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Love and hate always remember it is only indifference that forgets.
Myrtle Reed
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Myrtle Reed
Age: 36 †
Born: 1874
Born: September 27
Died: 1911
Died: August 17
Author
Journalist
Novelist
Writer
Chicago
Illinois
Olive Green
Myrtle Reed MacCollough
Forgets
Indifference
Forget
Hate
Remember
Always
Love
More quotes by Myrtle Reed
when you can't see straight ahead, it's because you're about to turn a corner.
Myrtle Reed
The things that are ours cannot be given away, or taken away, or lost. We break our hearts, all of us, trying to keep things that do not belong to us — and to which we have no right.
Myrtle Reed
Love is an orchid which thrives principally on hot air.
Myrtle Reed
Revolution is obstructed evolution.
Myrtle Reed
Before, you think of it as a permanent bond of happiness later, you see that it is a yoke, borne unequally. You marry to keep love, but sometimes that is the surest way to lose it.
Myrtle Reed
If we could only use other folks' experience, this here world would be heaven in about three generations, but we're so constructed that we never believe fire'll burn till we poke our own fingers into it to see. Other folks' scars don't go no ways at all toward convincin' us.
Myrtle Reed
It seems to take a lifetime for us to learn that wisdom consists largely in a graceful acceptance of things that do not immediately concern us.
Myrtle Reed
There is only one path which leads to the house of forgiveness - that of understanding.
Myrtle Reed
A good forgettery is a happier possession than a good memory.
Myrtle Reed
Content is a matter of temperament rather than circumstance.
Myrtle Reed
Three things I have longed to see ... The sea serpent, a white rhinoceros, and an unselfish man.
Myrtle Reed
I had thought, in my blindness, that the great things were the easiest to do, but now I see that drudgery is an inseparable part of everything worth while, and the more worth while it is, the more drudgery is involved.
Myrtle Reed
Married and unmarried women waste a great deal of time in feeling sorry for each other.
Myrtle Reed
At twenty, men love woman at thirty, a woman and at forty, women.
Myrtle Reed
I've just washed my hair and I can't do a thing with it!
Myrtle Reed
It is personal vanity of the most flagrant type which intrudes itself, unasked, into other people's affairs. There are few of us who do not feel capable of ordering the daily lives of others, down to the most minute detail.
Myrtle Reed
The spirit in which one earns his daily bread means as much to his soul as the bread itself may mean to his body.
Myrtle Reed
Gossip is the social mosquito.
Myrtle Reed
How strange it is that life must be nearly over, before one fully learns to live!
Myrtle Reed
Conceit is lovable and unconcealed vanity is supreme selfishness, usually hidden.
Myrtle Reed