Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
Everything comes to the man who won't wait.
Ada Leverson
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Ada Leverson
Age: 70 †
Born: 1862
Born: October 10
Died: 1933
Died: August 30
Novelist
Writer
London
England
Ada Esther Leverson
Ada Beddington
Sphinx
Everything
Men
Impatience
Wait
Waiting
Comes
More quotes by Ada Leverson
It is all very well to say that children are happier with mud pies and rag dolls than with these elaborate delights. There may be something in this theory, but when their amusements are carried to such a point of luxurious and imaginative perfection it certainly gives them great and even unlimited enjoyment at the time.
Ada Leverson
There is, of course, no joy so great as the cessation of pain in fact all joy, active or passive, is the cessation of some pain, since it must be the satisfaction of a longing, even perhaps an unconscious longing.
Ada Leverson
People were not charmed with Eglantine because she herself was charming, but because she was charmed.
Ada Leverson
Absurdly improbable things are quite as liable to happen in real life as in weak literature.
Ada Leverson
Fog and hypocrisy - that is to say, shadow, convention, decency - these were the very things that lent to London its poetry and romance.
Ada Leverson
envy, as a rule, is of success rather than of merit. No one would have objected to his talent deserving recognition - only to his getting it.
Ada Leverson
Modesty is a valuable merit ... in people who have no other, and the appearance of it is extremely useful to those who have.
Ada Leverson
Feminine intuition, a quality perhaps even rarer in women than in men.
Ada Leverson
A morbid propensity that causes great suffering in domestic life is often curiously infectious to the very person for whom it creates most suffering.
Ada Leverson
Thou canst not serve both cod and salmon.
Ada Leverson
Looking at the poems of John Gray when I saw the tiniest rivulet of text meandering through the very largest meadow of margin, I suggested to Oscar Wilde that he should go a step further than these minor poets he should publish a book all margin full of beautiful, unwritten thoughts.
Ada Leverson
an optimist is the man who looks after your eyes, and the pessimist the person who looks after your feet.
Ada Leverson
To a woman--I mean, a nice woman--there is no such thing as men. There is a man and either she is so fond of him that she can talk of nothing else, however unfavourably, or so much in love with him that she never mentions his name.
Ada Leverson
You don't really know a woman until she writes you a letter.
Ada Leverson
Suspense is torture ... but delightful--or there'd be no gambling in the world.
Ada Leverson
When a passion is not realized ... it fades away, or becomes ideal worship--Dante--Petrarch--that sort of thing!
Ada Leverson
Most people now seem to treasure anything they value in proportion to the extent that it's followed about and surrounded by the vulgar public.
Ada Leverson
She suspected him of infidelity, with and without reason, morning, noon and night.
Ada Leverson
A butler in an English household should, however, be English, and as much like an archbishop as possible.
Ada Leverson
Women are so perverse. Look how they won't wear black when nothing suits them so well!
Ada Leverson