mother live
+on potatoes
+
+I am not ashamed
+
+I hope I am not too hungry to
+discriminate
+
+I cannot say less, and will say no more
+
+I wanted a hero
+
+I do not see it, because I will not see
+it
+
+I can pay clever gentlemen for doing
+Greek for me
+
+I never saw out of a doll-shop, and
+never saw there
+
+I 'm the warming pan, as legitimately I
+should be
+
+I detest enthusiasm
+
+I baint done yet
+
+I know that your father has been
+hearing tales told of me
+
+I never knew till this morning the
+force of No in earnest
+
+I hate sleep: I hate anything that robs
+me of my will
+
+I have all the luxuries&mdash;enough to
+loathe them
+
+I who respect the state of marriage by
+refusing
+
+I make a point of never recommending my
+own house
+
+I like him, I like him, of course, but
+I want to breathe
+
+I am a discordant instrument I do not
+readily vibrate
+
+I don't count them against women
+(moods)
+
+I 'm a bachelor, and a person&mdash;you're
+married, and an object
+
+I did, replied Evan. 'I told a lie.'
+
+I never see anything, my dear
+
+I always wait for a thing to happen
+first
+
+I'll come as straight as I can
+
+I'm for a rational Deity
+
+I'm in love with everything she wishes!
+I've got the habit
+
+Idea is the only vital breath
+
+Ideas in gestation are the dullest
+matter you can have
+
+If we are really for Nature, we are not
+lawless
+
+If there's no doubt about it, how is it
+I have a doubt about it?
+
+If you kneel down, who will decline to
+put a foot on you?
+
+If I love you, need you care what
+anybody else thinks
+
+If we are to please you rightly, always
+allow us to play First
+
+If he had valued you half a grain less,
+he might have won you
+
+If the world is hostile we are not to
+blame it
+
+If we are robbed, we ask, How came we
+by the goods?
+
+If thou wouldst fix remembrance&mdash;
+thwack!
+
+If I'm struck, I strike back
+
+If only been intellectually a little
+flexible in his morality
+
+If you have this creative soul, be the
+slave of your creature
+
+If I do not speak of payment
+
+Ignorance roaring behind a mask of
+sarcasm
+
+Imagination she has, for a source of
+strength in the future days
+
+Immense wealth and native obtuseness
+combine to disfigure us
+
+Imparting the usual chorus of yesses to
+his own mind
+
+Impossible for him to think that women
+thought
+
+Impossible for us women to comprehend
+love without folly in man
+
+Impudent boy's fling at superiority
+over the superior
+
+In the pay of our doctors
+
+In every difficulty, patience is a
+life-belt
+
+In India they sacrifice the widows, in
+France the virgins
+
+In bottle if not on draught (oratory)
+
+In our House, my son, there is peculiar
+blood. We go to wreck!
+
+In Sir Austin's Note-book was written:
+"Between Simple Boyhood..."
+
+In Italy, a husband away, ze friend
+takes title
+
+In truth she sighed to feel as he did,
+above everybody
+
+Incapable of putting the screw upon
+weak excited nature
+
+Incessantly speaking of the necessity
+we granted it unknowingly
+
+Inclined to act hesitation in accepting
+the aid she sought
+
+Increase of dissatisfaction with the
+more she got
+
+Indirect communication with heaven
+
+Inducement to act the hypocrite before
+the hypocrite world
+
+Indulged in their privilege of thinking
+what they liked
+
+Infallibility of our august mother
+
+Infants are said to have their ideas,
+and why not young ladies?
+
+Infatuated men argue likewise, and
+scandal does not move them
+
+Inferences are like shadows on the wall
+
+Inflicted no foretaste of her coming
+subjection to him
+
+Informed him that he never played jokes
+with money, or on men
+
+Injury forbids us to be friends again
+
+Innocence and uncleanness may go
+together
+
+Insistency upon there being two sides
+to a case&mdash;to every case
+
+Intellectual contempt of easy dupes
+
+Intensely communicative, but
+inarticulate
+
+Intentions are really rich possessions
+
+Intimations of cowardice menacing a
+paralysis of the will
+
+Intrusion of the spontaneous on the
+stereotyped would clash
+
+Intrusion of hard material statements,
+facts
+
+Invite indecision to exhaust their
+scruples
+
+Ireland 's the sore place of England
+
+Irishman there is a barrow trolling a
+load of grievances
+
+Irishmen will never be quite sincere
+
+Ironical fortitude
+
+Irony in him is only eulogy standing on
+its head
+
+Irony that seemed to spring from
+aversion
+
+Irony instead of eloquence
+
+Irony provoked his laughter more than
+fun
+
+Irritability at the intrusion of past
+disputes
+
+Is he jealous? 'Only when I make him,
+he is.'
+
+Is not one month of brightness as much
+as we can ask for?
+
+Is it any waste of time to write of
+love?
+
+It 's us hard ones that get on best in
+the world
+
+It was harder to be near and not close
+
+It is not high flying, which usually
+ends in heavy falling
+
+It is no insignificant contest when
+love has to crush self-love
+
+It would be hard! ay, then we do it
+forthwith
+
+It was as if she had been eyeing a
+golden door shut fast
+
+It is the best of signs when women take
+to her
+
+It was his ill luck to have strong
+appetites and a weak stomach
+
+It rarely astonishes our ears It
+illumines our souls
+
+It goes at the lifting of the
+bridegroom's little finger
+
+It was an honest buss, but dear at ten
+thousand
+
+It is well to learn manners without
+having them imposed on us
+
+It was in a time before our joyful era
+of universal equality
+
+It is the devil's masterstroke to get
+us to accuse him
+
+It was her prayer to heaven that she
+might save a doctor's bill
+
+It is better for us both, of course
+
+It was now, as Sir Austin had written
+it down, The Magnetic Age
+
+It is no use trying to conceal anything
+from him
+
+It's a fool that hopes for peace
+anywhere
+
+It's no use trying to be a gentleman if
+you can't pay for it
+
+Italians were like women, and wanted&mdash;a
+real beating
+
+Its glee at a catastrophe; its poor
+stock of mercy
+
+January was watering and freezing old
+earth by turns
+
+Judging of the destiny of man by the
+fate of individuals
+
+Just bad inquirin' too close among men
+
+Keep passion sober, a trotter in
+harness
+
+Kelts, as they are called, can't and
+won't forgive injuries
+
+Kindness is kindness, all over the
+world
+
+Knew my friend to be one of the most
+absent-minded of men
+
+Lack of precise words admonished him of
+the virtue of silence
+
+Land and beasts! They sound like
+blessed things
+
+Lawyers hold the keys of the great
+world
+
+Lay no petty traps for opportunity
+
+Laying of ghosts is a public duty
+
+Leader accustomed to count ahead upon
+vapourish abstractions
+
+Learn all about them afterwards, ay,
+and make the best of them
+
+Learn&mdash;principally not to be afraid of
+ideas
+
+Led him to impress his unchangeableness
+upon her
+
+Lend him your own generosity
+
+Lengthened term of peace bred maggots
+in the heads of the people
+
+Lest thou commence to lie&mdash;be dumb!
