Tuesday, December 24, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Anne Louise Germaine de Stael

« All quotes from this author
 

It seems to me that life's circumstances, being ephemeral, teach us less about durable truths than the fictions based on those truths; and that the best lessons of delicacy and self-respect are to be found in novels where the feelings are so naturally portrayed that you fancy you are witnessing real life as you read.
--
Delphine (1802), Preface

 
Anne Louise Germaine de Stael

» Anne Louise Germaine de Stael - all quotes »



Tags: Anne Louise Germaine de Stael Quotes, Authors starting by d


Similar quotes

 

Maeterlinck says that compared with ordinary truths mystic truths have strange privileges—they can neither age nor die. Beauty is eternal and ugliness, thank God, is ephemeral. Can there be any question as to which should attract the poet?

 
Florence Earle Coates
 

There are different kinds of truths for different kinds of people. There are truths appropriate for children; truths that are appropriate for students; truths that are appropriate for educated adults; and truths that are appropriate for highly educated adults, and the notion that there should be one set of truths available to everyone is a modern democratic fallacy. It doesn't work.

 
Irving Kristol
 

We must not, then, as Christians, assume an attitude of antagonism toward the truths of reason, or the truths of philosophy, or the truths of science, or the truths of history, or the truths of criticism. As children of the light, we must be careful to keep ourselves open to every ray of light. Let us, then, cultivate an attitude of courage as over against the investigations of the day. None should be more zealous in them than we. None should be more quick to discern truth in every field, more hospitable to receive it, more loyal to follow it, whither soever it leads.

 
Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield
 

There are no whole truths; all truths are half-truths. It is trying to treat them as whole truths that plays the devil.

 
Alfred North Whitehead
 

What are novels? What is the secret of the charm of every romance that ever was written? The first thing in a good novel is to place the persons together in circumstances which naturally call out the high feelings and thoughts of the character, which afford food for sympathy between them on these points — romantic events they are called. The second is that the heroine has generally no family ties (almost invariably no mother), or, if she has, these do not interfere with her entire independence.
These two things constitute the main charm of reading novels.

 
Florence Nightingale
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact