Top 18 Woman's Scorn Quotes
#1. A woman's scorn has been the downfall of a goodly number of men and the cause of many a conflict.
Kathleen E. Woodiwiss
#2. Women, they were tricky business. A man had to step carefully lest he find himself in a pit of despair, longing after the one he wants and getting nothing but scorn in return. What was it about her that drove him crazy? He'd never had such a wild and instantaneous reaction to a woman before.
T.A. Grey
#3. A lot of people do not muster the courage to live their dreams because they are afraid to die.
Les Brown
#5. Love and grief and motherhood, Fame and mirth and scorn - these are all shall befall, Any woman born.
Margaret Widdemer
#6. For a significant man
woman, the one thought he values greatly, to the laughter and scorn of insignificant men, is a key to hidden treasure chambers; for those others, it is nothing but a piece of old iron.
Friedrich Nietzsche
#7. I was taught very early on how you treat people is actually what matters.
Gerald Chertavian
#9. We will glorify war-the world's only hygiene, milliterism, patriotism , the destructive gesture of freedom-bringers, beautiful ideas worth dying for, and scorn for woman
Filippo Tommaso Marinetti
#10. The prevailing view that Smith criticized was mercantilism, which held that wealth consisted of the stock of precious metals in a country.
Edd S. Noell
#11. Those who scorn you taunt only themselves
I knew this without reading one word; because in reading one is reminded of the truth man is given at birth
by man I mean man and woman.
David Adams Richards
#12. A woman scorn'd is pitiless as fate,
For then the dread of shame adds stings to hate.
William Gifford
#13. The journalist's job is to get the story by breaking into their offices, by bribing, by seducing people, by lying, by anything else to break through the palace guard.
Robert Scheer
#14. Propelled by nothing more than a drab sense of duty not to die if she didn't have to, Fire turned [...]
Kristin Cashore
#16. Heav'n hath no Rage, like Love to Hatred turn'd,
Nor Hell a Fury, like a Woman scorn'd.
William Congreve
#17. Our common status made talk easier. [...] She knew the paradox of being stared at and not seen. She knew what it felt like to walk out of a movie theater feeling ashamed or erased.
Alex Tizon
#18. Father laughed, which upset Bruno even more; there was nothing that made him more angry than when a grown-up laughed at him for not knowing something, especially when he was trying to find out the answer by asking questions.
John Boyne