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Enid Bagnold Quotes

English author and playwright (b. 1889), Death: 31-3-1981 Enid Bagnold Quotes
1.
Who wants to become a writer? And why? Because it's the answer to everything. ... It's the streaming reason for living. To note, to pin down, to build up, to create, to be astonished at nothing, to cherish the oddities, to let nothing go down the drain, to make something, to make a great flower out of life, even if it's a cactus.
Enid Bagnold

2.
A father is always making his baby into a little woman. And when she is a woman he turns her back again.
Enid Bagnold

3.
I don't like people," said Velvet. "... I only like horses.
Enid Bagnold

4.
In marriage there are no manners to keep up, and beneath the wildest accusations no real criticism. Each is familiar with that ancient child in the other who may erupt again. We are not ridiculous to ourselves. We are ageless. That is the luxury of the wedding ring.
Enid Bagnold

5.
When a man goes through six years training to be a doctor he will never be the same. He knows too much.
Enid Bagnold

Similar Authors: William Shakespeare Rush Limbaugh Cassandra Clare Charles Spurgeon Deepak Chopra Stephen King George Bernard Shaw Winston Churchill Neil Gaiman Richelle Mead Jodi Picoult Francois de La Rochefoucauld Marianne Williamson Wayne Dyer Michel de Montaigne
6.
One's palate is reborn every morning!
Enid Bagnold

7.
The theatre is a gross art, built in sweeps and over-emphasis. Compromise is its second name.
Enid Bagnold

8.
Sex -- the great inequality, the great miscalculator, the great Irritator.
Enid Bagnold

Quote Topics by Enid Bagnold: People Sex Marriage Pain Morning Hands Age Death Years Lying Inspirational Thinking One Day Fear Everyday Men Wonderful Astonishment Heart Horse Lunch God Born Certain Oddities Birth Dog Used Pity Flirting
9.
Before you fall asleep everyday, say something positive to yourself.
Enid Bagnold

10.
It's not till sex has died out between a man and a woman that they can really love. And now I mean affection. Now I mean to be fond of (as one is fond of oneself) -to hope, to be disappointed, to live inside the other heart. When I look back on the pain of sex, the love like a wild fox so ready to bite, the antagonism that sits like a twin beside love, and contrast it with affection, so deeply unrepeatable, of two people who have lived a life together (and of whom one must die) it's the affection I find richer. It's that I would have again. Not all those doubtful rainbow colors.
Enid Bagnold

11.
One can lie, but truth is more interesting.
Enid Bagnold

12.
An only child is never twelve.
Enid Bagnold

13.
If a dog doesn't put you first where are you both? In what relation? A dog needs God. It lives by your glances, your wishes. It even shares your humor. This happens about the fifth year. If it doesn't happen you are only keeping an animal.
Enid Bagnold

14.
As for death, one gets used to it, even if it is only other people is death you get used to.
Enid Bagnold

15.
I am not a born writer, but I was born a writer.
Enid Bagnold

16.
I shall continue to explore-the astonishment of living.
Enid Bagnold

17.
You will be old-fashioned one day. It's more shocking than getting old.
Enid Bagnold

18.
Let this serve as an axiom to every lover: A woman who refuses lunch refuses everything.
Enid Bagnold

19.
It's not till sex has died out between a man and a woman that they can really love. And now I mean affection. Now I mean to be fond of (as one is fond of oneself) --to hope, to be disappointed, to live inside the other heart.
Enid Bagnold

20.
Judges don't age. Time decorates them.
Enid Bagnold

21.
The pleasure of one's effect on other people still exists in age - what's called making a hit. But the hit is much rarer and made of different stuff.
Enid Bagnold

22.
There may be wonder in money, but, dear God, there is money in wonder.
Enid Bagnold

23.
The Press blew, the public stared, hands flew out like a million little fishes after bread.
Enid Bagnold

24.
Marriage. The beginning and the end are wonderful. But the middle part is hell.
Enid Bagnold

25.
But I had been in love pretty often and I didn't think it stood the wear and tear.
Enid Bagnold

26.
Dead news like dead love has no phoenix in its ashes.
Enid Bagnold

27.
if death becomes cheap it is the watcher, not the dying, who is poisoned.
Enid Bagnold

28.
Why do birds sing in the morning? It's the triumphant shout: 'We got through another night!'
Enid Bagnold

29.
After forty years of marriage we still stood with broken swords in our hands.
Enid Bagnold

30.
The dangerous thing about hate is that it seems so reasonable.
Enid Bagnold

31.
From birth to death we are alone.
Enid Bagnold

32.
Things come suitable to the time.
Enid Bagnold

33.
Pity is exhaustible. What a terrible discovery!
Enid Bagnold

34.
One never knows when one is old for certain.
Enid Bagnold

35.
Isn't the fear of pain next brother to pain itself?
Enid Bagnold