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When we bring back with us the objects most dear, and find those we left unchanged, we are tempted to doubt the lapse of time but one link in the chain of affection broken, and every thing seems altered.
Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington
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Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington
Age: 59 †
Born: 1789
Born: September 1
Died: 1849
Died: June 4
Editor
Novelist
Poet
Salonnière
Marguerite Blessington
Marguerite Power Farmer Gardiner
Lady Blessington
The Countess of Blessington
Margaret Power
Countess of Blessington
Marguerite [Margaret] Gardiner
Marguerite [Margaret] Power
Marguerite [Margaret] Farmer
Margaret
Countess of Blessington
Every
Broken
Link
Time
Bring
Chain
Doubt
Tempted
Left
Links
Seems
Chains
Lapse
Back
Affection
Unchanged
Find
Dear
Lapses
Thing
Objects
Altered
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People seem to lose all respect for the past events succeed each other with such velocity that the most remarkable one of a few years gone by, is no more remembered than if centuries had closed over it.
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Spring is the season of hope, and autumn is that of memory.
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Wit is the lightning of the mind, reason the sunshine, and reflection the moonlight.
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There are some chagrins of the heart which a friend ought to try to console without betraying a knowledge of their existence, as there are physical maladies which a physician ought to seek to heal without letting the sufferer know that he has discovered their extent.
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Love in France is a comedy in England a tragedy in Italy an opera seria and in Germany a melodrama.
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alas! there is no casting anchor in the stream of time!
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The most certain mode of making people content with us is to make them content with themselves.
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Flowers are the bright remembrances of youth they waft us back, with their bland odorous breath, the joyous hours that only young life knows, ere we have learnt that this fair earth hides graves.
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We never respect those who amuse us, however we may smile at their comic powers
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Haste is always ungraceful.
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[His mind] was like a volcano, full of fire and wealth, sometimes calm, often dazzling and playful, but ever threatening. It ran swift as the lightning from one subject to another, and occasionally burst forth in passionate throes of intellect, nearly allied to madness.
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There is no knowledge for which so great a price is paid as a knowledge of the world and no one ever became an adept in it except at the expense of a hardened or a wounded heart.
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Wit lives in the present, but genius survives the future.
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Life would be as insupportable without the prospect of death, as it would be without sleep.
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We have a reading, a talking, and a writing public. When shall we have a thinking?
Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington