Madame's Quotes
Collection of top 100 famous quotes about Madame's
Madame's Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Madame's quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Madame Aubain's servant Felicite was the envy of the ladies of Pont-l'Eveque for half a century.
— Gustave Flaubert
A door once opened may be stepped through in either direction.
— Madame De Pompadour
Just saw a woman with a t-shirt that said southern and sassy, it's all good. Well madame, I beg to differ, it is in fact, not 'all good'.
— Dov Davidoff
She [Madame Duvall] seems desirious to repair the wrongs she has done, yet wishes the world to believe her blameless.
— Fanny Burney
I took my mother-in-law to Madame Tussaud's Chamber of Horrors, and one of the attendants said: 'Keep her moving sir; we're stock-taking.'
— Les Dawson
The more I see of men, the more I admire dogs. - Jeanne
— Madame Roland
What matters in a character is not whether one holds this or that opinion: what matters is how proudly one upholds it.
— Madame De Stael
Madame ... gloatingly savored her words as earlier she had savored her pig's trotter.
— Georges Simenon
Every so often I wonder what on earth we are waiting for. Silence. For it to be too late, Madame.
— Alessandro Baricco
Madame Defarge immediately called to her husband that she would get them, and went, knitting, out of the lamplight, through the courtyard
— Charles Dickens
I desire no other proof of Christianity than the Lord's Prayer.
— Madame De Stael
Madame Maxime was with him, we've been in touch with her and she says they got separated
— J.K. Rowling
Love is the symbol of eternity.
— Madame De Stael
If you don't get caught, you deserve everything you steal.
— Daniel Nayeri
We have to destroy the radioactive brain of Madame Curie.
— A. Lee Martinez
Lovin this Ghost Ghirls! It was great to get to play a madame not just a boring prostitute.
— Natasha Leggero
I have left all my business and all my husbands; I have taken with me only fair weather and my children, which is as much as I want.
— Madame De La Fayette
The quarrels of lovers are like summer storms. Everything is more beautiful when they have passed.
— Madame Necker
One is very weak when one is in love.
— Madame De La Fayette
I see you are working your usual magic this evening." "Not magic, Madame. Just me." Agnes
— Jessie Burton
Courage of soul is necessary for the triumphs of genius.
— Madame De Stael
Prayer is the life of the soul.
— Madame De Stael
When men do wrong, it is out of hardness; when women do wrong, it is out of weakness.
— Madame De Stael
Happiness is a wondrous commodity: the more you give, the more you have.
— Madame De Stael
Madame Guillotine gets mad at me. Not because I told them to shove it, but because I didn't say it in French. What is wrong with this school?
— Stephanie Perkins
I perceive your tongue is," returned madame; "and what the tongue is, I suppose the man is.
— Charles Dickens
Venice astonishes more than it pleases at first sight ...
— Madame De Stael
What is love, if it can calculate and provide against its own decay?
— Madame De Stael
The world is full of stupid people. That's why we have rules. But with enough intelligence, a person can be above the rules. She can make rules.
— Daniel Nayeri
How much past there is in a life, however brief it be.
— Madame De Stael
Guilt is a useless feeling. It's never enough to make you change direction
only enough to make you useless. — Daniel Nayeri
only enough to make you useless. — Daniel Nayeri
Believe it or don't believe it, Madame. But my feet are tired too. Bloody tired. Like a dead man's.
— Jessie Burton
The mind's pleasures are made to calm the tempests of the heart.
— Madame De Stael
The entire social order ... is arrayed against a woman who wants to rise to a man's reputation.
— Madame De Stael
In women's destiny everything goes downhill except for thought, whose immortal nature it is to keep constantly rising.
— Madame De Stael
I do not think very highly of Madame D'Arblay's books. The style is so strutting. She does so stalk about on Dr. Johnson's old stilts.
— Mary Russell Mitford
As I live and breath. The master is returned from parts unknown."
"Hi, Madame," Max said, planting a kiss on the woman's cheek. — Heather Graham
"Hi, Madame," Max said, planting a kiss on the woman's cheek. — Heather Graham
Madame Bovary is the sexiest book imaginable. The woman's virtually a nyphomaniac but you won't find a vulgar word in the entire thing.
— Noel Coward
One must, in one's life, make a choice between boredom and suffering.
— Madame De Stael
Champagne is the only wine that enhances a woman's beauty.
— Madame De Pompadour
She could be lively only in the midst of life; in isolation she dwindled to a shadow.
— Stefan Zweig
[On Napoleon:] One has the impression of an imperious wind blowing about one's ears when one is near that man.
— Madame De Stael
Madame, may I see your dog's chit, please,
— Kenneth Oppel
It's in my stars to invent; I was born on Madame Curie's birthday. I have this need for originals, for innovation. That's why I like Charlie Parker.
