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Jilly Cooper Quotes

Jilly Cooper Quotes
1.
Never drink black coffee at lunch; it will keep you awake all afternoon.
Jilly Cooper

2.
The male - I have found - is a domestic animal which, if treated with firmness and kindness, can be trained to do most things.
Jilly Cooper

3.
I have a theory that the secret of marital happiness is simple: drink in different pubs to your other half.
Jilly Cooper

4.
People always assume that bachelors are single by choice and spinsters because nobody asked them. It never enters their heads that poor bachelors might have worn the knees of their trousers out proposing to girls who rejected them or that a girl might deliberately stay unmarried.
Jilly Cooper

5.
Youve simply got to go on and on with your family and friends and tell them how much you love them because you never know whether theyll be there tomorrow, do you?
Jilly Cooper

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.
At home I have big vats of cabbage soup that I make to slim down.
Jilly Cooper

7.
For sheer sexiness, a man must be beautiful. Funny. yes. Clever, no.
Jilly Cooper

8.
I live at home and, if I want to start work at 11 o'clock, I can.
Jilly Cooper

Quote Topics by Jilly Cooper: Work Men Book People Office Writing Home Years Thinking Kindness Cooks Persons Party Cabbage Women Secret Jobs Cocktail Parties Forget Finding Yourself Different Bored More Time Diaries Morning Coffee Reading My Own Today England
9.
Leo, sadly, has Parkinsons, but he used to cook all sorts of dazzling things.
Jilly Cooper

10.
I think we ought to have a kindness year, or a kindness century.
Jilly Cooper

11.
I'd never have written the big books in London.
Jilly Cooper

12.
If you feel compelled to give a New Year's Eve party, don't invite people to arrive too early or they'll go off the boil before midnight.
Jilly Cooper

13.
People who can write a book usually do.
Jilly Cooper

14.
I love the long grass coming up to meet the willows.
Jilly Cooper

15.
I was so flattered that someone wanted me to write a book, I said I would. It was published in 1969.
Jilly Cooper

16.
it's a good idea to wait a few months before joining anything when you arrive at a village. A bookseller friend who retired to nearby Oxfordshire, and was worried he might be bored, got himself on to every village committee in the first six months, and spent the next ten years extricating himself.
Jilly Cooper

17.
And I would really like to be a grandmother, but only when Felix or Emily meet the right person and are ready.
Jilly Cooper

18.
I'm basically a very happy person and I don't have to be anybody else.
Jilly Cooper

19.
Without doubt, keep a diary. From the day you're born, keep a diary, because we all forget things so quickly.
Jilly Cooper

20.
I think it bespeaks a generous nature, a man who can cook.
Jilly Cooper

21.
I can assure you that the class system is alive and well and living in people's minds in England.
Jilly Cooper

22.
The letter of application ... should be a masterpiece of fiction, papering over all the cracks. Get it properly typed on decent writing paper. Never let it run over the page, people get bored with reading.
Jilly Cooper

23.
There is something infinitely dingy about the word workshop. Pray that England doesn't become a nation of workshopkeepers.
Jilly Cooper

24.
in a village you can't sack or fight with someone, as you'll find yourself stuck beside them in the hairdresser's next morning.
Jilly Cooper

25.
Always be nice to everyone in the firm on the way up. You never know who you may meet on the way down.
Jilly Cooper

26.
I wrote my earliest piece for The Sunday Times about being a young wife.
Jilly Cooper

27.
It must be a terrible pressure to have to go to the office.
Jilly Cooper

28.
There is nothing more attractive than a man who is not a New Man.
Jilly Cooper

29.
My own parents loved each other very much.
Jilly Cooper

30.
I would really like to spend more time with the family. Every time I go abroad I miss them all dreadfully.
Jilly Cooper

31.
Meetings ... are rather like cocktail parties. You don't want to go, but you're cross not to be asked.
Jilly Cooper

32.
But I always seem to finish a book and then think, oh God, I've got to pay a tax bill, so I'd better write a novel, so I tend not to stop and learn word processing.
Jilly Cooper

33.
The only thing a whirlwind courtship does is blow dust in everyone's eyes.
Jilly Cooper

34.
I'm not wild about holidays. They always seem a ludicrously expensive way of proving there's no place like home.
Jilly Cooper

35.
Although it is the biggest time-waster in office life, you must never underrate the importance of the memo. You will be judged by the volume of your paper work.
Jilly Cooper

36.
The aristocrat, when he wants to, has very good manners. The Scottish upper classes, in particular, have that shell-shocked look that probably comes from banging their heads on low beams leaping to their feet whenever a woman comes into the room. Aristocrats are also deeply male chauvinist, and ... on the whole they tend to be reactionary.
Jilly Cooper

37.
A lot of meetings are held to arrange when to have meetings. ... Meetings today are usually called conferences to make them sound more significant.
Jilly Cooper

38.
hurting other people is not excusable because you've been hurt yourself.
Jilly Cooper

39.
Bachelors begin at thirty-six. Up till this age they are regarded as single men.
Jilly Cooper

40.
The memo's chief function ... is as a track-coverer, so that you can turn on someone six months later and snarl: 'Well, you should have known about it, I sent you a memo.
Jilly Cooper

41.
Go to lots of interviews, at least one a month even when you don't need a job, to keep in training for when you do.
Jilly Cooper

42.
But really I'm not terribly interested in what I eat.
Jilly Cooper