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Imagination took the reins, and reason, slow-paced, though sure-footed, was unequal to a race with so eccentric and flighty a companion.
Fanny Burney
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Fanny Burney
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More quotes by Fanny Burney
I am tired to death! tired of every thing! I would give the universe for a disposition less difficult to please. Yet, after all, what is there to give pleasure? When one has seen one thing, one has seen every thing.
Fanny Burney
No man is in love when he marries. He may have loved before I have even heard he has sometimes loved after: but at the time never. There is something in the formalities of the matrimonial preparations that drive away all the little cupidons.
Fanny Burney
Well of all things in the world, I don't suppose anything can be so dreadful as a public wedding--my stars!--I should never be able to support it!
Fanny Burney
an old woman ... is a person who has no sense of decency if once she takes to living, the devil himself can't get rid of her.
Fanny Burney
Unused to the situations in which I find myself, and embarassed by the slightest difficulties, I seldom discover, till too late, how I ought to act.
Fanny Burney
I love and honour [Paulus Aemilius, in Plutarch's Lives], for his fondness for his children, which instead of blushing at, he avows and glories in: and that at an age, when almost all the heros and great men thought that to make their children and family a secondary concern, was the first proof of their superiority and greatness of soul.
Fanny Burney
To a heart formed for friendship and affection the charms of solitude are very short-lived.
Fanny Burney
. . . men seldom risk their lives where an escape is without hope of recompense.
Fanny Burney
We continually say things to support an opinion, which we have given, that in reality we don't above half mean.
Fanny Burney
To save the mind from preying inwardly upon itself, it must be encouraged to some outward pursuit.
Fanny Burney
People who live together naturally catch the looks and air of one another and without having one feature alike, they contract a something in the whole countenance which strikes one as a resemblance
Fanny Burney
But authors before they write should read.
Fanny Burney
I cannot sleep - great joy is as restless as sorrow.
Fanny Burney
There si nothing upon the face of the earth so insipid as a medium. Give me love or hate! A friend that will go to jail for me, or an enemy that will run me through the body!
Fanny Burney
Generosity without delicacy, like wit without judgment, generally gives as much pain as pleasure.
Fanny Burney
When young people are too rigidly sequestered from [the world], their lively and romantic imaginations paint it to them as a paradise of which they have been beguiled but when they are shown it properly, and in due time, they see it such as it really is, equally shared by pain and pleasure, hope and disappointment.
Fanny Burney
The laws of custom make our [returning a visit] necessary. O how I hate this vile custom which obliges us to make slaves of ourselves! to sell the most precious property we boast, our time--and to sacrifice it to every prattling impertinent who chooses to demand it!
Fanny Burney
Far from having taken any positive step, I have not yet even fommed any resolution.
Fanny Burney
We relate all our afflictions more frequently than we do our pleasures.
Fanny Burney
to be sure, marriage is all in all with the ladies but with us gentlemen it's quite another thing!
Fanny Burney