+
+Let but the throb be kept for others&mdash;
+That is the one secret
+
+Let never Necessity draw the bow of our
+weakness
+
+Let none of us be so exalted above the
+wit of daily life
+
+Levelling a finger at the taxpayer
+
+Lies are usurers' coin we pay for ten
+thousand per cent
+
+Life is the burlesque of young dreams
+
+Like a woman, who would and would not,
+and wanted a master
+
+Like an ill-reared fruit, first at the
+core it rotteth
+
+Limit was two bottles of port wine at a
+sitting
+
+Listened to one another, and blinded
+the world
+
+Literature is a good stick and a bad
+horse
+
+Little boy named Tommy Wedger said he
+saw a dead body go by
+
+Littlenesses of which women are accused
+
+Loathing of artifice to raise emotion
+
+Loathing for speculation
+
+Longing for love and dependence
+
+Look within, and avoid lying
+
+Look well behind
+
+Look backward only to correct an error
+of conduct in future
+
+Looked as proud as if he had just
+clapped down the full amount
+
+Looking on him was listening
+
+Loudness of the interrogation precluded
+thought of an answer
+
+Love, with his accustomed cunning
+
+Love the poor devil
+
+Love dies like natural decay
+
+Love the children of Erin, when not
+fretted by them
+
+Love of men and women as a toy that I
+have played with
+
+Love of pleasure keeps us blind
+children
+
+Love and war have been compared&mdash;Both
+require strategy
+
+Love that shrieks at a mortal wound,
+and bleeds humanly
+
+Love discerns unerringly what is and
+what is not duty
+
+Love must needs be an egoism
+
+Love is a contagious disease
+
+Love the difficulty better than the
+woman
+
+Love, that has risen above emotion,
+quite independent of craving
+
+Love's a selfish business one has work
+in hand
+
+Loves his poets, can almost understand
+what poetry means
+
+Loving in this land: they all go mad,
+straight off
+
+Lucky accidents are anticipated only by
+fools
+
+Made of his creed a strait-jacket for
+humanity
+
+Madness that sane men enamoured can be
+struck by
+
+Magnificent in generosity; he had
+little humaneness
+
+Magnify an offence in the ratio of our
+vanity
+
+Make no effort to amuse him. He is
+always occupied
+
+Make a girl drink her tears, if they
+ain't to be let fall
+
+Making too much of it&mdash;a trick of the
+vulgar
+
+Man with a material object in aim, is
+the man of his object
+
+Man who beats his wife my first
+question is, 'Do he take his tea?'
+
+Man owes a duty to his class
+
+Man who helps me to read the world and
+men as they are
+
+Man without a penny in his pocket, and
+a gizzard full of pride
+
+Mankind is offended by heterodoxy in
+mean attire
+
+Mare would do, and better than a dozen
+horses
+
+Mark of a fool to take everybody for a
+bigger fool than himself
+
+Marriage is an awful thing, where
+there's no love
+
+Married at forty, and I had to take her
+shaped as she was
+
+Married a wealthy manufacturer&mdash;
+bartered her blood for his money
+
+Martyrs of love or religion are madmen
+
+Material good reverses its benefits the
+more nearly we clasp it
+
+Matter that is not nourishing to brains
+
+Maxims of her own on the subject of
+rising and getting the worm
+
+May lull themselves with their
+wakefulness
+
+May not one love, not craving to be
+beloved?
+
+Meant to vanquish her with the
+dominating patience
+
+Meditations upon the errors of the
+general man, as a cover
+
+Memory inspired by the sensations
+
+Men overweeningly in love with their
+creations
+
+Men do not play truant from home at
+sixty years of age
+
+Men they regard as their natural prey
+
+Men bore the blame, though the women
+were rightly punished
+
+Men must fight: the law is only a
+quieter field for them
+
+Men in love are children with their
+mistresses
+
+Men love to boast of things nobody else
+has seen
+
+Men who believe that there is a virtue
+in imprecations
+
+Men had not pleased him of late
+
+Mental and moral neuters
+
+Metaphysician's treatise on Nature: a
+torch to see the sunrise
+
+Mighty Highnesses who had only smelt
+the outside edge of battle
+
+Mika! you did it in cold blood?
+
+Mindless, he says, and arrogant
+
+Minutes taken up by the grey puffs from
+their mouths
+
+Mistake of the world is to think
+happiness possible to the sense
+
+Mistaking of her desires for her
+reasons
+
+Modest are the most easily intoxicated
+when they sip at vanity
+
+Money is of course a rough test of
+virtue
+
+Money's a chain-cable for holding men
+to their senses
+
+Moral indignation is ever consolatory
+
+Morales, madame, suit ze sun
+
+More argument I cannot bear
+
+More culpable the sparer than the
+spared
+
+Most youths are like Pope's women; they
+have no character
+
+Mrs. Fleming, of Queen Anne's Farm, was
+the wife of a yeoman
+
+Music was resumed to confuse the
+hearing of the eavesdroppers
+
+Music in Italy? Amorous and martial,
+brainless and monotonous
+
+Must be the moralist in the satirist if
+satire is to strike
+
+Mutual deference
+
+My engagement to Mr. Pericles is that I
+am not to write
+
+My mistress! My glorious stolen fruit!
+My dark angel of love
+
+My plain story is of two Kentish
+damsels
+
+My first girl&mdash;she's brought disgrace
+on this house
+
+My belief is, you do it on purpose.
+Can't be such rank idiots
+
+My voice! I have my voice! Emilia had
+cried it out to herself
+
+Naked original ideas, are acceptable at
+no time
+
+Napoleon's treatment of women is
+excellent example
+
+Nation's half made-up of the idle and
+the servants of the idle
+
+Nations at war are wild beasts
+
+Naturally as deceived as he wished to
+be
+
+Nature and Law never agreed
+
+Nature is not of necessity always
+roaring
+
+Nature could at a push be eloquent to
+defend the guilty
+
+Nature's logic, Nature's voice, for
+self-defence
+
+Naughtily Australian and kangarooly
+
+Necessary for him to denounce somebody
+
+Necessity's offspring
+
+Needed support of facts, and feared
+them
+
+Never reckon on womankind for a wise
+act
+
+Never, never love a married woman
+
+Never intended that we should play with
+flesh and blood
+
+Never forget that old Ireland is
+weeping
+
+Never forgave an injury without a
+return blow for it
+
+Never to despise the good opinion of
+the nonentities
+
+Never nurse an injury, great or small
+
+Never was a word fitter for a quack's
+mouth than "humanity"
+
+Never fell far short of outstripping
+the sturdy pedestrian Time
+
+Never pretend to know a girl by her
+face
+
+Nevertheless, inclinations are an
+infidelity
+
+Next door to the Last Trump
+
+Night has little mercy for the
+self-reproachful
+
+No nose to the hero, no moral to the
+tale
+
+No runner can outstrip his fate
+
+No companionship save with the wound
+they nurse
+
+No Act to compel a man to deny what
+appears in the papers
+
+No great harm done when you're silent
+
+No heart to dare is no heart to love!
