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It is better to be tied to any thorny bush than to be with a cross man.
Lady Gregory
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Lady Gregory
Age: 80 †
Born: 1852
Born: March 5
Died: 1932
Died: May 22
Autobiographer
Diarist
Dramatist
Linguist
Playwright
Poet
Translator
Writer
Isabella Augusta Persse Gregory
Isabella Augusta Gregory
Lady Gregory
Isabella Augusta Persse
Thorny
Tied
Bush
Cross
Crosses
Better
Men
More quotes by Lady Gregory
What are prophecies? Don't we hear them every day of the week? And if one comes true there may be seven blind and come to nothing.
Lady Gregory
Our curses on them that boil the eggs too hard! What use is an egg that is hard to any person on earth?
Lady Gregory
I said, in talking, that I felt more and more the time wasted that was not spent in Ireland.
Lady Gregory
If the past year were offered me again, And choice of good and ill before me set Would I accept the pleasure with the pain Or dare to wish that we had never met?
Lady Gregory
There is no sin coveting things are of no great use or profit, but would show out good and have some grandeur around them.
Lady Gregory
Ah, I am thinking people put more in their prayers than was ever put in them by God.
Lady Gregory
I'll take no charity! What I get I'll earn by taking it. I would feel no pleasure it being given to me, any more than a huntsman would take pleasure being made a present of a dead fox, in place of getting a run across country after it.
Lady Gregory
The way most people fail is in not keeping up the heart.
Lady Gregory
The first play I wrote was called 'Twenty-five.' It was played by our company in Dublin and London, and was adapted and translated into Irish and played in America.
Lady Gregory
Irish history having been forbidden in schools, has been, to a great extent, learned from Raftery's poems by the people of Mayo, where he was born, and of Galway, where he spent his later years.
Lady Gregory
The time the moon is going back, the blood that is in a person does be weakening, but when the moon is strong, the blood that moves strong in the same way. And it to be at the full, it drags the wits along with it, the same as it drags the tide.
Lady Gregory
And my desire,' he said, 'is a desire that is as long as a year but it is love given to an echo, the spending of grief on a wave, a lonely fight with a shadow, that is what my love and my desire have been to me.
Lady Gregory
As to the old history of Ireland, the first man ever died in Ireland was Partholan, and he is buried, and his greyhound along with him, at some place in Kerry.
Lady Gregory
I don't know in the world why anyone would consent to be a king, and never to be left to himself, but to be worried and wearied and interfered with from dark to daybreak and from morning to the fall of night.
Lady Gregory
In my childhood there was every year at my old home, Roxborough, or, as it is called in Irish, Cregroostha, a great sheep-shearing that lasted many days. On the last evening there was always a dance for the shearers and their helpers, and two pipers used to sit on chairs placed on a corn-bin to make music for the dance.
Lady Gregory
There is many a man without learning will get the better of a college-bred man, and will have better words, too.
Lady Gregory
It was among farmers and potato diggers and old men in workhouses and beggars at my own door that I found what was beyond these and yet farther beyond that drawingroom poet of my childhood in the expression of love, and grief, and the pain of parting, that are the disclosure of the individual soul.
Lady Gregory
Every trick is an old one, but with a change of players, a change of dress, it comes out as new as before.
Lady Gregory
Every day in the year there comes some malice into the world, and where it comes from is no good place.
Lady Gregory
She is a girl would not be afraid to walk the whole world with herself.
Lady Gregory