"Or — to descend to the ordinary ranks and routine of life — we furnish a house, that our friends may cry out on our extravagance or bad taste; — we give dinners, that our guests may hereafter find fault with our cook or our cellar ; — we give parties, that three parts of the company may rail at their stupidity; — we dress, that our acquaintance may revenge themselves on our silks, by finding fault with our appearance ;— we marry ; if well, it was interest — if badly, it was insanity ; — we die, and even that is our own fault ; if we had but done so and so, or gone to Dr. such a one, the accident would not have happened."
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/Romance_and_Reality
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Romance and Reality
Romance and Reality (1831) is a novel by Letitia Elizabeth Landon about an attractive heiress, Emily Arundel, who meets the handsome Edward Lorraine and hopes to win his heart. In her imagination, she is succeeding but he is a traveler and in Spain he encounters Beatrice de los Zeridos, a spirited young lady of action, who is fighting to save both her home and family. Broken-hearted, Emily enters a nunnery in Italy from whence she is rescued, but she returns to England so weakened that she dies.
473 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Romance and Reality →
Related Quotes
"Women in black gowns, and drab-coloured shawls hung upon their shoulders as if they were pegs in a passage — men in c…"
"No thoroughly occupied man was ever yet very miserable."
"[From Mr Morland]: You all universally like the qualities in which you yourselves are deficient : the more you indulg…"
"We build our castles on the golden sand ; — the material is too rich to be durable."
"— it makes good the observation that a bystander sees more of the game than those who are playing ; —"
"But pleasures are always most delightful when we look back upon, or forward to them : …"
"The first great principle of our religious, moral, civil, and literary institutions, is a dinner."
"[From Lord Mandeville]: What will Lady Lauriston do without a daughter to marry ? She really must advertise for one."
"What betraying things blushes are ! Like sealing wax in the juvenile riddle, a blush "burns to keep a secret.""
"… : people cannot be married without a clergyman — the milliner and the jeweller are equally indispensable."