Stella Benson Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Stella Benson's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Novelist Stella Benson's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 31 quotes on this page collected since January 6, 1892! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • We travel because we do not know. We know that we do not know the best before we start. That is why we start. But we forget that we do not know the worst either. That is why we come back.

    Travel   Forget   Worst  
  • What is this Charity, this clinking of money between strangers, and when did Charity cease to be a comforting and secret thing between one friend and another? Does Love make her voice heard through a committee, does Love employ an almoner to convey her message to her neighbor? ... The real Love knows her neighbor face to face, and laughs with him and weeps with him, and eats and drinks with him, so that at last, when his black day dawns, she may share with him, not what she can spare, but all that she has.

    Real   Voice   Laughing  
    Stella Benson (2012). “Living Alone”, p.65, tredition
  • Islands are gregarious animals, they decorate the ocean in conveys.

    Ocean   Animal   Islands  
    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • Curiosity needs food as much as any of us, and dies soon if denied it.

    Curiosity   Needs   Dies  
    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • You want the vote so badly that you think it worth while to become hysterical over it.' 'There is not much hysteria in the movement, only hysteria is the thing that strikes a hysterical press as most worthy of note.

    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • There are some people who can never see a little cloud of fantasy float across the horizon of their dreams without building a heavy castle in the air upon it, and bringing it to earth.

    Dream   Clouds   Air  
    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • Californians have brought suburb-making almost to an art. Their cities and their country-side are equally suburban. No-one has a country house in California; no-one has a city house. It is good to see trees always from city windows, but it is not so good always to see houses from country windows.

    Country   Art   Cities  
    Stella Benson (1922). “The Poor Man”
  • Imagination seems to be a glory and a misery, a blessing and a curse. Adam, to his sorrow, lacked it. Eve, to her sorrow, possessed it. Had both been blessed - or cursed - with it, there would have been much keener competition for the apple.

    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • The dense and godly wear consistency as a flower, the imaginative fling it joyfully behind them.

    Change   Flower   Godly  
    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • The moment of cocoa-drinking was always the moment of confidences.

    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • Music is the ethereal connection between this world and the other.

  • The sun was like a word written between the sea and the sky, a word that was swallowed up by the sea before any man had time to read it.

    Men   Sea   Sky  
  • You can't discover one foot of clay on an idol without suspecting the other.

    Idols   Feet   Clay  
    Stella Benson (1924). “Pipers and a dancer”
  • a committee, of course, exists for the purpose of damping enthusiasms.

    Stella Benson (2012). “Living Alone”, p.16, tredition
  • Sometimes I think there are two kinds of people - the autobiographists and the biographists.

    Thinking   Two   People  
    Stella Benson (1924). “Pipers and a dancer”
  • Man is potentially a son, and woman is potentially a mother; woman depends on the dependence of man. The spinster, if pathetic at all, is pathetic because she has no one to look after, not because there is no one to look after her. Bear in mind that the conventional spinster keeps a canaary as a substitute for a husband.

    Mother   Husband   Son  
    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • There are, broadly speaking, two kinds of workers in the world, the people who do all the work, and the people who think they do all the work. The latter class is generally the busiest, the former never have time to be busy.

    Thinking   Class   Two  
    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • Los Angeles is a sophisticated city; it has no eccentricities and no heart.

  • Twenty-three is said to be the prime of life by those who have reached so far and no farther. It shares this distinction with every age, from ten to three-score and ten.

    Age   Twenties   Three  
    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • The more committees you belong to, the less of ordinary life you will understand. When your daily round becomes nothing more than a daily round of committees you might as well be dead.

    Stella Benson (2012). “Living Alone”, p.13, tredition
  • The music paled like a candle and went out.

    Music   Candle  
    Stella Benson (1922). “The Poor Man”
  • always there is a sort of dream of air between you and the hills of California, a veil of unreality in the intervening air. It gives the hills the bloom that peaches have, or grapes in the dew.

    Dream   Air   California  
    Stella Benson (1922). “The Poor Man”
  • Call no man a foe, but never love a stranger.

    Love   Men   Stranger  
    This Is the End (1917)
  • Cows in India occupy the same position in society as women did in England before they got the vote. Woman was revered but not encouraged. Her life was one long obstacle race owing to the anxiety of man to put pedestals at her feet. While she was falling over the pedestals she was soothingly told that she must occupy a Place Apart - and indeed, so far Apart did her place prove to be that it was practically out of earshot. The cow in India finds her position equally lofty and tiresome. You practically never see a happy cow in India.

    Fall   Men   Race  
  • Family jokes, though rightly cursed by strangers, are the bond that keeps most families alive.

    Family   Ties   Alive  
    Stella Benson (1924). “Pipers and a dancer”
  • Sometimes I pose, but sometimes I pose as posing.

    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
  • The Law likes to be argued with. Take away words and where is the Law? Silence always annoys it.

    Law   Silence   Likes  
    Stella Benson (2005). “This Is the End”, p.42, 1st World Publishing
  • Americans were people who wanted to leave every place better than they found it, to leave every man more of a man than they found him. ... Americans could open doors to almost all that was admirable - it was their misfortune, not their fault, that movies and victrolas and advertisements squeezed in when they opened the door.

    Men   Doors   People  
    Stella Benson (1924). “Pipers and a Dancer”
  • Nearly everybody in San Francisco writes poetry. Few San Franciscans would admit this, but most of them would rather like to have their productions accidentally discovered.

    Stella Benson (1922). “The Poor Man”
  • Unpopularity is a excellent salve to the conscience; it is delicious to be misunderstood.

    Stella Benson (1916). “I Pose”
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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 31 quotes from the Novelist Stella Benson, starting from January 6, 1892! 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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