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Sarah Fielding was a British novelist born on November 8, 1710. She is known for her contributions to literature, particularly in the 18th century. Fielding was one of the first women to write novels, and her work often explored themes of morality and social issues. She is remembered for her pioneering role in the development of the novel as a literary form. Sarah Fielding passed away on April 8, 1768, leaving a legacy in the world of literature.
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"The loss of liberty which must attend being a wife was of all things the most horrible to my imagination."

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"The words of kindness are more healing to a drooping heart than balm or honey."

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"I fancied I had some constancy of mind because I could bear my own sufferings, but found through the sufferings of others I could be weakened like a child."

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"Tis this desire of bending all things to our own purposes which turns them into confusion and is the chief source of every error in our lives."

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"I was condemned to be beheaded, or burnt, as the king pleased; and he was graciously pleased, from the great remains of his love, to choose the mildest sentence."

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"Flattery in courtship is the highest insolence, for whilst it pretends to bestow on you more than you deserve, it is watching an opportunity to take from you what you really have."

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"If modesty and candor are necessary to an author in his judgment of his own works, no less are they in his reader."

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