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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—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—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—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—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—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—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—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—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—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—is the +alternative of despair + +Convict it by instinct without the +ceremony of a jury + +Convictions we store—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—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—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—Keep +your tears for the living + +Good maxim for the wrathful—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—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—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—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—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—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—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—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—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—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— +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—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—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—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—be dumb! + +Let but the throb be kept for others— +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—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—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— +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—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—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—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— +which draws the heart? + +On a wild April morning + +Once my love? said he. Not now?—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—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— +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—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— +leap + +She was at liberty to weep if she +pleased + +She felt in him a maker of facts + +She was not his match—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—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—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—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—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— +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— +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—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— +Youth's infant conscience + +Want of courage is want of sense + +War is only an exaggerated form of +duelling + +Warm, is hardly the word—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—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—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!—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—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—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—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—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. 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