Dorothy Richardson Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Dorothy Richardson's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Author Dorothy Richardson's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 4 quotes on this page collected since May 17, 1873! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • Quotations are feeble; you always regret making them.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • The difference between you and me is that you think to live and I live to think.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • Coercion. The unpardonable crime.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1938). “Pilgrimage”
  • Dancing brings an endlessness in which nothing matters but to go on dancing - in a room, till the walls disappear - in the open, till the sky, moving as you dance, seems to cleave and let you through.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1925). “The Trap”
  • Life is creation - self and circumstances, the raw material.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • In the midst of the happiness they brought there was always a lurking shadow. The shadow of incompatibility; of the impossibility of being at once bound and free. The garden breeds a longing for the wild; the wild a homesickness for the garden.

    Garden   Shadow   Longing  
    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1925). “The Trap”
  • until it had been clearly explained that men were always and always partly wrong in all their ideas, life would be full of poison and secret bitterness. Men fight about their philosophies and religions, there is no certainty in them; but their contempt for women is flawless and unanimous.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • You think Christianity is favorable to women? On the contrary. It is the Christian countries that have produced the prostitute and the most vile estimations of women in the world.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • It's only in silence that you can judge of your relationship to a person.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • The better you hear a thing put, the more certain you are there's another view.

  • Clear thought makes clear speech.

  • Real speech can only come from complete silence. Incomplete silence is as fussy as deliberate conversation.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • Men would always rather be made love to than talked at.

  • Death must be got through as life had been, just somehow.

  • The question was not how to get a job, but how to live by such jobs as I could get.

    Dorothy Richardson (1905). “The Long Day: The Story of a New York Working Girl”, p.45, University of Virginia Press
  • Marriage is not an institution, it is an intuition.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • People is themselves when they are children, and not again till they know they'm dying.

  • No future life could heal the degradation of having been a woman. Religion in the world had nothing but insults for women.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1919). “The Tunnel”
  • The joy of a party is the newness of people to each other, renewed strikingness of humanity. They love each other, to distraction. Really to distraction. Before they fall into conversation and separate. ... The strangeness, and the hopes aroused by strangeness, are illusions. Mirages arising wherever people gather expectantly together.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • It will all go on as long as women are stupid enough to go on bringing men into the world. . .

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1979). “Pilgrimage”
  • Deep down in everyone was sorrow and certainty.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1919). “Honeycomb”
  • Night is torment. That is why people go to sleep. To avoid clear sight and torment.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • Women who are not living ought to spend all their time cracking jokes. In a rotten society women grow witty; making a heaven while they wait.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • Life ought to be lived on a basis of silence, where truth blossoms.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • ... men want recognition of their work, to help them believe in themselves.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1931). “Dawn's Left Hand”
  • Every thought vibrates through the universe.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
  • If there was a trick, there must be a trickster.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1979). “Pilgrimage”
  • Suddenly a mist of green on the trees, as quiet as thought.

  • A happy childhood is perhaps the most-fortunate gift in life.

  • the Church will go on being a Royal Academy of Males.

    Dorothy Miller Richardson (1967). “Pilgrimage”
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