+
+No stopping the Press while the people
+have an appetite for it
+
+No word is more lightly spoken than
+shame
+
+No flattery for me at the expense of my
+sisters
+
+No man has a firm foothold who pretends
+to it
+
+No enemy's shot is equal to a weak
+heart in the act
+
+No man can hear the words which prove
+him a prophet (quietly)
+
+No conversation coming of it, her
+curiosity was violent
+
+No intoxication of hot blood to cheer
+those who sat at home
+
+No case is hopeless till a man consents
+to think it is
+
+No love can be without jealousy
+
+No! Gentlemen don't fling stones; leave
+that to the blackguards
+
+None but fanatics, cowards,
+white-eyeballed dogmatists
+
+Nor can a protest against coarseness be
+sweepingly interpreted
+
+Not every chapter can be sunshine
+
+Not afford to lose, and a disposition
+free of the craving to win
+
+Not men of brains, but the men of
+aptitudes
+
+Not the indignant and the frozen, but
+the genially indifferent
+
+Not daring risk of office by offending
+the taxpayer
+
+Not in love&mdash;She was only not unwilling
+to be in love
+
+Not a page of his books reveals
+malevolence or a sneer
+
+Not always the right thing to do the
+right thing
+
+Not to do things wholly is worse than
+not to do things at all
+
+Not to be feared more than are the
+general race of bunglers
+
+Not much esteem for non-professional
+actresses
+
+Not in a situation that could bear of
+her blaming herself
+
+Not so much read a print as read the
+imprinting on themselves
+
+Not to go hunting and fawning for
+alliances
+
+Not to bother your wits, but leave the
+puzzle to the priest
+
+Not to be the idol, to have an aim of
+our own
+
+Not the great creatures we assume
+ourselves to be
+
+Not likely to be far behind curates in
+besieging an heiress
+
+Nothing is a secret that has been
+spoken
+
+Nothing desirable will you have which
+is not coveted
+
+Nothing the body suffers that the soul
+may not profit by
+
+Notoriously been above the honours of
+grammar
+
+Nought credit but what outward orbs
+reveal
+
+Now far from him under the failure of
+an effort to come near
+
+Nursing of a military invalid awakens
+tenderer anxieties
+
+O for yesterday!
+
+O self! self! self!
+
+O heaven! of what avail is human
+effort?
+
+Obedience oils necessity
+
+Obeseness is the most sensitive of our
+ailments
+
+Objects elevated even by a decayed
+world have their magnetism
+
+Observation is the most, enduring of
+the pleasures of life
+
+Occasional instalments&mdash;just to freshen
+the account
+
+Official wrath at sound of footfall or
+a fancied one
+
+Oggler's genial piety made him shrink
+with nausea
+
+Oh! beastly bathos
+
+Oh! I can't bear that class of people
+
+Old houses are doomed to burnings
+
+Old age is a prison wall between us and
+young people
+
+Omnipotence, which is in the image of
+themselves
+
+On a morning when day and night were
+made one by fog
+
+On the threshold of Puberty, there is
+one Unselfish Hour
+
+On which does the eye linger longest&mdash;
+which draws the heart?
+
+On a wild April morning
+
+Once my love? said he. Not now?&mdash;does
+it mean, not now?
+
+Once out of the rutted line, you are
+food for lion and jackal
+
+Once called her beautiful; his praise
+had given her beauty
+
+One wants a little animation in a
+husband
+
+One who studies is not being a fool
+
+One is a fish to her hook; another a
+moth to her light
+
+One might build up a respectable figure
+in negatives
+
+One in a temper at a time I'm sure 's
+enough
+
+One night, and her character's gone
+
+One learns to have compassion for
+fools, by studying them
+
+One has to feel strong in a delicate
+position
+
+One of those men whose characters are
+read off at a glance
+
+One seed of a piece of folly will lurk
+and sprout to confound us
+
+One idea is a bullet
+
+One fool makes many, and so, no doubt,
+does one goose
+
+Only to be described in the tongue of
+auctioneers
+
+Only true race, properly so called, out
+of India&mdash;German
+
+Opened a wider view of the world to
+him, and a colder
+
+Openly treated; all had an air of being
+on the surface
+
+Optional marriages, broken or renewed
+every seven years
+
+Or where you will, so that's in Ireland
+
+Oratory will not work against the
+stream, or on languid tides
+
+Orderliness, from which men are
+privately exempt
+
+Our most diligent pupil learns not so
+much as an earnest teacher
+
+Our weakness is the swiftest dog to
+hunt us
+
+Our partner is our master
+
+Our comedies are frequently youth's
+tragedies
+
+Our life is but a little holding, lent
+To do a mighty labour
+
+Our bravest, our best, have an impulse
+to run
+
+Our lawyers have us inside out, like
+our physicians
+
+Our love and labour are constantly on
+trial
+
+Owner of such a woman, and to lose her!
+
+Pact between cowardice and comfort
+under the title of expediency
+
+Pain is a cloak that wraps you about
+
+Paint themselves pure white, to the
+obliteration of minor spots
+
+Parliament, is the best of occupations
+for idle men
+
+Partake of a morning draught
+
+Passion, he says, is noble strength on
+fire
+
+Passion is not invariably love
+
+Passion added to a bowl of reason makes
+a sophist's mess
+
+Passion does not inspire dark appetite&mdash;
+Dainty innocence does
+
+Past, future, and present, the three
+weights upon humanity
+
+Past fairness, vaguely like a snow
+landscape in the thaw
+
+Patience is the pestilence
+
+Patronizing woman
+
+Paying compliments and spoiling a game!
