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Every dogma must have its day.
Carolyn Wells
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Carolyn Wells
Age: 79 †
Born: 1862
Born: June 18
Died: 1942
Died: March 26
Author
Novelist
Poet
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Rahway
New Jersey
Carolyn Wells Houghton
Dogma
Must
Every
More quotes by Carolyn Wells
Invitation is the sincerest flattery.
Carolyn Wells
... ideals, standards, aspirations,--those are chameleon words, and take color from their speakers,--often false tints. A scholarly man of my acquaintance once told me that he traveled a thousand miles into the desert to get away from the word uplift, and it was the first word he heard after he reached his destination.
Carolyn Wells
Nonsense makes the heart grow fonder.
Carolyn Wells
Flirtation envies Love, and Love envies Flirtation.
Carolyn Wells
I don't care very much for literary shrines and hauntsI knew a woman in London who boasted that she had lodgings from the windows of which she could throw a stone into Carlyle's yard. And when I said, Why throw a stone into Carlyle's yard? she looked at me as if I were an imbecile and changed the subject.
Carolyn Wells
musicians rarely have a sense of humour, at least, about themselves.
Carolyn Wells
I love the Christmas-tide, and yet, I notice this, each year I live I always like the gifts I get, But how I love the gifts I give!
Carolyn Wells
At times there is nothing so unnatural as nature.
Carolyn Wells
There are many ways of discarding [books]. You can give them to friends,--or enemies,--or to associations or to poor Southern libraries. But the surest way is to lend them. Then they never come back to bother you.
Carolyn Wells
Wall Street. - The abode of the Brokers and the Broke.
Carolyn Wells
Almost before the big motor-car stopped, the girl sprang out.
Carolyn Wells
In December people give no thought to the Past or the Future. They thing only of the Present.
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Society's the mother of convention.
Carolyn Wells
What is a magazine? A small body of Literature entirely surrounded by advertisements.
Carolyn Wells
Happiness is the ability to recognize it.
Carolyn Wells
Youth is a silly, vapid state, Old age with fears and ills is rife, This simple boon I beg of Fate - A thousand years of Middle Life.
Carolyn Wells
A profit is not without honor save in Boston.
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Circumstances alter faces.
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A living gale is better than a dead calm.
Carolyn Wells
... as beauty is in the eye of the beholder, the ideal library is in the wish of its maker.
Carolyn Wells