43 Quotes by Ada Leverson

  • Author Ada Leverson
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    Some men are born husbands; they have a passion for domesticity, for a fireside, for a home. Yet, curiously, these men very rarely stay at home. Apparently what they want is to have a place to get away from.

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  • Author Ada Leverson
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    It's always something to get one's wish, even if the wish is a failure.

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  • Author Ada Leverson
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    A morbid propensity that causes great suffering in domestic life is often curiously infectious to the very person for whom it creates most suffering.

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  • Author Ada Leverson
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    When a passion is not realized ... it fades away, or becomes ideal worship--Dante--Petrarch--that sort of thing!

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  • Author Ada Leverson
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    As a rule the person found out in a betrayal of love holds, all the same, the superior position of the two. It is the betrayed one who is humiliated.

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  • Author Ada Leverson
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    It is all very well to say that children are happier with mud pies and rag dolls than with these elaborate delights. There may be something in this theory, but when their amusements are carried to such a point of luxurious and imaginative perfection it certainly gives them great and even unlimited enjoyment at the time.

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  • Author Ada Leverson
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    The marvellous instinct with which women are usually credited seems too often to desert them on the only occasions when it would be of any real use. One would say it was there for trivialities only, since in a crisis they are usually dense, fatally doing the wrong thing. It is hardly too much to say that most domestic tragedies are caused by the feminine intuition of men and the want of it in women.

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  • Author Ada Leverson
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    To a woman--I mean, a nice woman--there is no such thing as men. There is a man; and either she is so fond of him that she can talk of nothing else, however unfavourably, or so much in love with him that she never mentions his name.

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  • Author Ada Leverson
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    Looking at the poems of John Gray when I saw the tiniest rivulet of text meandering through the very largest meadow of margin, I suggested to Oscar Wilde that he should go a step further than these minor poets; he should publish a book all margin; full of beautiful, unwritten thoughts.

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