816 Quotes by Robert Louis Stevenson
- Author Robert Louis Stevenson
-
Quote
Here it is about gentlemen of fortune. They lives rough, and they risk swinging, but they eat and drink like fighting-cocks, and when a cruise is done, why, it’s hundreds of pounds instead of hundreds of farthings in their pockets.
- Share
- Author Robert Louis Stevenson
-
Quote
Mutiny, it was plain, hung over us like a thunder-cloud.
- Share
- Author Robert Louis Stevenson
-
Quote
The hamlet lay not many hundred yards away, though out of view, on the other side of the next cove; and what greatly encouraged me, it was in an opposite direction from that whence the blind man had made his appearance and whither he had presumably returned. We were not many minutes on the road, though we sometimes stopped to lay hold of each other and hearken. But there was no unusual sound – nothing but the low wash of the ripple and the croaking of the inmates of the wood.
- Share
- Author Robert Louis Stevenson
-
Quote
The bourgeoisie’s weapon is starvation. If as a writer or artist you run counter to their narrow notions they simplyand silently withdraw your means of subsistence. I sometimes wonder how many people of talent are executed in this way every year.
- Share
- Author Robert Louis Stevenson
-
Quote
Blows the wind to-day, and the sun and the rain are flying, Blows the wind on the moors to-day and now, Where about the graves of the martyrs the whaups are crying, My heart remembers how!
- Share
- Author Robert Louis Stevenson
-
Quote
The dismal quarter of Soho seen under these changing glimpses, with its muddy ways, and slatternly passengers, and its lamps, which had never been extinguished or had been kindled afresh to combat this mournful reinvasion of darkness, seemed, in the lawyer’s eyes, like a district of some city in a nightmare.
- Share
- Author Robert Louis Stevenson
-
Quote
You can’t begin and then stop. If you begin, you must keep on beginning: that’s the truth. No rest for the wicked.
- Share
- Author Robert Louis Stevenson
-
Quote
I feel very strongly about putting questions; it partakes too much of the style of the day of judgment.
- Share
- Author Robert Louis Stevenson
-
Quote
If we take matrimony at it’s lowest, we regard it as a sort of friendship recognised by the police.
- Share