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Nothing is so deceptive as human reasoning, - nothing so slippery and reversible as what we have decided to call 'logic.' The truest compass of life is spiritual instinct.
Marie Corelli
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Marie Corelli
Age: 68 †
Born: 1855
Born: May 1
Died: 1924
Died: April 21
Novelist
Poet
Writer
London
England
Mary McKay
Mary Mackay
Life
Logic
Instinct
Reversible
Decided
Deceptive
Call
Slippery
Spiritual
Truest
Human
Compass
Humans
Reasoning
Nothing
Intuition
More quotes by Marie Corelli
Such lovely warmth of thought and delicacy of colour are beyond all praise, and equally beyond all thanks!
Marie Corelli
You should always be well and bright, for so you do your best work and you have so much beautiful work to do. The world needs it, and you must give it!
Marie Corelli
Great Poets discover themselves. Little Poets have to be 'discovered' by somebody else.
Marie Corelli
Greatness is always envied - it is only mediocrity that can boast of a host of friends.
Marie Corelli
How foolish it would be if women did not obey men. The world would be all confusion!
Marie Corelli
And out of heart's pain comes heart's peace and out of desire, accomplishment.
Marie Corelli
It is not so difficult to win love as to keep it!
Marie Corelli
There is no wealth but love.
Marie Corelli
the beginning of my history is - love. It is the beginning of every man and every woman's history, if they are only frank enough to admit it.
Marie Corelli
Education! Is it education to teach the young that their chances of happiness depend on being richer than their neighbors? Yet that is what it all tends to. Get on! - be successful!
Marie Corelli
What was the use of trying to expound a truth, if the majority preferred a lie?
Marie Corelli
in my opinion, the Divine is revealed to all men once at least in their lives.
Marie Corelli
One of the advantages or disadvantages of the way in which we live in these modern days is that we are ceasing to feel. That is to say we do not permit ourselves to be affected by either death or misfortune, provided these natural calamities leave our own persons unscathed.
Marie Corelli
The Press nowadays is not a literary press classic diction and brilliancy of style do not distinguish it by any means.
Marie Corelli
There is nothing so depressing as a constant contemplation of one's self, and the greatest moral cowardice in the world's opinion comes from consulting one's own personal convenience.
Marie Corelli
... though a dealer in meat, groceries, and other food stuffs may obtain compensation if his wares are wilfully misrepresented to the buying public, the purveyor of thoughts or ideas has no remedy when such thoughts or ideas are deliberately and purposefully falsified to the world through the press.
Marie Corelli
No one is contented in this world, I believe. There is always something left to desire, and the last thing longed for always seems the most necessary to happiness.
Marie Corelli
Nothing gives small minds a better handle for hatred than superiority.
Marie Corelli
For though there never was so much reading matter put before the public, there was never less actual 'reading' in the truest and highest sense of the term than there is at present.
Marie Corelli
work is happiness. No one can take my work from me and therefore no one can take my happiness from me.
Marie Corelli