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Jane Austen

"It would be most right, and most wise, and, therefore must involve least suffering."

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"It would be most right, and most wise, and, therefore must involve least suffering."

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Donna Grant

"The basic element that will distinguish those that are for godliness from those that are promoting ungodliness is if such individuals possess the spirit of godliness and not just a form of it."

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Donna Grant

"Proportion is almost impossible to human beings. There is no one who does not exaggerate."

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Donna Grant

"One act of a kind deed is better than thousand words of knowledge."

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Donna Grant

"Shame on the misguided, the blinded, the distracted and the divided. Shame. You have allowed deceptive men to corrupt and desensitize your hearts and minds to unethically fuel their greed."

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Donna Grant

"Extremes meet and there is no better example than the naughtiness of humility."

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Donna Grant

"It is better to be kind than to seek much knowledge."

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Donna Grant

"It is better to be slave to righteousness of God than sin of satan."

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Donna Grant

"Don't you ever dare judge, for who among us can say that when the devil himself offered us a deal, we refused?"

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Donna Grant

"If there is anything the leaders in the society or the nations must take note of is to know the importance of justice."

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Donna Grant

"The anti-hero has played an important role in the history of mankind, so much so that the whole ethos of what is good and bad has become blurred."

Explore more quotes by Jane Austen

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Jane Austen
"When once we are buried you think we are gone. But behold me immortal!"
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Jane Austen
"Where people are really attached, poverty itself is wealth."
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Jane Austen
"Elinor had some difficulty here to refrain from observing, that she thought Fanny might have borne with composure, an acquisition of wealth to her brother, by which neither she nor her child could be possibly impoverished."
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Jane Austen
"Stupid men are the only ones worth knowing after all."
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Jane Austen
"Mr. Knightley to be no longer coming there for his evening comfort! - No longer walking in at all hours, as if ever willing to change his own home for their's! - How was it to be endured?"
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Jane Austen
"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 will not allow books to prove anything."
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Jane Austen
"A very narrow income has a tendency to contract the mind, and sour the temper. Those who can barely live, and who live perforce in a very small, and generally very inferior, society, may well be illiberal and cross."
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Jane Austen
"Adieu to disappointment and spleen. What are men to rocks and mountains?"
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Jane Austen
"To be fond of dancing was a certain step towards falling in love."
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Jane Austen
"With such a worshipping wife, it was hardly possible that any natural defects in it should not be increased. The extreme sweetness of her temper must hurt his."
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