114 Quotes by Harriet Martineau
- Author Harriet Martineau
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There have been few things in my life which have had a more genial effect on my mind than the possession of a piece of land.
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I am sure that no traveler seeing things through author spectacles can see them as they are.
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Men who pass most comfortably through this world are those who possess good digestions and hard hearts.
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The progression of emancipation of any class usually, if not always,takes place through the efforts of individuals of that class.
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if I believed that the choice lay between a sacrifice of the completest order of biography and that of the inviolability of private epistolary correspondence, I could not hesitate for a moment. I would keep the old and precious privacy,-the inestimable right of every one who has a friend and can write to him, - I would keep our written confidence from being made biographical material, as anxiously as I would keep our spoken conversation from being noted down for the good of society.
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Day-thoughts feed nightly dreams; And sorrow tracketh wrong, As echo follows song.
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Must love be ever treated with profaneness as a mere illusion? or with coarseness as a mere impulse? or with fear as a mere disease? or with shame as a mere weakness? or with levity as a mere accident? whereas it is a great mystery and a great necessity, lying at the foundation of human existence, morality, and happiness,--mysterious, universal, inevitable as death.
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School is no place of education for any children whatever till their minds are well put in action. This is the work which has to be done at home, and which may be done in all homes where the mother is a sensible woman.
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I certainly never believed, more or less, in the "essential doctrines" of Christianity, which represent God as the predestinator of men to sin and perdition, and Christ as their rescuer from that doom. I never was more or less behuiled by the trickery of language by which the perdition of man is made out to be justice, and his redemption to be mercy.
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