+
+Payment is no more so than to restore
+money held in trust
+
+Peace-party which opposed was the
+actual cause of the war
+
+Peace, I do pray, for the
+husband-haunted wife
+
+Pebble may roll where it likes&mdash;not so
+the costly jewel
+
+Peculiar subdued form of laughter
+through the nose
+
+People of a provocative prosperity
+
+People were virtuous in past days: they
+counted their sinners
+
+People with whom a mute conformity is
+as good as worship
+
+People who can lose themselves in a ray
+of fancy at any season
+
+People is one of your Radical big words
+that burst at a query
+
+Perhaps inspire him, if he would let
+her breathe
+
+Period of his life a man becomes too
+voraciously constant
+
+Persist, if thou wouldst truly reach
+thine ends
+
+Person in another world beyond this
+world of blood
+
+Perused it, and did not recognize
+herself in her language
+
+Pessimy is invulnerable
+
+Petty concessions are signs of weakness
+to the unsatisfied
+
+Philip was a Spartan for keeping his
+feelings under
+
+Philosophy skimmed, and realistic
+romances deep-sounded
+
+Pitiful conceit in men
+
+Planting the past in the present like a
+perceptible ghost
+
+Play the great game of blunders
+
+Play second fiddle without looking
+foolish
+
+Pleasant companion, who did not play
+the woman obtrusively among men
+
+Please to be pathetic on that subject
+after I am wrinkled
+
+Pleasure-giving laws that make the
+curves we recognize as beauty
+
+Pleasure sat like an inextinguishable
+light on her face
+
+Poetic romance is delusion
+
+Policy seems to petrify their minds
+
+Polished barbarism
+
+Politics as well as the other diseases
+
+Poor mortals are not in the habit of
+climbing Olympus to ask
+
+Portrait of himself by the artist
+
+Practical or not, the good people
+affectingly wish to be
+
+Practical for having an addiction to
+the palpable
+
+Prayer for an object is the cajolery of
+an idol
+
+Press, which had kindled, proceeded to
+extinguished
+
+Presumptuous belief
+
+Pride in being always myself
+
+Pride is the God of Pagans
+
+Primitive appetite for noise
+
+Principle of examining your hypothesis
+before you proceed to decide by it
+
+Procrastination and excessive
+scrupulousness
+
+Professional widows
+
+Professional Puritans
+
+Profound belief in her partiality for
+him
+
+Propitiate common sense on behalf of
+what seems tolerably absurd
+
+Protestant clergy the social police of
+the English middle-class
+
+Providence and her parents were not
+forgiven
+
+Published Memoirs indicate the end of a
+man's activity
+
+Puns are the smallpox of the language
+
+Push me to condense my thoughts to a
+tight ball
+
+Push indolent unreason to gain the
+delusion of happiness
+
+Put material aid at a lower mark than
+gentleness
+
+Put into her woman's harness of the bit
+and the blinkers
+
+Puzzle to connect the foregoing and the
+succeeding
+
+Question the gain of such an
+expenditure of energy
+
+Question with some whether idiots
+should live
+
+Quick to understand, she is in the
+quick of understanding
+
+Quixottry is agreeable reading, a silly
+performance
+
+Rage of a conceited schemer tricked
+
+Rapture of obliviousness
+
+Rare as epic song is the man who is
+thorough in what he does
+
+Rare men of honour who can command
+their passion
+
+Rarely exacted obedience, and she was
+spontaneously obeyed
+
+Read deep and not be baffled by
+inconsistencies
+
+Read with his eyes when you meet him
+this morning
+
+Read one another perfectly in their
+mutual hypocrisies
+
+Ready is the ardent mind to take
+footing on the last thing done
+
+Real happiness is a state of dulness
+
+Rebellion against society and advocacy
+of humanity run counter
+
+Rebukes which give immeasurable
+rebounds
+
+Recalling her to the subject-matter
+with all the patience
+
+Reflection upon a statement is its
+lightning in advance
+
+Refuge in the Castle of Negation
+against the whole army of facts
+
+Regularity of the grin of dentistry
+
+Rejoicing they have in their common
+agreement
+
+Religion condones offences: Philosophy
+has no forgiveness
+
+Religion is the one refuge from women
+
+Reluctant to take the life of flowers
+for a whim
+
+Remarked that the young men must fight
+it out together
+
+Repeatedly, in contempt of the disgust
+of iteration
+
+Reproof of such supererogatory counsel
+
+Requiring natural services from her in
+the button department
+
+Respect one another's affectations
+
+Respected the vegetable yet more than
+he esteemed the flower
+
+Revived for them so much of themselves
+
+Rewards, together with the
+expectations, of the virtuous
+
+Rhoda will love you. She is firm when
+she loves
+
+Rich and poor 's all right, if I'm rich
+and you're poor
+
+Ripe with oft telling and old is the
+tale
+
+Rogue on the tremble of detection
+
+Rose was much behind her age
+
+Rose! what have I done? 'Nothing at
+all,' she said
+
+Rumour for the nonce had a stronger
+spice of truth than usual
+
+Said she was what she would have given
+her hand not to be
+
+Salt of earth, to whom their salt must
+serve for nourishment
+
+Satirist too devotedly loves his lash
+to be a persuasive teacher
+
+Satirist is an executioner by
+profession
+
+Says you're so clever you ought to be a
+man
+
+Scorn titles which did not distinguish
+practical offices
+
+Scorned him for listening to the
+hesitations (hers)
+
+Scotchman's metaphysics; you know
+nothing clear
+
+Screams of an uninjured lady
+
+Second fiddle; he could only mean what
+she meant
+
+Secret of the art was his meaning what
+he said
+
+Secrets throw on the outsiders the onus
+of raising a scandal
+
+Seed-Time passed thus smoothly, and
+adolescence came on
+
+Self-consoled when they are not
+self-justified
+
+Self, was digging pits for comfort to
+flow in
+
+Self-incense
+
+Self-worship, which is often
+self-distrust
+
+Self-deceiver may be a persuasive
+deceiver of another
+
+Selfishness and icy inaccessibility to
+emotion
+
+Semblance of a tombstone lady beside
+her lord
+
+Sense, even if they can't understand
+it, flatters them so
+
+Sensitiveness to the sting, which is
+not allowed to poison
+
+Sentimentality puts up infant hands for
+absolution
+
+Serene presumption
+
+Service of watering the dry and drying
+the damp (Whiskey)
+
+Seventy, when most men are reaping and
+stacking their sins
+
+Sham spiritualism
+
+Share of foulness to them that are for
+scouring the chamber
+
+She marries, and it's the end of her
