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Fortune does not change [people], it unmasks them.
Suzanne Curchod
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Suzanne Curchod
Age: 55 †
Born: 1739
Born: May 6
Died: 1794
Died: May 15
Salonnière
Socialite
Writer
Crassier VD
Louise-Suzanne Necker
Fortune
Wealth
Money
Change
Doe
People
Unmasks
More quotes by Suzanne Curchod
A pure style in writing results from the rejection of everything superfluous.
Suzanne Curchod
A woman must be truly refined to incite chivalry in the heart of a man.
Suzanne Curchod
Gallantry thrives most in the atmosphere of the court.
Suzanne Curchod
Make your best thoughts into action.
Suzanne Curchod
Love is the only possession which we can carry with us beyond the grave.
Suzanne Curchod
Order in a house ought to be like the machinery in opera, whose effect produces great pleasure, but whose ends must be hid.
Suzanne Curchod
Obstinacy is ever most positive when it is most in the wrong.
Suzanne Curchod
Women do not often have it in their power to give like men, but they forgive like Heaven.
Suzanne Curchod
Dignity and love do not blend.
Suzanne Curchod
The most subtle flattery that a woman can receive is by actions, not by words.
Suzanne Curchod
Romance is the poetry of literature.
Suzanne Curchod
Innocence and mystery never dwell long together.
Suzanne Curchod
The quarrels of lovers are like summer storms. Everything is more beautiful when they have passed.
Suzanne Curchod
Where love and wisdom drink out of the same cup, in this everyday world, it is the exception.
Suzanne Curchod
How immense to us appear the sins we have not committed.
Suzanne Curchod
Elegance is exquisite polish.
Suzanne Curchod
Our own cast-off sorrows are not sufficient to constitute sympathy for others.
Suzanne Curchod
That woman is happiest whose life is passed in the shadow of a manly, loving heart.
Suzanne Curchod
It is never permissible to say, I say.
Suzanne Curchod
The old age of women is bearable only on condition that they do not take up any room, do not make any noise, do not demand any service on condition that they render all the service that is expected of them, and actually have no existence except for the good of others.
Suzanne Curchod