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Nancy Mitford Quotes

English journalist and author (b. 1904), Birth: 28-11-1904, Death: 30-6-1973 Nancy Mitford Quotes
1.
Paris in the early morning has a cheerful, bustling aspect, a promise of delicious things to come, a positive smell of coffee and croissants, quite peculiar to itself. The people welcome a new day as if they were certain of liking it, the shopkeepers pull up their blinds serene in the expectation of good trade, the workers go happily to their work, the people who have sat up all night in night-clubs go happily to their rest, the orchestra of motor-car horns, of clanking trams, of whistling policemen tunes up for the daily symphony, and everywhere is joy.
Nancy Mitford

2.
I am sometimes bored by people, but never by life.
Nancy Mitford

3.
the test of a cook is how she boils an egg. My boiled eggs are fantastic, fabulous. Sometimes as hard as a 100 carat diamond, or again soft as a feather bed, or running like a cooling stream, they can also burst like fireworks from their shells and take on the look and rubbery texture of a baby octopus. Never a dull egg, with me.
Nancy Mitford

4.
I think housework is far more tiring and frightening than hunting is, no comparison, and yet after hunting we had eggs for tea and were made to rest for hours, but after housework people expect one to go on just as if nothing special had happened.
Nancy Mitford

5.
To fall in love you have to be in the state of mind for it to take, like a disease.
Nancy Mitford

Similar Authors: Cassandra Clare Charles Spurgeon Terry Pratchett Stephen King Winston Churchill Richelle Mead Jodi Picoult Francois de La Rochefoucauld Marianne Williamson Wayne Dyer Michel de Montaigne Chuck Palahniuk H. L. Mencken Suzanne Collins Leo Tolstoy
6.
The great advantage of living in a large family is that early lesson of life's essential unfairness.
Nancy Mitford

7.
An aristocracy in a republic is like a chicken whose head has been cut off: it may run about in a lively way, but in fact it is dead.
Nancy Mitford

8.
Life itself, she thought, as she went upstairs to dress for dinner, was stranger than dreams and far, far more disordered.
Nancy Mitford

Quote Topics by Nancy Mitford: People Children Thinking Running Girl Sometimes Love Unhappy Black May Reading Writing Wings Night Weather Home Waffles Lobster Marriage Cutting Dollars Yesterday Cake Silence Would Be France Advice Poverty Making Love Gay
9.
One's emotions are intensified in Paris—one can be more happy and also more unhappy here than in any other place. But it is always a positive source of joy to live here, and there is nobody so miserable as a Parisian in exile from his town.
Nancy Mitford

10.
What is so nice & so unexpected about life is the way it improves as it goes along. I think you should impress this fact on your children because I think young people have an awful feeling that life is slipping past them & they must do something - catch something - they don't quite know what, whereas they've only got to wait & it all comes.
Nancy Mitford

11.
The trouble is that people seem to expect happiness in life. I can't imagine why; but they do. They are unhappy before they marry, and they imagine to themselves that the reason of their unhappiness will be removed when they are married.
Nancy Mitford

12.
The worst of being a Communist is the parties you may go to are - well - awfully funny and touching but not very gay...I don't see the point of sad parties, do you? And Left-wing people are always sad because they mind dreadfully about their causes, and the causes are always going so badly.
Nancy Mitford

13.
A typical Irish dinner would be: cream flavored with lobster, cream with bits of veal in it, green peas and cream, cream cheese, cream flavored with strawberries.
Nancy Mitford

14.
If I had a girl I should say to her, 'Marry for love if you can, it won't last, but it is a very interesting experience and makes a good beginning in life. Later on, when you marry for money, for heaven's sake let it be big money. There are no other possible reasons for marrying at all.
Nancy Mitford

15.
If one can't be happy, one must be amused.
Nancy Mitford

16.
The English lord marries for love, and is rather inclined to love where money is; he rarely marries in order to improve his coat of arms.
Nancy Mitford

17.
Surely a King who loves pleasure is less dangerous than one who loves glory?
Nancy Mitford

18.
People in towns are always preoccupied. 'Have I missed the bus? Have I forgotten the potatoes? Can I get across the road?
Nancy Mitford