+sparkling
+
+She seems honest, and that is the most
+we can hope of girls
+
+She had sunk her intelligence in her
+sensations
+
+She had a fatal attraction for antiques
+
+She had great awe of the word
+'business'
+
+She ran through delusion and delusion,
+exhausting each
+
+She, not disinclined to dilute her
+grief
+
+She was unworthy to be the wife of a
+tailor
+
+She did not detest the Countess because
+she could not like her
+
+She endured meekly, when there was no
+meekness
+
+She was perhaps a little the taller of
+the two
+
+She thought that friendship was sweeter
+than love
+
+She herself did not like to be seen
+eating in public
+
+She had a thirsting mind
+
+She was sick of personal freedom
+
+She believed friendship practicable
+between men and women
+
+She had to be the hypocrite or else&mdash;
+leap
+
+She was at liberty to weep if she
+pleased
+
+She felt in him a maker of facts
+
+She was not his match&mdash;To speak would
+be to succumb
+
+She disdained to question the mouth
+which had bitten her
+
+She had no longer anything to resent:
+she was obliged to weep
+
+She stood with a dignity that the word
+did not express
+
+She dealt in the flashes which connect
+ideas
+
+She began to feel that this was life in
+earnest
+
+She might turn out good, if well
+guarded for a time
+
+She sought, by looking hard, to
+understand it better
+
+She was thrust away because because he
+had offended
+
+She seemed really a soaring bird
+brought down by the fowler
+
+She can make puddens and pies
+
+She was not, happily, one of the women
+who betray strong feeling
+
+Should we leave a good deed half done
+
+Showery, replied the admiral, as his
+cocked-hat was knocked off
+
+Shun comparisons
+
+Shuns the statuesque pathetic, or any
+kind of posturing
+
+Sign that the evil had reached from
+pricks to pokes
+
+Silence and such signs are like
+revelations in black night
+
+Silence was their only protection to
+the Nice Feelings
+
+Silence is commonly the slow poison
+used by those who mean to murder love
+
+Silence was doing the work of a scourge
+
+Simple obstinacy of will sustained her
+
+Simple affection must bear the strain
+of friendship if it can
+
+Simplicity is the keenest weapon
+
+Sincere as far as she knew: as far as
+one who loves may be
+
+Sinners are not to repent only in words
+
+Slap and pinch and starve our appetites
+
+Slave of existing conventions
+
+Slaves of the priests
+
+Sleepless night
+
+Slightest taste for comic analysis that
+does not tumble to farce
+
+Small beginnings, which are in reality
+the mighty barriers
+
+Small things producing great
+consequences
+
+Smallest of our gratifications in life
+could give a happy tone
+
+Smart remarks have their measured
+distances
+
+Smile she had in reserve for
+serviceable persons
+
+Smoky receptacle cherishing millions
+
+Smothered in its pudding-bed of the
+grotesque (obesity)
+
+Snatch her from a possessor who
+forfeited by undervaluing her
+
+Snuffle of hypocrisy in her prayer
+
+So the frog telleth tadpoles
+
+So it is when you play at Life! When
+you will not go straight
+
+So long as we do not know that we are
+performing any remarkable feat
+
+So says the minute Years are before
+you
+
+So indulgent when they drop their blot
+on a lady's character
+
+So much for morality in those days!
+
+So are great deeds judged when the
+danger's past (as easy)
+
+Socially and politically mean one thing
+in the end
+
+Soft slumber of a strength never yet
+called forth
+
+Solitude is pasturage for a suspicion
+
+Some so-called laws of honour
+
+Something of the hare in us when the
+hounds are full cry
+
+Sort of religion with her to believe no
+wrong of you
+
+South-western Island has few
+attractions to other than invalids
+
+Spare me that word "female" as long as
+you live
+
+Speech that has to be hauled from the
+depths usually betrays
+
+Speech is poor where emotion is extreme
+
+Speech was a scourge to her sense of
+hearing
+
+Spiritualism, and on the balm that it
+was
+
+Stand not in my way, nor follow me too
+far
+
+Startled by the criticism in laughter
+
+State of feverish patriotism
+
+Statesman who stooped to conquer fact
+through fiction
+
+Statistics are according to their
+conjurors
+
+Steady shakes them
+
+Story that she believed indeed, but had
+not quite sensibly felt
+
+Strain to see in the utter dark, and
+nothing can come of that
+
+Straining for common talk, and showing
+the strain
+
+Strength in love is the sole sincerity
+
+Strengthening the backbone for a bend
+of the knee in calamity
+
+Stultification of one's feelings and
+ideas
+
+Style is the mantle of greatness
+
+Style resembling either early
+architecture or utter dilapidation
+
+Subterranean recess for Nature against
+the Institutions of Man
+
+Such a man was banned by the world,
+which was to be despised?
+
+Suggestion of possible danger might
+more dangerous than silence
+
+Sunning itself in the glass of Envy
+
+Suspects all young men and most young
+women
+
+Suspicion was her best witness
+
+Sweet treasure before which lies a
+dragon sleeping
+
+Sweetest on earth to her was to be
+prized by her brother
+
+Swell and illuminate citizen prose to a
+princely poetic
+
+Sympathy is for proving, not prating
+
+Taint of the hypocrisy which comes with
+shame
+
+Take 'em somethin' like Providence&mdash;as
+they come
+
+Taking oath, as it were, by their lower
+nature
+
+Tale, which leaves the man's mind at
+home
+
+Task of reclaiming a bad man is
+extremely seductive to good women
+
+Taste a wound from the lightest touch,
+and they nurse the venom
+
+Tears of such a man have more of blood
+than of water in them
+
+Tears are the way of women and their
+comfort
+
+Tears that dried as soon as they had
+served their end
+
+Tears of men sink plummet-deep
+
+Telling her anything, she makes half a
+face in anticipation
+
+Tendency to polysyllabic phraseology
+
+Tenderness which Mrs. Mel permitted
+rather than encouraged
+
+Tension of the old links keeping us
+together
+
+Terrible decree, that all must act who
+would prevail
+
+That which fine cookery does for the
+cementing of couples
+
+That beautiful trust which habit gives
+
+That a mask is a concealment
+
+That fiery dragon, a beautiful woman
+with brains
+
+That sort of progenitor is your
+"permanent aristocracy"
+
+That plain confession of a lack of wit;
+he offered combat
+
+That is life&mdash;when we dare death to
+live!
