"[From Lady Mary Wortley Montague]: We might have had hearts in our cradles ; but, as I don't pretend to remember mine, I cannot say. Perhaps at sixteen, too, there is a sort of imagination of one ; but it is a phantom which flits at the cockcrowing of reality. We soon learn, 'That the worth of any thing is just as much as it will bring :’ and we value a lover by the estimate of others, not by our own. Our own suffrage is nothing."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ethel_Churchill_(or_The_Two_Brides)
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Ethel Churchill (or The Two Brides)
284 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Ethel Churchill (or The Two Brides) →
Related Quotes
"… if there be one torture which the demons, who delight in human misery, might, rejoice to inflict, it is the anxious…"
"But there always is in my mind something at once ludicrous and mournful in a crowd congregated for the purpose of amu…"
"To find that you have been deceived, where you trusted so entirely ; trifled with, where all your deepest and sweetes…"
"[From Lady Marchmont’s journal]: Will the time ever come, when men will feel that the mind and the heart must work in…"
"Life is made up of vanities — so small, So mean, the common history of the day, — That mockery seems the sole philoso…"
"Who ever said one-half of all that seemed in absence so easy to say ?"
"There is an awe about death, even in the face the most familiar to us; it has already taken its likeness from the her…"
"It is a weary and a bitter hour When first the real disturbs the poet's world, And he distrusts the future. Not for t…"
"We might have been !—these are but common words, And yet they make the sum of life's bewailing;"
"Few know the demands made by the imagination on those who are once its masters and its victims. Its exercise is so fe…"