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Miles Franklin Quotes

Miles Franklin Quotes
1.
Someone to tell it to is one of the fundamental needs of human beings.
Miles Franklin

2.
It's a sign of your own worth sometimes if you are hated by the right people.
Miles Franklin

3.
When all is said and done, friendship is the only trustworthy fabric of the affections. So-called LOVE is a delirious inhuman state of mind: when hot it substitutes indulgence for fair play; when cold it is cruel, but friendship is warmth in cold, firm ground in a bog.
Miles Franklin

4.
there is a law of retribution in all things, direct or indirect, visible or invisible.
Miles Franklin

5.
Women can always think as much as they like, an' they could get up on a platform an' talk till they bust, as long as they didn't want the world to be made no better, an' they wouldn't be thought unwomanly. It's soon as a woman wants any practical good done that she is considered a unwomanly creature.
Miles Franklin

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.
To grow up in intimate association with nature - animal and vegetable - is an irreplaceable form of wealth and culture.
Miles Franklin

7.
Our greatest heart-treasure is a knowledge that there is in creation an individual to whom our existence is necessary - some one who is part of our life as we are part of theirs, some one in whose life we feel assured our death would leave a gap for a day or two.
Miles Franklin

8.
Men always say there is no female Shakespeare.' 'Humph! You study the fellows who say that, and you'll see they are a long way from being Shakespeares themselves. Why shouldn't women have the same privilege?
Miles Franklin

Quote Topics by Miles Franklin: Men People Art Thinking Two Would Be Long Age Heart Mother Children Clever Design Atheism Sometimes Indirect Earthquakes Smile Law Sparks Cheer Coward Relationship Sadness May Mean Desire Wind Office Fleeting
9.
If the souls of lives were voiced in music, there are some that none but a great organ could express, others the clash of a full orchestra, a few to which nought but the refined and exquisite sadness of a violin could do justice. Many might be likened unto common pianos, jangling and out of tune, and some to the feeble piping of a penny whistle, and mine could be told with a couple of nails in a rusty tin-pot.
Miles Franklin

10.
Heed the spark or you may dread the fire.
Miles Franklin

11.
Civilization, stretching up to recognize that every child is a portion of State wealth, may presently make some movement to recognize maternity as a business or office needing time and strength, not as a mere passing detail thrown in among mountains of other slavery.
Miles Franklin

12.
Girls! Girls! Those of you who have hearts, and therefore a wish for happiness, homes and husbands by and by, never develop a reputation for being clever.
Miles Franklin

13.
It is the highest form of culture and craftmanship in art to use local materials. That way you stand a chance of adding to culture. The other way you are in danger of merely imitating it.
Miles Franklin

14.
My mother is a good woman - a very good woman - and I am, I think, not quite all criminality, but we do not pull together. I am a piece of machinery which, not understanding, my mother winds up the wrong way, setting all the wheels of my composition going in creaking discord.
Miles Franklin

15.
There are only two kinds of parents. Those who think their offspring can do nothing wrong, and those who think they can do nothing right.
Miles Franklin

16.
Every now and again it would be considered wholesome for me to be more with people of my own age. Demotion to such company was a sapless exile. Their inanity was insufferable.
Miles Franklin

17.
In the career of a prodigy there invariably comes a time when it is compelled to relinquish being very clever for a child, and has to enter the business of life in competition with adults.
Miles Franklin

18.
I early became conscious that men breathe more audibly than women. Sit in a room in silence with men and women, and you can always hear the men breathing.
Miles Franklin

19.
Grandpa ... was ever ready to cheer and help me, ever sure that I was a remarkable specimen. He was a dear old man who asked little from life and got less.
Miles Franklin

20.
... no problem except old age ever vanquished my mother.
Miles Franklin

21.
... we each have our fleeting hour.
Miles Franklin

22.
I never can see why they make such a fuss and get so frightened because wimmen does a thing or two now they usedn't to. Nothing short of a earthquake can make them not men an' wimmmen, an' that's the main thing.
Miles Franklin

23.
Bravely you jog along with the rope of class distinction drawing closer, close, tighter, tighter around you... I see it and know it, but I cannot help you... I am only an unnecessary, little, bush commoner, I am only a - woman.
Miles Franklin

24.
All is egotism. The only people whose mainspring is not egotism are the dead and perhaps idiots.
Miles Franklin

25.
It ain't what things actually are, it's all they stand for.
Miles Franklin

26.
It is a wise provision that youth cannot see what it owes the previous generation. This is a chicken that comes back to roost in heavier years.
Miles Franklin

27.
Before I was ten I became critical of the anthropomorphic God as interpreted in the churches. I did not warm to One thus revealed as the semblance of a bullying and mean old man who must have all his own way, be praised all the time and for attributes which were deplorable in us.
Miles Franklin

28.
I'm sure it's not any wish of mine that I'm born with inclinations for better things. If I could be born again, and had the designing of myself, I'd be born the lowest and coarsest-minded person imaginable, so that I could find plenty of companionship, or I'd be born an idiot, which would be better still.
Miles Franklin

29.
What I absorbed from autobiographies was not how to be great so much as the littleness of the great.
Miles Franklin

30.
the way to wean any one from a desire is not by condemnation of it.
Miles Franklin

31.
Cowards always drag in the Bible to back theirselves up far more than proper people does.
Miles Franklin

32.
Ah, the bitter, hopeless heart-hunger of godlessness none but an atheist can understand!
Miles Franklin

33.
Only a very small percentage can regard conditions from any but a selfish point of view or conceive of any but their own shoe-pinch.
Miles Franklin