19.
Life is sometimes sad and often dull, but there are currants in the cake, and here is one of them.
Nancy Mitford

20.
Spring came late, but when it came it was hand-in-hand with summer, and almost at once everything was baking and warm, and in the villages the people danced every night on concrete dancing floors under the plane trees.
Nancy Mitford

21.
I do love translating; it is the pure pleasure of writing without the misery of inventing.
Nancy Mitford

22.
It's a funny thing that people are always ready to admit it if they've no talent for drawing or music, whereas everyone imagines that they themselves are capable of true love, which is a talent like any other, only far more rare.
Nancy Mitford

23.
oh how television diminishes everything.
Nancy Mitford

24.
Twice in her life she had mistaken something else for it; it was like seeing somebody in the street who you think is a friend, you whistle and wave and run after him, and it is not only not the friend, but not even very like him. A few minutes later the real friend appears in view, and then you can't imagine how you ever mistook that other person for him. Linda was now looking upon the authentic face of love, and she knew it, but it frightened her. That it should come so casually, so much by a series of accidents, was frightening.
Nancy Mitford

25.
always either on a peak of happiness or drowning in black waters of despair they loved or they loathed, they lived in a world of superlatives
Nancy Mitford

26.
Sisters are a shield against life's cruel adversity.
Nancy Mitford

27.
When the loo paper gets thicker and the writing paper thinner, it's always a bad sign, at home.
Nancy Mitford

28.
I Love children, especially when they cry for then someone takes them away.
Nancy Mitford

29.
Always be civil to the girls, you never know who they may marry.
Nancy Mitford

30.
And Left-wing people are always sad because they mind dreadfully about their causes, and the causes are always going so badly.
Nancy Mitford

31.
Irish gardens beat all for horror. With 19 gardeners, Lord Talbot of Malahide has produced an affair exactly like a suburban golf course.
Nancy Mitford

32.
Americans relate all effort, all work, and all of life itself to the dollar. Their talk is of nothing but dollars.
Nancy Mitford

33.
I have only ever read one book in my life, and that is White Fang. It's so frightfully good I've never bothered to read another.
Nancy Mitford

34.
Greece is not a country of happy mediums: everything there seems to be either wonderful or horrible.
Nancy Mitford

35.
Sun, silence, and happiness.
Nancy Mitford

36.
Nothing about human beings ever had the power to move me as a child. Black Beauty now ... !
Nancy Mitford

37.
There are worse things than poverty, though I can't for the moment remember what they are.
Nancy Mitford

38.
English doctors have killed 3/4 of my friends & the joke is the remaining 1/4 go on recommending them, so odd is human nature.
Nancy Mitford

39.
One thing about tourists is that it is very easy to get away from them. Like ants they follow a trail and a few yards each side of that trail there are none.
Nancy Mitford

40.
Do you always laugh when you make love?' said Fabrice. I hadn't thought about it, but I suppose I do. I generally laugh when I'm happy and cry when I'm not. Do you find it odd?
Nancy Mitford

41.
But I think she would have been happy with Fabrice,' I said. 'He was the great love of her life, you know.' Oh, dulling,' said my mother, sadly. 'One always thinks that. Every, every time.
Nancy Mitford

42.
Chickens are cheerless birds, I advise you to keep geese which can be taught to follow like dogs, one needs all the companionship one can get in these days.
Nancy Mitford

43.
In France that is the one rule, never make trouble.
Nancy Mitford

44.
Always remember, children, that marriage is a very intimate relationship. It's not just sitting and chatting to a person; there are other things, you know.
Nancy Mitford

45.
Children should be like waffles--you should be able to throw the first one away.
Nancy Mitford

46.
You've no idea how long life goes on and how many, many changes it brings. Young people seem to imagine that it's over in a flash, that they do this thing, or that thing, and then die, but I can assure you they are quite wrong.
Nancy Mitford

47.
Most people like reading about what they already know - there is even a public for yesterday's weather.
Nancy Mitford

48.
Oh dear... it really is rather disillusioning. When one's friends marry for money they are wretched, when they marry for love it is worse. What is the proper thing to marry for, I should like to know?
Nancy Mitford

49.
Always be civil to the girls, you never know who they may marry' is a aphorism which has saved many an English spinster from being treated like an Indian widow.
Nancy Mitford

50.
Nothing makes people crosser than being considered too old for love.
Nancy Mitford