+
+That pit of one of their dead silences
+
+That's the natural shamrock, after the
+artificial
+
+The exhaustion ensuing we named
+tranquillity
+
+The most dangerous word of all&mdash;ja
+
+The impalpable which has prevailing
+weight
+
+The world is wise in its way
+
+The danger of a little knowledge of
+things is disputable
+
+The infant candidate delights in his
+honesty
+
+The rider's too heavy for the horse in
+England
+
+The Pilgrim's Scrip remarks that: Young
+men take joy in nothing
+
+The tragedy of the mirror is one for a
+woman to write
+
+The worst of it is, that we remember
+
+The old confession, that we cannot
+cook (The English)
+
+The sentimentalists are represented by
+them among the civilized
+
+The born preacher we feel instinctively
+to be our foe
+
+The face of a stopped watch
+
+The banquet to be fervently remembered,
+should smoke
+
+The woman follows the man, and music
+fits to verse,
+
+The circle which the ladies of
+Brookfield were designing
+
+The majority, however, had been
+snatched out of this bliss
+
+The effects of the infinitely little
+
+The way is clear: we have only to take
+the step
+
+The devil trusts nobody
+
+The divine afflatus of enthusiasm
+buoyed her no longer
+
+The weighty and the trivial contended
+
+The backstairs of history (Memoirs)
+
+The defensive is perilous policy in war
+
+The family view is everlastingly the
+shopkeeper's
+
+The unhappy, who do not wish to live,
+and cannot die
+
+The homage we pay him flatters us
+
+The worst of omens is delay
+
+The people always wait for the winner
+
+The healthy only are fit to live
+
+The defensive is perilous policy in war
+
+The past is our mortal mother, no dead
+thing
+
+The wretch who fears death dies
+multitudinously
+
+The proper defence for a nation is its
+history
+
+The thought stood in her eyes
+
+The love that survives has strangled
+craving
+
+The grey furniture of Time for his
+natural wear
+
+The world without him would be heavy
+matter
+
+The despot is alert at every issue, to
+every chance
+
+The spending, never harvesting, world
+
+The shots hit us behind you
+
+The terrible aggregate social woman
+
+The next ten minutes will decide our
+destinies
+
+The woman side of him
+
+The good life gone lives on in the mind
+
+The beat of a heart with a dread like a
+shot in it
+
+The girl could not know her own mind,
+for she suited him exactly
+
+The critic that sneers
+
+The blindness of Fortune is her one
+merit
+
+The religion of this vast English
+middle-class&mdash;Comfort
+
+The slavery of the love of a woman
+chained
+
+The idea of love upon the lips of
+ordinary men, provoked Dahlia's irony
+
+The brainless in Art and in Statecraft
+
+The well of true wit is truth itself
+
+The debts we owe ourselves are the
+hardest to pay
+
+The greed of gain is our volcano
+
+The burlesque Irishman can't be
+caricatured
+
+The man had to be endured, like other
+doses in politics
+
+The greater wounds do not immediately
+convince us of our fate
+
+The system is cursed by nature, and
+that means by heaven
+
+The turn will come to us as to others&mdash;
+and go
+
+The woman seeking for an anomaly wants
+a master
+
+The language of party is eloquent
+
+The philosopher (I would keep him back
+if I could)
+
+The gallant cornet adored delicacy and
+a gilded refinement
+
+The sentimentalist goes on accumulating
+images
+
+The dismally-lighted city wore a look
+of Judgement terrible to see
+
+The kindest of men can be cruel
+
+The night went past as a year
+
+The social world he looked at did not
+show him heroes
+
+The overwise themselves hoodwink
+
+The king without his crown hath a
+forehead like the clown
+
+The curse of sorrow is comparison!
+
+The race is for domestic peace, my boy
+
+The divinely damnable naked truth won't
+wear ornaments
+
+The idol of the hour is the mob's
+wooden puppet
+
+The embraced respected woman
+
+The habit of the defensive paralyzes
+will
+
+The intricate, which she takes for the
+infinite
+
+The mildness of assured dictatorship
+
+The alternative is, a garter and the
+bedpost
+
+The ass eats at my table, and treats me
+with contempt
+
+The Countess dieted the vanity
+according to the nationality
+
+The letter had a smack of crabbed age
+hardly counterfeit
+
+The commonest things are the worst done
+
+The thrust sinned in its shrewdness
+
+The power to give and take flattery to
+any amount
+
+Their sneer withers
+
+Their not caring to think at all
+
+Their idol pitched before them on the
+floor
+
+Their hearts are eaten up by property
+
+Their way was down a green lane and
+across long meadow-paths
+
+Then for us the struggle, for him the
+grief
+
+Then, if you will not tell me
+
+There is little to be learnt when a
+little is known
+
+There is no history of events below the
+surface
+
+There is no first claim
+
+There is no step backward in life
+
+There is more in men and women than the
+stuff they utter
+
+There is no driver like stomach
+
+There were joy-bells for Robert and
+Rhoda, but none for Dahlia
+
+There is for the mind but one grasp of
+happiness
+
+There may be women who think as well as
+feel; I don't know them
+
+There are women who go through life not
+knowing love
+
+There's nothing like a metaphor for an
+evasion
+
+There's not an act of a man's life lies
+dead behind him
+
+There's ne'er a worse off but there's a
+better off
+
+They have no sensitiveness, we have too
+much
+
+They may know how to make themselves
+happy in their climate
+
+They dare not. The more I dare, the
+less dare they
+
+They have not to speak to exhibit their
+minds
+
+They had all noticed, seen, and
+observed
+
+They seem to me to be educated to
+conceal their education
+
+They miss their pleasure in pursuing it
+
+They could have pardoned her a younger
+lover
+
+They take fever for strength, and
+calmness for submission
+
+They are little ironical laughter&mdash;
+Accidents
+
+They have their thinking done for them
+
+They laugh, but they laugh
+extinguishingly
+
+They kissed coldly, pressed a hand,
+said good night
+
+They create by stoppage a volcano
+
+They want you to show them what they 'd
+like the world to be
+
+They, meantime, who had a contempt for
+sleep
+
+They believe that the angels have been
+busy about them
+
+They helped her to feel at home with
+herself
+
+They do not live; they are engines
+
+They're always having to retire and
+always hissing
+
+Things are not equal
+
+Things were lumpish and gloomy that day
+of the week
+
+Thirst for the haranguing of crowds
+
+This was a totally different case from
+the antecedent ones
+
+This mania of young people for
+pleasure, eternal pleasure
+
+This love they rattle about and rave
+about
+
+This girl was pliable only to service,
+not to grief
+
+This female talk of the eternities
+
+Those happy men who enjoy perceptions
+without opinions
+
+Those who know little and dread much
+
+Those days of intellectual coxcombry
+
+Those numerous women who always know
+themselves to be right
+
+Those whose humour consists of a
+readiness to laugh
+
+Those who have the careless chatter,
+the ready laugh
+
+Those who are rescued and made happy by
+circumstances
+
+Thought of differences with him caused
+frightful apprehensions
+
+Threatened powerful drugs for weak
+stomachs
+
+Threats of prayer, however, that harp
+upon their sincerity
+
+Thus does Love avenge himself on the
+unsatisfactory Past
+
+Thus are we stricken by the days of our
+youth
+
+Tight grasps of the hand, in which
+there was warmth and shyness
+
+Tighter than ever I was tight I'll be
+to-night
+
+Time and strength run to waste in
+retarding the inevitable
+
+Time is due to us, and the minutes are
+our gold slipping away
+
+Time, whose trick is to turn corners of
+unanticipated sharpness
+
+Times when an example is needed by
+brave men
+
+Tis the fashion to have our tattle done
+by machinery
+
+Tis the first step that makes a path
+
+Titles showered on the women who take
+free breath of air
+
+To be a really popular hero anywhere in
+Britain (must be a drinker)
+
+To hope, and not be impatient, is
+really to believe
+
+To males, all ideas are female until
+they are made facts
+
+To be both generally blamed, and
+generally liked
+
+To let people speak was a maxim of Mrs.
