Marriage Austen Quotes
Collection of top 24 famous quotes about Marriage Austen
Marriage Austen Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Marriage Austen quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Here are officers enough in Meryton to disappoint all the young ladies in the country.
— Jane Austen
Rational thoughts never drive people's creativity the way emotions do.
— Neil DeGrasse Tyson
Marriage is indeed a maneuvering business.
— Jane Austen
It was the marriage that was important; Jane Austen rarely even bothered to write about the wedding.
— Karen Joy Fowler
Conflict is the alchemical soup that transforms raw emotion and instinct into pure gold.
— Harville Hendrix
Lady Middleton resigned herself ... Contenting herself with merely giving her husband a gentle reprimand on the subject, five or six times every day.
— Jane Austen
Time, you may be sure, will make one or the other of us think differently; and, in the meanwhile, we need not talk much on the subject.
— Jane Austen
The most incomprehensible thing in the world to a man, is a woman who rejects his offer of marriage!
— Jane Austen
It is obvious that she is more interested in happiness than in the institution of marriage, in love and understanding than matrimony.
— Azar Nafisi
There's this brutal imperial power, that my passport says I represent. But it will never represent where my heart lives, only vaguely where it went.
— Ani DiFranco
I am not only not going to be married, at present, but have very little intention of ever marrying at all.
— Jane Austen
Luck which so often defies anticipation in matrimonial affairs, giving attraction to what is moderate rather than to what is superior.
— Jane Austen
but upon the marriage of the young 'squire, it had received the improvement of a farm-house elevated into a cottage, for his residence,
— Jane Austen
It is always incomprehensible to a man that a woman should ever refuse an offer of marriage.
— Jane Austen
A woman is not to marry a man merely because she is asked, or because he is attached to her, and can write a tolerable letter.
— Jane Austen
I'm sorry, I'm absolutely convinced that there is at the moment no realistic prospect for very much hope in human affairs.
— George Steiner
Miss Bingley's congratulations to her brother, on his approaching marriage, were all that was affectionate and insincere.
— Jane Austen
Happiness in marriage is entirely a matter of chance.
— Jane Austen
Nature, reason, and Christianity recognize no other. Pride may say Nay; but Pride was always a liar, and a great hater of the truth.
— Susanna Moodie