Jane Austen
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A large income is the best recipe for happiness I ever heard of.
Quote by Jane Austen
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Jane Austen Quotes
A large income is the best recipe for happiness I ever heard of.
One does not love a place the less for having suffered in it unless it has all been suffering, nothing but suffering.
One half of the world cannot understand the pleasures of the other.
I do not want people to be agreeable, as it saves me the trouble of liking them.
It is always incomprehensible to a man that a woman should ever refuse an offer of marriage.
Where any one body of educated men, of whatever denomination, are condemned indiscriminately, there must be a deficiency of information, or...of something else.
One half of the world can not understand the pleasures of the other.
But when a young lady is to be a heroine, the perverseness of forty surrounding families cannot prevent her. Something must and will happen to throw a hero in her way.
What dreadful weather we have! It keeps me in a continual state of inelegance.
For what do we live, but to make sport for our neighbors and laugh at them in our turn?
Best Quotes
Men become much more attractive when they start looking older. But it doesn't do much for women, though we do have an advantage: make-up.
My dad was a Methodist minister.
Great perils have this beauty, that they bring to light the fraternity of strangers.
I have always imagined that Paradise will be a kind of library.
The most beautiful as well as the most ugly inclinations of man are not part of a fixed biologically given human nature, but result from the social process which creates man.
I don't build in order to have clients. I have clients in order to build.
All the legal action I've taken against newspapers has had a massively positive effect on my life and achieved exactly what I wanted, which is privacy and non-harassment.
The Ukrainian community is tight-knit by nature.
Over and over, we hear politicians say they can't spend our tax dollars on environmental protection when the economy is so fragile.
That's a central part of philosophy, of ethics. What do I owe to strangers? What do I owe to my family? What is it to live a good life? Those are questions which we face as individuals.
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