+Mel's, and a wise one
+
+To kill the deer and be sorry for the
+suffering wretch is common
+
+To be passive in calamity is the
+province of no woman
+
+To the rest of the world he was a
+progressive comedy
+
+To know how to take a licking, that
+wins in the end
+
+To have no sympathy with the playful
+mind is not to have a mind
+
+To time and a wife it is no disgrace
+for a man to bend
+
+To know that you are in England,
+breathing the same air with me
+
+To be her master, however, one must not
+begin by writhing as her slave
+
+To do nothing, is the wisdom of those
+who have seen fools perish
+
+To most men women are knaves or ninnies
+
+To beg the vote and wink the bribe
+
+Tongue flew, thought followed
+
+Too well used to defeat to believe
+readily in victory
+
+Too prompt, too full of personal relish
+of his point
+
+Too many time-servers rot the State
+
+Too weak to resist, to submit to an
+outrage quietly
+
+Too often hangs the house on one loose
+stone
+
+Took care to be late, so that all eyes
+beheld her
+
+Tooth that received a stone when it
+expected candy
+
+Top and bottom sin is cowardice
+
+Tossed him from repulsion to
+incredulity, and so back
+
+Touch him with my hand, before he
+passed from our sight
+
+Touch sin and you accommodate yourself
+to its vileness
+
+Touching a nerve
+
+Toyed with little flowers of palest
+memory
+
+Tradesman, and he never was known to
+have sent in a bill
+
+Trial of her beauty of a woman in a
+temper
+
+Trick for killing time without hurting
+him
+
+Tried to be honest, and was as much so
+as his disease permitted
+
+Troublesome appendages of success
+
+True love excludes no natural duty
+
+True enjoyment of the princely
+disposition
+
+Trust no man Still, this man may be
+better than that man
+
+Truth is, they have taken a stain from
+the life they lead
+
+Twice a bad thing to turn sinners loose
+
+Twisted by a nature that would not
+allow of open eyes
+
+Two wishes make a will
+
+Two principal roads by which poor
+sinners come to a conscience
+
+Two people love, there is no such thing
+as owing between them
+
+Unaccustomed to have his will thwarted
+
+Unanimous verdicts from a jury of
+temporary impressions
+
+Uncommon unprogressiveness
+
+Unfeminine of any woman to speak
+continuously anywhere
+
+Universal censor's angry spite
+
+Unseemly hour&mdash;unbetimes
+
+Unshamed exuberant male has found the
+sweet reverse in his mate
+
+Use your religion like a drug
+
+Utterance of generous and patriotic
+cries is not sufficient
+
+Vagrant compassionateness of
+sentimentalists
+
+Vanity maketh the strongest most weak
+
+Venerated by his followers, well hated
+by his enemies
+
+Venus of nature was melting into a
+Venus of art
+
+Very little parleying between
+determined men
+
+Vessel was conspiring to ruin our
+self-respect
+
+Victims of the modern feminine 'ideal'
+
+Violent summons to accept, which is a
+provocation to deny
+
+Virtue of impatience
+
+Virtuously zealous in an instant on
+behalf of the lovely dame
+
+Vowed never more to repeat that offence
+to his patience
+
+Vulgarity in others evoked vulgarity in
+her
+
+Wait till the day's ended before you
+curse your luck
+
+Waited serenely for the certain
+disasters to enthrone her
+
+Wakening to the claims of others&mdash;
+Youth's infant conscience
+
+Want of courage is want of sense
+
+War is only an exaggerated form of
+duelling
+
+Warm, is hardly the word&mdash;Winter's warm
+on skates
+
+Was I true? Not so very false, yet how
+far from truth!
+
+Was not one of the order whose Muse is
+the Public Taste
+
+Was born on a hired bed
+
+Watch, and wait
+
+We are, in short, a civilized people
+
+We shall not be rich&mdash;nor poor
+
+We could row and ride and fish and
+shoot, and breed largely
+
+We has long overshadowed "I"
+
+We are good friends till we quarrel
+again
+
+We are chiefly led by hope
+
+We have a system, not planned but grown
+
+We can bear to fall; we cannot afford
+to draw back
+
+We can't hope to have what should be
+
+We don't know we are in halves
+
+We must fawn in society
+
+We never see peace but in the features
+of the dead
+
+We live alone, and do not much feel it
+till we are visited
+
+We dare not be weak if we would
+
+We do not see clearly when we are
+trying to deceive
+
+We women can read men by their power to
+love
+
+We were unarmed, and the spectacle was
+distressing
+
+We trust them or we crush them
+
+We shall go together; we shall not have
+to weep for one another
+
+We make our taskmasters of those to
+whom we have done a wrong
+
+We cannot relinquish an idea that was
+ours
+
+We deprive all renegades of their
+spiritual titles
+
+We like well whatso we have done good
+work for
+
+We grew accustomed to periods of Irish
+fever
+
+We have come to think we have a claim
+upon her gratitude
+
+We must have some excuse, if we would
+keep to life
+
+We shall want a war to teach the
+country the value of courage
+
+We cannot, men or woman, control the
+heart in sleep at night
+
+We have now looked into the hazy
+interior of their systems
+
+We don't go together into a garden of
+roses
+
+We're treated like old-fashioned
+ornaments!
+
+We're all of us hit at last, and
+generally by our own weapon
+
+We're a peaceful people, but 'ware who
+touches us
+
+We're smitten to-day in our hearts and
+our pockets
+
+We've all a parlous lot too much pulpit
+in us
+
+Weak stomach is certainly more carnally
+virtuous than a full one
+
+Weak reeds who are easily vanquished
+and never overcome
+
+Weak souls are much moved by having the
+pathos on their side
+
+Weather and women have some resemblance
+they say
+
+Weighty little word&mdash;woman's native
+watchdog and guardian (No!)
+
+Welcomed and lured on an adversary to
+wild outhitting
+
+Well, sir, we must sell our opium
+
+Welsh blood is queer blood
+
+Went into endless invalid's laughter
+
+Were I chained, For liberty I would
+sell liberty
+
+What might have been
+
+What the world says, is what the wind
+says
+
+What will be thought of me? not a small
+matter to any of us
+
+What he did, she took among other
+inevitable matters
+
+What a stock of axioms young people
+have handy
+
+What a woman thinks of women, is the
+test of her nature
+
+What else is so consolatory to a ruined
+man?
+
+What was this tale of Emilia, that grew
+more and more perplexing
+
+What ninnies call Nature in books
+
+What a man hates in adversity is to see
+'faces'
+
+What's an eccentric? a child grown
+grey!
