Jessica Mitford Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Jessica Mitford's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Author Jessica Mitford's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 28 quotes on this page collected since September 11, 1917! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • Gracious dying is a huge, macabre and expensive joke on the American public.

  • Society created the prison in its own image; will history, with its penchant for paradox, reverse those roles?

    Roles   Prison   Paradox  
    Jessica Mitford (1973). “Kind and usual punishment: the prison business”, Not Avail
  • In childbirth, as in other human endeavors, fashions start with the rich, are then adopted by the aspirant middle class with an assist from the ever-watchful media, and may or may not eventually filter down to the poor.

    Fashion   Media   Class  
  • Things on the whole are much faster in America; people don't 'stand for election', they 'run for office.'

    Jessica Mitford (1960). “Hons and Rebels”
  • the whole point of muck-raking, apart from all the jokes, is to try to do something about what you've been writing about. You may not be able to change the world but at least you can embarrass the guilty.

    Writing   Trying   May  
  • One is only really inwardly comfortable, so to speak, after one's life has assumed some sort of shape. Not just a routine, like studying or a job or being a housewife, but something more complete than all those, which would include goals set by oneself and a circle of life-time type friends. I think this is one of the hardest things to achieve, in fact often just trying doesn't achieve it but rather it seems to develop almost by accident.

    Jobs   Thinking   Circles  
    "Decca: The Letters of Jessica Mitford".
  • When is conduct a crime, and when is a crime not a crime? When "Somebody Up There" - a monarch, a dictator, a Pope, a legislator - so decrees.

    Jessica Mitford (1973). “Kind and usual punishment: the prison business”, Not Avail
  • Knowing few children of my age with whom to compare notes, I envied the children of literature to whom interesting things were always happening.

    Jessica Mitford (1960). “Hons and Rebels”, Isis Large Print Books
  • the prison system, inherently unjust and inhumane, is the ultimate expression of injustice and inhumanity in the society at large.

    Jessica Mitford (1973). “Kind and usual punishment: the prison business”, Vintage
  • Objectivity? I've always had an objective.

  • Alas, poor Yorick! How surprised he would be to see how his counterpart of today is whisked off to a funeral parlor and is in short order sprayed, sliced, pierced, pickled, trussed, trimmed, creamed, waxed, painted, rouged and neatly dressed - transformed from a common corpse into a Beautiful Memory Picture.

    Jessica Mitford (2011). “The American Way of Death Revisited”, p.43, Vintage
  • [On the United States:] A nation which does not appreciate that the simple elocution exercise 'Merry Mary married hairy Harry' contains not one but three vowel sounds.

  • Things on the whole are faster in America; people don't stand for election, they run for office. If a person says he's sick, it doesn't mean regurgitating, it means ill. Mad means angry, not insane. Don't ask for the left-luggage; it's called a checkroom.

    Running   Mean   America  
    Jessica Mitford (2016). “Hons and Rebels: Hons & Rebels”, p.141, Hachette UK
  • The character and mentality of the keepers may be of more importance in understanding prisons than the character and mentality of the kept.

    Jessica Mitford (1973). “Kind and usual punishment: the prison business”, Vintage
  • Enemies are, to me, as important as friends in my life, and when they die I mourn their passing.

    Jessica Mitford (2012). “Poison Penmanship: The Gentle Art of Muckraking”, p.219, New York Review of Books
  • It is somehow reassuring to discover that the word travel is derived from travail, denoting the pains of childbirth.

  • Objectivity? I always have an objective.

  • Prison walls are meant not only to keep convicts in, but to keep the would-be investigator out.

    Wall   Would Be   Prison  
    Jessica Mitford (1973). “Kind and usual punishment: the prison business”, Vintage
  • lifelong enemies are, I think, as hard to make and as important to one's well-being as lifelong friends.

    Jessica Mitford (2012). “Poison Penmanship: The Gentle Art of Muckraking”, p.219, New York Review of Books
  • Growing up in the English countryside seemed an interminable process. Freezing winter gave way to frosty spring, which in turn merged into chilly summer-but nothing ever, ever happened.

    Jessica Mitford (1960). “Hons and Rebels”, Isis Large Print Books
  • Funeralese has had its ups and downs. The word 'morticians,' first used in Embalmers Monthly for February, 1895, was barred by the Chicago Tribune in 1932, 'not for lack of sympathy with the ambition of undertakers to be well regarded, but because of it. If they haven't the sense to save themselves from their own lexicographers, we shall not be guilty of abetting them in their folly.

    JESSICA MITFORD (1963). “THE AMERICAN WAY OF DEATH”
  • I discovered that Human Nature was not, as I had always supposed, a fixed and unalterable entity, that wars are not caused by a natural urge in men to fight, that ownership of land and factories is not necessarily the natural reward of greater wisdom and energy.

    War   Fighting   Men  
  • A thirteen-year-old is a kaleidoscope of different personalities, if not in most ways a mere figment of her own imagination. At that age, what and who you are depends largely on what book you happen to be reading at the moment.

    Book   Reading   Years  
    Jessica Mitford (1960). “Hons and Rebels”
  • O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? Where, indeed. Many a badly stung survivor, faced with the aftermath of some relative's funeral, has ruefully concluded that the victory has been won hands down by a funeral establishment - in disastrously unequal battle.

    Hands   Funeral   Victory  
    Jessica Mitford (2011). “The American Way of Death Revisited”, p.14, Vintage
  • I have nothing against undertakers personally. It's just that I wouldn't want one to bury my sister.

  • You may not be able to change the world, but at least you can embarrass the guilty.

  • Now there is a society where the funeral industry got completely out of control.

  • Picking other people's brains is an art worth cultivating.

    Art   People   Brain  
    Jessica Mitford (2012). “Poison Penmanship: The Gentle Art of Muckraking”, p.6, New York Review of Books
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We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 28 quotes from the Author Jessica Mitford, starting from September 11, 1917! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
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