Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Irony is the hygiene of the mind.
Seeing through is rarely seeing into.
We often call a certainty a hope, to bring it luck.
What an uncertain thing, marriage - what an elusive thing, happiness!
Blessed are those who give without remembering and take without forgetting.
Passion is no respecter of persons. She hardly seems to select her victims.
It is sometimes the man who opens the door who is the last to enter the room.
The half-hour of crowded anticipation, how fully it pays for the sterile hour that follows!
The Ten Commandments don't tell you what you ought to do: They only put ideas into your head.
There is something very independent about French balloons - you feel you couldn't make a pet of one.
Friendship is a difficult, dangerous job. It is also (though we rarely admit it) extremely exhausting.
Oh, youth is a wicked, cruel thing - eating miracles with its breakfast and not knowing they are not porridge.
To others we are not ourselves but performers in their lives cast for a part we do not even know we are playing.
A man who is available for lunch, has no wife, is interested in everything, and talks well is socially invaluable.
It is better not to sit on the grass after thirty when sprawling at all is difficult, let alone sprawling gracefully.
What you possess is not what you jingle in the pockets of your memory, but the imaginings with which you fill the spaces of the future.
Can one end anything? A chapter, a paragraph, a sentence even? Doesn't everything one has ever done go on living in spite of subsequent events?
Only the artists interest me whose hearts beat in unison with the poignant misery of the world. If you have not felt that, you have not lived. Pity is essential.
Isn't that what love means, to fill ordinary, commonplace, conventional things with magic and significance, not to need the moon and white scent-heavy flowers at night?
There is nothing in the world like health. Live cleanly, and the high thinking will look after itself - or at least won't matter. Physical condition - there's nothing like it.
I do not know at what moment in life, if ever, we realise that we are neither George Sands nor Juliets. Of course, if we are not beautiful, we recognise early that beauty is nothing.
To some people, the impossible is impossible. One fine day, they wake up in the morning knowing that they will never hold the moon in their hands, and with the certainty, perfect peace descends on them.
Why don't people take the trouble to let you know that they are alive? It is so much more important. The whole system is wrong. No sooner do I die, than all the flowers I have ever longed for in life pour in.
Happiness is a light, an atmosphere, an illumination. It sets a personality. I always feel that it is a creation that is difficult for some and easy for others, but essentially an achievement, never an accident.
All my life, I have loved balloons - all balloons - the heavy English sort, immense and round, that have to be pushed about, and the gay, light, gas-filled French ones that soar into the air the moment you let go of them.
The only thing that matters is to have charm and expression. Then comes that horrible gnawing doubt of our own magnetism. Is it possible that, though we are not lovely, we are not irresistible either? That we will have to go through life belonging neither to the triumphantly beautiful nor to the triumphantly ugly?