
Top 26 Jane Austen Sense And Sensibility Quotes
#1. Love your life and all around you ...
Love's boomerang shall always return to you.
Timothy Pina
#2. 'Clone Club' is incredible - probably the best set of fans any show could ever hope for.
Ari Millen
#3. I believe that some of us who were kept by God a long while before we found Him love Him better perhaps than we should have done if we had received Him directly, and we can preach better to others - we can speak more of His loving-kindness and tender mercy.
Charles Spurgeon
#4. If you put it up, I'll just take it down again." His voice lowered to a throaty hum, "And you know what happens when I take your hair down.
Sabrina Jeffries
#5. Mama, the more I know of the world, the more I am convinced that I shall never see a man whom I can really love.
Jane Austen
#7. I was only going to say that abused people cling to their abusers, don't they? They've been brainwashed to believe there's no alternative. I was the bloody alternative, standing there, right in front of her!
Robert Galbraith
#8. The truth is you have to have great ideas that solve problems to make money. If you do, you will attract money like a magnet.
Steve Siebold
#9. One in whose head is conceit, Think not that he will ever listen to truth.
Bill Vaughan
#10. Charlotte Palmer is no sillier than Harriet Smith; and yet, how intolerable we should find it to see and hear as much of Charlotte as we do of Harriet! And would Miss Bates have been endurable if she had been presented in the mood and manners of Sense and Sensibility?
Mary Lascelles
#11. I am reading Ian Rankins book Doors Open and am enjoying his dark Edinburgh narrative will rate soon once I have read it. I am also a fan of Jane Austen and have visited her Museum House in Chawton, Hampshire every year for the last three years. My Favourite book is Sense and Sensibility.
Ian Rankin
#12. Every thing he did was right. Every thing he said was clever. If their evenings at the park included cards, he cheated himself and all the rest of the party to get her a good hand.
Jane Austen
#13. At times like this, tears exorcise emotions that would otherwise haunt me and, by their haunting, embitter me
Dean Koontz
#14. Brandon is just the kind of man whom every body speaks well of, and nobody cares about; whom all are delighted to see, and nobody remembers to talk to.
Jane Austen
#15. Dialogue starts with the willingness to challenge our own thinking, to recognize that any certainty we have is, at best, a hypothesis about the world.
Peter Senge
#16. Thunder Road' knows who I am and what I feel, and that is one of the consolations of art.
Nick Hornby
#17. Money can only give happiness where there is nothing else to give it.
Jane Austen
#18. Every romantic woman dreams of Willoughby. However, every wise woman's heart knows Colonel Brandon would take care of her when she was sick, love her when she was well and know her worth every day that she breathes.
Shannon L. Alder
#19. When people ask what 'American Pie' is about, they're missing the point. The song isn't about the lines themselves - it's about what is between the lines. The song is about what isn't there.
Don McLean
#20. Or maybe he was seeing double. Bad stuff, gin. Should 'ave switched to rum a long time ago. Good stuff, rum. You could drink it, or take a bath in it. No, that was gin - he meant Joe.
Robert A. Heinlein
#21. Poverty is the test of civility and the touchstone of friendship.
William Hazlitt
#22. the rent here may be low but i believe we have it on very hard terms --sense & sensibility
Jane Austen
#23. What a trajedy to be a martyr for love, yet we worship the characters anyways because they remind us of how we struggled.
Shannon L. Alder
#24. I could not be happy with a man whose taste did not in every point coincide with my own. He must enter in all my feelings; the same books, the same music must charm us both.
Jane Austen
#25. Esteem him! Like him! Cold-hearted Elinor! Oh! worse than cold-hearted! Ashamed of being otherwise. Use those words again, and I will leave the room this moment.
Jane Austen
#26. ...and to aim at the restraint of sentiments which were not in themselves illaudable, appeared to her not merely an unnecessary effort, but a disgraceful subjection of reason to common-place and mistaken notions.
Jane Austen
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