Top 30 Mary Russell Mitford Quotes
#1. No fear of forgetting the good-humoured faces that meet us in our walks each day.
Mary Russell Mitford
#2. I place flowers in the very first rank of simple pleasures; and I have no very good opinion of the hard worldly people who take no delight in them.
Mary Russell Mitford
#3. [On Elizabeth Barrett Browning:] ... for finish, and melody of versification, there is nothing approaching to Miss Barrett in this day, or in any other - also for diction. Her words paint.
Mary Russell Mitford
#4. To think of playing cricket for hard cash! Money and gentility would ruin any pastime under the sun.
Mary Russell Mitford
#6. Prejudices of taste, likings and dislikings, are not always vanquishable by reason ...
Mary Russell Mitford
#7. I have discovered that our great favorite, Miss Austen, is my countrywoman ... with whom mamma before her marriage was acquainted. Mamma says that she was then the prettiest, silliest, most affected, husband-hunting butterfly she ever remembers ...
Mary Russell Mitford
#8. We may admire people for being wise, but we like them best when they are foolish.
Mary Russell Mitford
#9. I detest so much ... those persons, who insist upon telling you everything - who labor every point, as the lawyers say, as if they thought all excellence consisted in length ...
Mary Russell Mitford
#10. The power of admiring whatever is deserving of admiration, the nice and quick perception of the beautiful and the true, is one of the highest and noblest of our faculties, born of taste, and knowledge, and wisdom, or rather it is taste, and wisdom, and knowledge, in one rare and great combination.
Mary Russell Mitford
#11. I have still the best comforts of life - books and friendships - and I trust never to lose my relish for either.
Mary Russell Mitford
#12. A novel should be as like life as a painting, but not as like life as a piece of waxwork.
Mary Russell Mitford
#14. She was the prettiest, silliest, most affected, husband-hunting butterfly ever.
Mary Russell Mitford
#15. They know little of the passions who seek to argue with that most intractable of them all, the fear that is born of love.
Mary Russell Mitford
#17. Our English people are much addicted to raising idols, and then revenging themselves on their own idolatry by knocking down and demolishing the poor bits of wood and stone that they had worshipped as gods. How many literary reputations have been so treated!
Mary Russell Mitford
#19. Well, great authors are great people - but I believe that they are best seen at a distance.
Mary Russell Mitford
#20. [On Elizabeth Barrett Browning:] Her sweetness of character is even beyond her genius.
Mary Russell Mitford
#21. That bad letters of every kind arise from want of the habit of thinking, I cannot doubt.
Mary Russell Mitford
#22. I foresee that the Andersen and Fairy Tale fashion will not last; none of these things away from general nature do.
Mary Russell Mitford
#25. Trees and children are, of all living things, those whose growth soonest makes one feel one's age ...
Mary Russell Mitford
#26. I do not think very highly of Madame D'Arblay's books. The style is so strutting. She does so stalk about on Dr. Johnson's old stilts.
Mary Russell Mitford
#27. Does it not appear to you versatility is the true and rare characteristic of that rare thing called genius-versatility and playfulness? In my mind they are both essential.
Mary Russell Mitford
#28. Autumn glows upon us like a splendid evening; it is the very sunset of the year ...
Mary Russell Mitford
#29. In our present high state of civilization, people are so much alike, that anything at all odd comes on one with the freshness and character of an antique coin among smooth shillings.
Mary Russell Mitford
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