1.
If you have been sunned through and through like an apricot on a wall from your earliest days, you are oversensitive to any withdrawal of heat.
Margot Asquith
2.
She tells enough white lies to ice a wedding cake.
Margot Asquith
3.
I have been devoured all my life by an incurable and burning impatience: and to this day find all oratory, biography, operas, films, plays, books, and persons, too long.
Margot Asquith
4.
His modesty amounts to deformity.
Margot Asquith
5.
It is easier to influence strong than weak characters in life.
Margot Asquith
6.
Stafford Cripps has a brilliant mind, until he makes it up.
Margot Asquith
7.
The capacity to suffer varies more than anything that I have observed in human nature.
Margot Asquith
8.
He's very clever, but sometimes his brains go to his head.
Margot Asquith
9.
My father's nature turned out no waste product; he had none of that useless stuff in him that lies in heaps near factories. He took his own happiness with him.
Margot Asquith
10.
He couldn't see a belt without hitting below it.
Margot Asquith
11.
From the happy expression on their faces you might have supposed that they welcomed the war. I have met with men who loved stamps, and stones, and snakes, but I could not imagine any man loving war.
Margot Asquith
12.
[On spiritualism:] I always knew the living talked rot, but it's nothing to the rot the dead talk.
Margot Asquith
13.
The first element of greatness is fundamental humbleness (this should not be confused with servility); the second is freedom from self; the third is intrepid courage, which, taken in its widest interpretation, generally goes with truth; and the fourth-the power of love-although I have put it last, is the rarest.
Margot Asquith
14.
Symbols are the imaginative signposts of life.
Margot Asquith
15.
Lloyd George? There is no Lloyd George. There is a marvellous brain; but if you were to shut him in a room and look through the keyhole there would be nobody there.
Margot Asquith
16.
Although I am not stupid, the mathematical side of my brain is like dumb notes upon a damaged piano.
Margot Asquith
17.
To marry a man out of pity is folly; and, if you think you are going to influence the kind of fellow who has never had a chance, poor devil, you are profoundly mistaken. One can only influence the strong characters in life, not the weak; and it is the height of vanity to suppose that you can make an honest man of anyone.
Margot Asquith
18.
There are some people that you cannot change, you must either swallow them whole or leave them alone.
Margot Asquith
19.
Rich men's houses are seldom beautiful, rarely comfortable, and never original. It is a constant source of surprise to people of moderate means to observe how little a big fortune contributes to Beauty.
Margot Asquith
20.
There are big men, men of intellect, intellectual men, men of talent and men of action; but the great man is difficult to find, and it needs --apart from discernment --a certain greatness to find him.
Margot Asquith
21.
All I can say about my mind is that, like a fire carefully laid by a good housemaid, it is one that any match will light.
Margot Asquith
22.
[To her host upon leaving a party:] Don't think it hasn't been charming, because it hasn't.
Margot Asquith
23.
I have always wanted to be a man, if only for the reason that I would like to have gauged the value of my intellect.
Margot Asquith
24.
She spends her day powdering her face till she looks like a bled pig.
Margot Asquith
25.
Truthfulness with me is hardly a virtue. I cannot discriminate between truths that and those that don't need to be told.
Margot Asquith
26.
The ingrained idea that, because there is no king and they despise titles, the Americans are a free people is pathetically untrue. . . . There is a perpetual interference with personal liberty over there that would not be tolerated in England for a week.
Margot Asquith
27.
The Bible tells us to forgive our enemies, not our friends
Margot Asquith
28.
You can do something with talent, but nothing with genius.
Margot Asquith
29.
Rumor is untraceable, incalculable, and infectious.
Margot Asquith
30.
I have no face, only two profiles clapped together.
Margot Asquith
31.
The spirit is an inward flame; a lamp the world blows upon but never puts out.
Margot Asquith
32.
It is not dying, but living, that is a preparation for Death.
Margot Asquith
33.
the announcement that you are going to tell a good story (and the chuckle that precedes it) is always a dangerous opening.
Margot Asquith
34.
I do not say I was ever what I would call "plain," but I have the sort of face that bores me when I see it on other people.
Margot Asquith
35.
There is nothing more perplexing in life than to know at what point you should surrender your intellect to your faith.
Margot Asquith
36.
Haunted from my early youth by the transitoriness and pathos of life, I was aware that it is not enough to say "I am doing no harm," I ought to be testing myself daily, and asking myself what I am really achieving.
Margot Asquith
37.
[To Jean Harlow, who repeatedly mispronounced her first name:] No, no, Jean. The t is silent, as in Harlow.
Margot Asquith
38.
Too much brilliance has its disadvantages, and misplaced wit may raise a laugh, but often beheads a topic of profound interest.
Margot Asquith
39.
The Almighty is a wonderful handicapper: He will not give us everything.
Margot Asquith
40.
Till I see money spent on the betterment of man instead of on his idleness and destruction, I shall not believe in any perfect form of government.
Margot Asquith
41.
Convictions no doubt have to be modified or expanded to meet changing conditions but ... to be a reliable political leader sooner or later your anchors must hold fast where other men's drag.
Margot Asquith
42.
It is always dangerous to generalize, but the American people, while infinitely generous, are a hard and strong race and, but for the few cemeteries I have seen, I am inclined to think they never die.
Margot Asquith
43.
What a pity, when Christopher Colombus discovered America, that he ever mentioned it.
Margot Asquith
44.
My sort of looks are of the kind that bore me when I see them on other people.
Margot Asquith
45.
My dear old friend King George V told me he would never have died but for that vile doctor, Lord Dawson of Penn.
Margot Asquith
46.
I was born in the country of Hogg and Scott between the Yarrow and the Tweed, in the year 1864.
Margot Asquith
47.
The power to love what is purely abstract is given to few.
Margot Asquith
48.
If Kitchener was not a great man, he was, at least, a great poster.
Margot Asquith
49.
[On Austen Chamberlain:] He is more loyal to his friends than to his convictions.
Margot Asquith