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Employment is the surest antidote to sorrow.
Ann Radcliffe
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Ann Radcliffe
Age: 58 †
Born: 1764
Born: July 9
Died: 1823
Died: February 7
Author
Novelist
Writer
Ann Ward
Anne Radcliffe
Anne Ward
Ann Ward Radcliffe
Ann Ward
Mrs. Radcliffe
Ann Radcliffe
née Ward
Surest
Antidote
Negativity
Employment
Sorrow
More quotes by Ann Radcliffe
It is dismal coming home, when there is nobody to welcome one!
Ann Radcliffe
Happiness has this essential difference from what is commonly called pleasure, that virtue forms its basis, and virtue being the offspring of reason, may be expected to produce uniformity of effect.
Ann Radcliffe
If the weak hand, that has recorded this tale, has, by its scenes, beguiled the mourner of one hour of sorrow, or, by its moral, taught him to sustain it - the effort, however humble, has not been vain, nor is the writer unrewarded.
Ann Radcliffe
I tasted too what was called the sweet of revenge - but it was transient, it expired even with the object, that provoked it.
Ann Radcliffe
The refreshing pleasure from the first view of nature, after the pain of illness, and the confinement of a sick-chamber, is above the conceptions, as well as the descriptions, of those in health.
Ann Radcliffe
There is no accounting for tastes.
Ann Radcliffe
How despicable is that humanity, which can be contented to pity, where it might assuage!
Ann Radcliffe
What is acquired without labor is seldom worth acquiring at all.
Ann Radcliffe
When one can hear people moving, one does not so much mind, about one's fears.
Ann Radcliffe
I never trust people's assertions, I always judge of them by their actions.
Ann Radcliffe
At first a small line of inconceivable splendour emerged on the horizon, which, quickly expanding, the sun appeared in all of his glory, unveiling the whole face of nature, vivifying every colour of the landscape, and sprinkling the dewy earth with glittering light.
Ann Radcliffe
There is some magic in wealth, which can thus make persons pay their court to it, when it does not even benefit themselves.
Ann Radcliffe
How strange it is, that a fool or knave, with riches, should be treated with more respect by the world, than a good man, or a wise man in poverty!
Ann Radcliffe
There are some few instances in which it is virtuous to disobey.
Ann Radcliffe
The passions are the seeds of vices as well as of virtues, from which either may spring, accordingly as they are nurtured. Unhappy they who have never been taught the art to govern them!
Ann Radcliffe
Ignorance of true pleasure more frequently than temptation to that which is false, leads to vice.
Ann Radcliffe
But St. Aubert had too much good sense to prefer a charm to a virtue.
Ann Radcliffe
Poverty cannot deprive us of many consolations. It cannot rob us of the affection we have for each other, or degrade us in our own opinion, of in that of any person, whose opinion we ought to value.
Ann Radcliffe
Fate sits on these dark battlements and frowns, And as the portal opens to receive me, A voice in hollow murmurs through the courts Tells of a nameless deed.
Ann Radcliffe
What has a man's face to do with his character? Can a man of good character help having a disagreeable face?
Ann Radcliffe