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Geraldine Jewsbury Quotes

1.
Did you ever see a giraffe? It is like something from between the regions of truth and fiction.
Geraldine Jewsbury

2.
There is no wisdom equal to that which comes after the event.
Geraldine Jewsbury

3.
Love ... is a sacred fire that must not be burnt to idols.
Geraldine Jewsbury

4.
People always make mistakes when they fancy themselves exceptions.
Geraldine Jewsbury

5.
society ... is tolerant of crimes, and long suffering with dullness, but it shows no mercy to those who are different from other people.
Geraldine Jewsbury

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
men change less than is imagined; their after life is only a kaleidescope combination of the elements of their character at the period of adolescence.
Geraldine Jewsbury

7.
I wish there were some photographic process by which one's mind could be struck off and transferred to that of the friend we wish to know it, without the medium of this confounded letter-writing!
Geraldine Jewsbury

8.
But have you never noticed that when one has been trying to do something really good one is much nearer committing some special sin than when one keeps on in the selfish, matter-of-fact prudence of minding one's own business, and that alone?
Geraldine Jewsbury

Quote Topics by Geraldine Jewsbury: People Wish Years Fancy Expectations Special Littles Wisdom Believe Giraffe Writing Animal Folly Fire Death Life Is Lasts Men Evil Long Accomplishment Mistake Selfish Events Trying Religion History Mind Reproach Fiction
9.
Our wishes never seem so little desirable as when on the verge of accomplishment; we draw back instinctively, they look so different from what we expected.
Geraldine Jewsbury

10.
What would become of the world without the Devil? Under all the different systems of religion that have guided or misguided the world for the last six thousand years, the Devil has been the grand scapegoat. He has had to bear the blame of every thing that has gone wrong. All the evil that gets committed is laid to his door, and he has, besides, the credit of hindering all the good that has never got done at all. If mankind were not thus one and all victims to the Devil, what an irredeemable set of scoundrels they would be obliged to confess themselves!
Geraldine Jewsbury

11.
Death is the last fact of which we can be certain.
Geraldine Jewsbury

12.
One's conscience reproaches one much more stingingly for one's follies than one's crimes.
Geraldine Jewsbury

13.
Whilst you live a very little religion seems enough; but believe me, it requires a great deal when you come to die.
Geraldine Jewsbury