Suzanne Curchod quotes:

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  • Obstinacy is ever most positive when it is most in the wrong.

  • Indulgence, twin sister of guilt.

  • Recognized probity is the surest of all oaths.

  • Remarkable places are like the summits of rocks; eagles and reptiles only can get there.

  • A woman must be truly refined to incite chivalry in the heart of a man.

  • Dignity and love do not blend.

  • Elegance is exquisite polish.

  • Fiction is a potent agent for good--in the hands of the good.

  • For the honest people, relations increase with the years. For the vicious, inconveniences increase. Inconstancy is the defect of vice; the influence of habit is one of the qualities of virtue.

  • Fortune does not change [people], it unmasks them.

  • Innocence and mystery never dwell long together.

  • Obligation is the bitterest thraldom.

  • One can impose silence on sentiment, but one can not give it limits.

  • One of the first observations to make in conversation is the state, or the character, and the education of the person to whom we speak.

  • Romance is the poetry of literature.

  • It is never permissible to say, I say.

  • Where love and wisdom drink out of the same cup, in this everyday world, it is the exception.

  • A pure style in writing results from the rejection of everything superfluous.

  • Gallantry thrives most in the atmosphere of the court.

  • How immense to us appear the sins we have not committed.

  • In looking around me seeking for miserable resources against the heaviness of time, I open a book and I say to myself, as the cat to the fox: I have only one good turn, but I need no other.

  • It is often a sign of wit not to show it, and not to see that others want it.

  • It were no virtue to bear calamities if we did not feel them.

  • Love is the only possession which we can carry with us beyond the grave.

  • Love is the pass-key to the heart.

  • Make your best thoughts into action.

  • Order in a house ought to be like the machinery in opera, whose effect produces great pleasure, but whose ends must be hid.

  • Our own cast-off sorrows are not sufficient to constitute sympathy for others.

  • Reason ought not, like vanity, to adorn herself with ancient parchments, and the display of a genealogical tree; more dignified in her proceedings, and proud of her immortal nature, she ought to derive everything from herself.

  • That woman is happiest whose life is passed in the shadow of a manly, loving heart.

  • The heart of a good man is the sanctuary of God in this world.

  • The more heart, the more sorrow.

  • The most subtle flattery that a woman can receive is by actions, not by words.

  • The old age of women is bearable only on condition that they do not take up any room, do not make any noise, do not demand any service; on condition that they render all the service that is expected of them, and actually have no existence except for the good of others.

  • The quarrels of lovers are like summer storms. Everything is more beautiful when they have passed.

  • The revolting details of childbirth had been hidden from me with such care that I was as surprised as I was horrified, and I cannot help thinking that the vows most women are made to take are very foolhardy. I doubt whether they would willingly go to the altar to swear that they will allow themselves to be broken on the wheel every nine months.

  • To love one that is great, is almost to be great one's self.

  • Too many wish to be happy before becoming wise.

  • Want of perseverance is the great fault of women in everything--morals, attention to health, friendship, and so on. It cannot be too often repeated that women never reach the end of anything through want of perseverance.

  • When death gives us a long lease of life, it takes as hostages all those whom we have loved.

  • Women do not often have it in their power to give like men, but they forgive like Heaven.

  • You may be more prodigal of time than of money.

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