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Some persons' letters seem almost framed to afford a series of alibis for their personality.
Vernon Lee
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Vernon Lee
Age: 78 †
Born: 1856
Born: October 14
Died: 1935
Died: February 13
Art Critic
Art Historian
Essayist
Novelist
Poet
Writer
Port-de-l'Union
Violet Paget
Persons
Framed
Afford
Letters
Series
Personality
Seem
Almost
Seems
Alibis
More quotes by Vernon Lee
Mankind may be divided into playgoers and not playgoers.
Vernon Lee
things in this world are very roughly averaged and although averaging is a useful, rapid way of dispatching business, it does undoubtedly waste a great deal which is too good for wasting.
Vernon Lee
Despite our complicated civilization, so called, or perhaps on account of it, we are all of us a mere set of barbarians, who find it less trouble to provide a new, cheap, and shoddy thing than to get the full use and full pleasure out of a finely-made and carefully-chosen old one.
Vernon Lee
poets are privileged to utter more than they can always quite explain, bringing up from the mind's unplumbed depths tokens of the nature of the world we carry within us.
Vernon Lee
Leisure requires the evidence of our own feelings, because it is not so much a quality of time as a peculiar state of mind. ... What being at leisure means is more easily felt than defined.
Vernon Lee
What being at leisure means is more easily felt than defined.
Vernon Lee
There is too little courtship in the world.
Vernon Lee
There is no end to the deceits of the past.
Vernon Lee
There is an unlucky tendency ... to allow every new invention to add to life's complications, and every new power to increase life's hustling so that, unless we can dominate the mischief, we are really the worse off instead of the better.
Vernon Lee
Art is the expression of a man's life, of his mode of being, of his relations with the universe, since it is, in fact, man's inarticulate answer to the universe's unspoken message.
Vernon Lee
There is too little courtship in the world. ... For courtship means a wish to stand well in the other person's eyes, and, what is more, a readiness to be pleased with the other's ways a sense on each side of having had the better of the bargain an undercurrent of surprise and thankfulness at one's good luck.
Vernon Lee
The greatest pleasure of reading consists in re-reading.
Vernon Lee
A deal of the world's sound happiness is lost through Shyness.
Vernon Lee