"They are much to be pitied who have not been given a taste for nature early in life.












One half of the world cannot understand the pleasures of the other.
More Jane Austen quotes
"To look almost pretty is an acquisition of higher delight to a girl who has been looking plain for the first fifteen years of her life than a beauty f...
"Without music, life would be a blank to me.
"But one never does form a just idea of anybody beforehand. One takes up a notion and runs away with it.
"Blessed with so many resources within myself the world was not necessary to me. I could do very well without it.
"Ever since her being turned into a Churchill, she has out-Churchill'd them all in high and mighty claims.
"She looked back as well as she could; but it was all confusion. She had taken up the idea, she supposed and made everything bend to it.
"If I am wrong, I am doing what I believe to the right.
"How quick come the reasons for approving what we like.
"Men have had every advantage of us in telling their own story. Education has been theirs in so much higher a degree the pen has been in their hands. I...
"...when pain is over, the remembrance of it often becomes a pleasure.
"There certainly was some great mismanagement in the education of those two young men. One has got all the goodness, and the other all the appearance o...