+
+When you run away, you don't live to
+fight another day
+
+When we see our veterans tottering to
+their fall
+
+When to loquacious fools with patience
+rare I listen
+
+When testy old gentlemen could commit
+slaughter with ecstasy
+
+When he's a Christian instead of a
+Churchman
+
+When Love is hurt, it is self-love that
+requires the opiate
+
+When duelling flourished on our land,
+frail women powerful
+
+When we despair or discolour things, it
+is our senses in revolt
+
+When you have done laughing with her,
+you can laugh at her
+
+Where fools are the fathers of every
+miracle
+
+Where one won't and can't, poor
+t' other must
+
+Where she appears, the first person
+falls to second rank
+
+Where heart weds mind, or nature joins
+intellect
+
+Where love exists there is goodness
+
+Whimpering fits you said we enjoy and
+must have in books
+
+Who venerate when they love
+
+Who cannot talk!&mdash;but who can?
+
+Who rises from Prayer a better man, his
+prayer is answered
+
+Who beguiles so much as Self?
+
+Who shrinks from an hour that is
+suspended in doubt
+
+Who in a labyrinth wandereth without
+clue
+
+Who enjoyed simple things when
+commanding the luxuries
+
+Who can really think, and not think
+hopefully?
+
+Who cries, Come on, and prays his gods
+you won't
+
+Who so intoxicated as the convalescent
+catching at health?
+
+Who shuns true friends flies fortune in
+the concrete
+
+Who ever loved that loved not at first
+sight?
+
+Whole body of fanatics combined to
+precipitate the devotion
+
+Whose bounty was worse to him than his
+abuse
+
+Why should these men take so much
+killing?
+
+Why, he'll snap your head off for a
+word
+
+Why he enjoyed the privilege of seeing,
+and was not beside her
+
+Wife and no wife, a prisoner in liberty
+
+Wilfrid perceived that he had become an
+old man
+
+Will not admit the existence of a
+virtue in an opposite opinion
+
+William John Fleming was simply a poor
+farmer
+
+Win you&mdash;temperately, let us hope; by
+storm, if need be
+
+Winds of panic are violently engaged in
+occupying the vacuum
+
+Wins everywhere back a reflection of
+its own kindliness
+
+Winter mornings are divine. They move
+on noiselessly
+
+Wise in not seeking to be too wise
+
+With that I sail into the dark
+
+With good wine to wash it down, one can
+swallow anything
+
+With what little wisdom the world is
+governed
+
+With death; we'd rather not, because of
+a qualm
+
+With one idea, we see nothing&mdash;nothing
+but itself
+
+With a frozen fish of admirable
+principles for wife
+
+With this money, said the demon, you
+might speculate
+
+With a proud humility
+
+Withdrew into the entrenchments of
+contempt
+
+Without a single intimation that he
+loathed the task
+
+Without those consolatory efforts,
+useless between men
+
+Wits, which are ordinarily less
+productive than land
+
+Wives are only an item in the list, and
+not the most important
+
+Woman descending from her ideal to the
+gross reality of man
+
+Woman will be the last thing civilized
+by Man
+
+Woman finds herself on board a
+rudderless vessel
+
+Woman's precious word No at the
+sentinel's post, and alert
+
+Women are wonderfully quick scholars
+under ridicule
+
+Women with brains, moreover, are all
+heartless
+
+Women are taken to be the second
+thoughts of the Creator
+
+Women don't care uncommonly for the men
+who love them
+
+Women must not be judging things out of
+their sphere
+
+Women and men are in two hostile camps
+
+Women treat men as their tamed
+housemates
+
+Women are swift at coming to
+conclusions in these matters
+
+Women are happier enslaved
+
+Won't do to be taking in reefs on a
+lee-shore
+
+Wonderment that one of her sex should
+have ideas
+
+Wooing her with dog's eyes instead of
+words
+
+Wooing a good man for his friendship
+
+Work of extravagance upon perceptibly
+plain matter
+
+Work is medicine
+
+World cannot pardon a breach of
+continuity
+
+World against us It will not keep us
+from trying to serve
+
+World is ruthless, dear friends,
+because the world is hypocrite
+
+World prefers decorum to honesty
+
+World voluntarily opens a path to those
+who step determinedly
+
+Would like to feel he was doing a bit
+of good
+
+Would he see what he aims at? let him
+ask his heels
+
+Wrapped in the comfort of his cowardice
+
+Writer society delights in, to show
+what it is composed of
+
+Yawns coming alarmingly fast, in the
+place of ideas
+
+Years are the teachers of the great
+rocky natures
+
+Yet, though Angels smile, shall not
+Devils laugh
+
+You accuse or you exonerate&mdash;Nobody can
+be half guilty
+
+You choose to give yourself to an
+obscure dog
+
+You rides when you can, and you walks
+when you must
+
+You talk your mother with a vengeance
+
+You do want polish
+
+You who may have cared for her through
+her many tribulations, have no fear
+
+You are entreated to repress alarm
+
+You beat me with the fists, but my
+spirit is towering
+
+You can master pain, but not doubt
+
+You are not married, you are simply
+chained
+
+You have not to be told that I desire
+your happiness above all
+
+You are to imagine that they know
+everything
+
+You may learn to know yourself through
+love
+
+You want me to flick your indecision
+
+You saw nothing but handkerchiefs out
+all over the theatre
+
+You played for gain, and that was a
+licenced thieving
+
+You'll have to guess at half of
+everything he tells you
+
+You'll tell her you couldn't sit down
+in her presence undressed
+
+You're the puppet of your women!
+
+You're talking to me, not to a gallery
+
+You're a rank, right-down widow, and no
+mistake
+
+You're going to be men, meaning
+something better than women
+
+You've got no friend but your bed
+
+Young as when she looked upon the
+lovers in Paradise
+
+Your devotion craves an enormous
+exchange
+
+Youth will not believe that stupidity
+and beauty can go together
+
+Youth is not alarmed by the sound of
+big sums
+</pre>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<p>If you wish to read the entire context of any of these quotations, select a short segment and
+copy it into your clipboard memory&mdash;then open the following eBook and paste the phrase
+into your computer's find or search operation.</p>
+<h3>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/4/5/0/4500/4500.txt">The Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith</a>
+</h3>
+
+
+<br>
+<blockquote><blockquote><blockquote>
+
+<p>These quotations were collected from sixteen volumes of George Meredith's works by
+<a href="mailto:widger@cecomet.net">David Widger</a> while preparing etexts
+for Project Gutenberg. Comments and suggestions will be most welcome.</p>
+
+
+</blockquote></blockquote></blockquote>
+
+
+
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br><br>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Quotes and Images From The Works of
+George Meredith, by George Meredith
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUOTES FROM MEREDITH ***
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+</pre>
+
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