— Joni Mitchell
Man's most valuable faculty is his imagination.
— Madame De Stael
O Earth! all bathed with blood and years, yet never / Hast thou ceased putting forth thy fruit and flowers.
— Madame De Stael
Life resembles Gobelin tapestry; you do not see the canvass on the right side; but when you turn it, the threads are visible.
— Madame De Stael
I just snogged Madame de Pompadour!
— Madame De Pompadour
When we destroy an old prejudice, we have need of a new virtue.
— Madame De Stael
The smooth folds of her dress concealed a tumultuous heart, and her modest lips told nothing of her torment. She was in love.
— Gustave Flaubert
Most mothers think that to keep young people away from love-making it is enough never to speak of it in their presence.
— Madame De La Fayette
Public service used to be the highest of callings, until people like Madame Voldemort vilified it.
— Jennifer Granholm
The thing that must be preserved in all situations whatever is the reputation of one's character.
— Madame De Stael
Men have made of fortune an all-powerful goddess, in order that she may be made responsible for all their blunder's.
— Madame De Stael
As we grow in wisdom, we pardon more freely.
— Madame De Stael
We understand death for the first time when he puts his hand upon one whom we love
— Madame De Stael
To pray together, in whatever tongue or ritual, is the most tender brotherhood of hope and sympathy that man can contract in this life.
— Madame De Stael
Madame Thenardier was approaching her forties, which is equivalent to fifty in a woman ...
— Victor Hugo
Nothing is so horrifying as the possibility of existing simply because we do not know how to die.
— Madame De Stael
Music revives the recollections it would appease.
— Madame De Stael
The greatest happiness is to transform one's feelings into action.
— Madame De Stael
The voice of conscience is so delicate that it is easy to stifle it; but it is also so clear that it is impossible to mistake it.
— Madame De Stael
When once enthusiasm has been turned into ridicule, everything is undone except money and power.
— Madame De Stael
A fondness for satire indicates a mind pleased with irritating others; for myself, I never could find amusement in killing flies.
— Madame Roland
However old a conjugal union, it still garners some sweetness. Winter has some cloudless days, and under the snow a few flowers still bloom.
— Madame De Stael
It does not take a long time," said madame, "for an earthquake to swallow a town. Eh well! Tell me how long it takes to prepare the earthquake?
— Charles Dickens
No, you misunderstand, Madame Prime Minister. I'm not just good at staying alive. I'm also really, really good at drugging people. - Grace
— Ally Carter
Madame Lefoux shrugged. I do not know about that, my lady. I mean to say, one's life is one thing; one's technology is an entirely different matter.
— Gail Carriger
Everyone is an actor. In the end, everyone wants applause.
— V.C. Andrews
[The Germans] so easily confuse obstinacy with energy, and rudeness with firmness.
— Madame De Stael
A religious life is a struggle and not a hymn.
— Madame De Stael
It would have cost me more trouble to escape from injustice, than it does to submit to it.
— Madame Roland
Every day, I wish to make the world more beautiful than I found it.
— Madame De Pompadour
Genius inspires this thirst for fame: there is no blessing undesired by those to whom Heaven gave the means of winning it.
— Madame De Stael
Madame Schmid belonged to that large class of persons who believe that a man who engages in any form of art is necessarily a loafer.
— Molly Elliot Seawell
After all, hadn't she been the one to pursue him? And Madame Dupuy had done it with a vigor that most women would have been too ashamed to display.
— Rose Wynters
The people are as severe toward the clergy as toward women; they want to see absolute devotion to duty from both.
— Madame De Stael
See I'm the reckless and wild one who saves him from being boring. It's why we're perfect for each other. We balance. - Madame Selena
— Sherrilyn Kenyon
Champagne is the only drink that leaves a woman still beautiful after drinking it.
— Madame De Pompadour
Happy the land where the writers are sad, the merchants satisfied, the rich melancholic, and the populace content.
— Madame De Stael
In the history of the human mind there has never been a useful thought or a profound truth that has not found its century and admirers.
— Madame De Stael
Danger is like wine, it goes to your head.
— Madame De Stael
It becomes known as the time of the ostriches. "Do we have our heads in the sand, Madame? Or do they?" "Maybe everybody does," she murmurs. Madame
— Anthony Doerr
New doctrines ever displease the old. They like to fancy that the world has been losing wisdom, instead of gaining it, since they were young.
— Madame De Stael
It was a page he had Found in the handbook Of heartbreak. Wallace Stevens, "Madame la Fleurie," Collected Poems I
— Cornelia Funke
ground-growing shrub rather like a small azalea,' Madame is explaining when I return
— Carol Drinkwater
The human mind always makes progress, but it is a progress in spirals.
— Madame De Stael
Whatever is natural admits of variety.
— Madame De Stael