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Marie Corelli Quotes

Marie Corelli Quotes
1.
I never married because there was no need. I have three pets at home which answer the same purpose as a husband. I have a dog which growls every morning, a parrot which swears all afternoon, and a cat that comes home late at night.
Marie Corelli

2.
Such lovely warmth of thought and delicacy of colour are beyond all praise, and equally beyond all thanks!
Marie Corelli

3.
Let me be mad, then, by all means! mad with the madness of Absinthe, the wildest, most luxurious madness in the world! Vive la folie! Vive l'amour! Vive l'animalisme! Vive le Diable!
Marie Corelli

4.
You should always be well and bright, for so you do your best work; and you have so much beautiful work to do. The world needs it, and you must give it!
Marie Corelli

5.
Nothing gives small minds a better handle for hatred than superiority.
Marie Corelli

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.
Flowers are like visible messages from God.
Marie Corelli

7.
No one is contented in this world, I believe. There is always something left to desire, and the last thing longed for always seems the most necessary to happiness.
Marie Corelli

8.
Wealth acts merely as a kind of mirror to show you human nature at its worst.
Marie Corelli

Quote Topics by Marie Corelli: Men Thinking Giving World Special Truth Church Spiritual Wealth Love Writing Mean Heart Two Envy Opinion Seems Secret Wedding Life Beautiful Desire Work Messages Used Hunting Funny Kids Believe Poetry
9.
There is no wealth but love.
Marie Corelli

10.
The Church is a system, - but whether it is as much founded on the teaching of our Lord, who was divine, as on the teaching of St. Paul, who was not divine, is a question to me of much perplexity.
Marie Corelli

11.
Great Poets discover themselves. Little Poets have to be 'discovered' by somebody else.
Marie Corelli

12.
Nothing is so deceptive as human reasoning, - nothing so slippery and reversible as what we have decided to call 'logic.' The truest compass of life is spiritual instinct.
Marie Corelli

13.
Love, if it be love indeed, asks no permission as to where it shall seek vantage ground or gain its victory - it is of all powers the most unfettered and the one which takes the widest course of largest liberty.
Marie Corelli

14.
religion is poetry, - poetry is religion.
Marie Corelli

15.
What a fool cannot learn he laughs at, thinking that by his laughter he shows superiority instead of latent idiocy.
Marie Corelli

16.
Fame, or notoriety, whichever that special noise may be called when the world like a hound 'gives tongue' and announces that the quarry in some form of genius is at bay, is apt to increase its clamor in proportion to the aloofness of the pursued animal.
Marie Corelli

17.
the world is not always kind to a clever woman even when she is visibly known to be earning her own living. There are always spiteful tongues wagging in the secret corners and byways, ready to assert that her work is not her own and and that some man is in the background, helping to keep her!
Marie Corelli

18.
Pleasure for others is the only pleasure possible to me. I assure you I'm quite selfish! - I'm greedy for the happiness of those I love - and if they can't or won't be happy I'm perfectly miserable.
Marie Corelli

19.
When one loves God better than the Church is one called a heretic?
Marie Corelli

20.
Love clamors far more incessantly and passionately at a closed gate than an open one!
Marie Corelli

21.
Greatness is always envied - it is only mediocrity that can boast of a host of friends.
Marie Corelli

22.
Years should be nothing to you. Who asked you to count them or consider them? In the world of wild Nature, time is measured by seasons only-the bird does not know how old it is-the rose-tree does not count its birthdays!
Marie Corelli

23.
nobody ever intends to be old.
Marie Corelli

24.
There is nothing so depressing as a constant contemplation of one's self, and the greatest moral cowardice in the world's opinion comes from consulting one's own personal convenience.
Marie Corelli

25.
For though there never was so much reading matter put before the public, there was never less actual 'reading' in the truest and highest sense of the term than there is at present.
Marie Corelli

26.
work is happiness. No one can take my work from me and therefore no one can take my happiness from me.
Marie Corelli

27.
How foolish it would be if women did not obey men. The world would be all confusion!
Marie Corelli

28.
Fancy your having no sunshine in London yesterday! Here it was glorious, like full summer, and I sat up with the window wide open, listening to the discourse of two amorous thrushes.
Marie Corelli

29.
There is nothing so inconvenient in this world as an absolutely truthful person, who can both speak and write, and has the courage of his convictions. One can always arrange matters with liars ... But with the man or woman who holds truth dearer than life, and honor more valuable than advancement, there is nothing to be done, now that governments cannot insist on the hemlock-cure, as in the case of Socrates.
Marie Corelli

30.
What was the use of trying to expound a truth, if the majority preferred a lie?
Marie Corelli

31.
An opinion which excites no opposition at all is not worth having!
Marie Corelli

32.
I attribute my good fortune to the simple fact that I have always tried to write straight from my own heart to the hearts of others.
Marie Corelli

33.
It is not so difficult to win love as to keep it!
Marie Corelli

34.
Hate is a grand, a strong quality! It makes nations, it builds up creeds! If men loved one another what should they need of a Church?
Marie Corelli

35.
There is no Death,/What seems so is transition.
Marie Corelli

36.
Imagination is the supreme endowment of the poet and romanticist. It is a kind of second sight, which conveys the owner of it to places he has never seen, and surrounds him with strange circumstances of which he is merely the spiritual eyewitness.
Marie Corelli

37.
If we choose to be no more than clods of clay, then we shall be used as clods of clay for braver feet to tread on.
Marie Corelli

38.
I must not say what I truly think, or you will tell me I flatter you-but I can only speak what I feel-and very often I cannot even do that when the feeling is very deep.
Marie Corelli

39.
One of the advantages or disadvantages of the way in which we live in these modern days is that we are ceasing to feel. That is to say we do not permit ourselves to be affected by either death or misfortune, provided these natural calamities leave our own persons unscathed.
Marie Corelli

40.
Education! Is it education to teach the young that their chances of happiness depend on being richer than their neighbors? Yet that is what it all tends to. Get on! - be successful!
Marie Corelli

41.
the beginning of my history is - love. It is the beginning of every man and every woman's history, if they are only frank enough to admit it.
Marie Corelli

42.
And out of heart's pain comes heart's peace; and out of desire, accomplishment.
Marie Corelli

43.
Art is sexless; - good work is eternal, no matter whether it is man or woman who has accomplished it. ... Ah, but the world will never own woman's work to be great even if it be so, because men give the verdict, and man's praise is for himself and his own achievements always.
Marie Corelli

44.
A fine morning's killing, ay! All their necks wrung - all dead birds! Once they could fly - fly and swim! Fly and swim! All dead now - and sold cheap in the open market!
Marie Corelli

45.
in my opinion, the Divine is revealed to all men once at least in their lives.
Marie Corelli

46.
Patriotism is understood to be that virtue which consists in serving one's country; but in what way is this 'Patria' or country served by slaying its able bodied men in thousands?
Marie Corelli

47.
The Browning love story? It is an ideal, all too rare, and yet I hardly think it strange. It would have been far stranger had the fates allowed those two brilliant passionate souls to beat themselves out in silence.
Marie Corelli

48.
A criminal is twice a criminal when he adds hypocrisy to his crime.
Marie Corelli

49.
it seems a silly kind o' business to bring us into the world at all for no special reason 'cept to take us out of it again just as folks 'ave learned to know us a bit and find us useful.
Marie Corelli

50.
The Press nowadays is not a literary press; classic diction and brilliancy of style do not distinguish it by any means.
Marie Corelli