61+ Wilkie Collins Quotes On Hiring, Evolution And Mysterious

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Top 10 Wilkie Collins Quotes

  1. The evening advanced. The shadows lengthened. The waters of the lake grew pitchy black. The gliding of the ghostly swans became rare and more rare.
  2. My hour for tea is half-past five, and my buttered toast waits for nobody.
  3. We had our breakfasts--whatever happens in a house, robbery or murder, it doesn't matter, you must have your breakfast.
  4. Let the music speak to us of tonight, in a happier language than our own.
  5. I have always held the old-fashioned opinion that the primary object of work of fiction should be to tell a story.
  6. Pedants, who have the least knowledge to be proud of, are impelled most by vanity.
  7. I have always maintained that the one important phenomenon presented by modern society is - the enormous prosperity of Fools.
  8. I am not against hasty marriages where a mutual flame is fanned by an adequate income.
  9. Women can resist a man's love, a man's fame, a man's personal appearance, and a man's money, but they cannot resist a man's tongue when he knows how to talk to them.
  10. The law will argue any thing, with any body who will pay the law for the use of its brains and its time.

Wilkie Collins Short Quotes

  • This is the story of what a Woman's patience can endure, and what a Man's resolution can achieve.
  • Husbands and wives talk of the cares of matrimony, and bachelors and spinsters bear them.
  • It is the nature of truth to struggle to the light.
  • Peace rules the day, where reason rules the mind.
  • The horrid mystery hanging over us in this house gets into my head like liquor, and makes me wild.
  • Men ruin themselves headlong for unworthy women.
  • No sensible man ever engages, unprepared, in a fencing match of words with a woman.
  • Our words are giants when they do us an injury, and dwarfs when they do us a service.
  • I am a bundle of nerves dressed up to look like a man!
  • The best men are not consistent in good-- why should the worst men be consistent in evil.

Wilkie Collins Quotes About Life

I never paid you a compliment, Rachel, in my life. Successful love may sometimes use the language of flattery, I admit. But hopeless love, dearest, always speaks the truth. — Wilkie Collins

It is one of my rules in life, never to notice what I don't understand. — Wilkie Collins

The woman who first gives life, light, and form to our shadowy conceptions of beauty, fills a void in our spiritual nature that has remained unknown to us till she appeared. — Wilkie Collins

Your tears come easy, when you're young, and beginning the world. Your tears come easy, when you're old, and leaving it. I burst out crying. — Wilkie Collins

Some of us rush through life, and some of us saunter through life. Mrs Vesey sat through life. — Wilkie Collins

My business in life is to eat, drink, sleep, and die. Everything else is superfluity and I will have none of it. — Wilkie Collins

Wilkie Collins Famous Quotes And Sayings

Yes! the books - the generous friends who met me without suspicion - the merciful masters who never used me ill! The only years of my life that I can look back on with something like pride... Early and late, through the long winter nights and the quiet summer days, I drank at the fountain of knowledge, and never wearied of the draught. — Wilkie Collins

The dull people decided years and years ago, as everyone knows, that novel-writing was the lowest species of literary exertion, and that novel reading was a dangerous luxury and an utter waste of time. — Wilkie Collins

Habits of literary composition are perfectly familiar to me. One of the rarest of all the intellectual accomplishments that a man can possess is the grand faculty of arranging his ideas. Immense privilege! I possess it. Do you? — Wilkie Collins

There are three things that none of the young men of the present generation can do.They can't sit over their wine;they can't play at wist;and they can't pay a lady a compliment. — Wilkie Collins

I haven't much time to be fond of anything. But when I have a moment's fondness to bestow, most times the roses get it. — Wilkie Collins

And earth was heaven a little the worse for wear. And heaven was earth, done up again to look like new. — Wilkie Collins

If I ever meet with the man who fulfills my ideal, I shall make it a condition of the marriage settlement, that I am to have chocolate under the pillow. — Wilkie Collins

Except in this ignorant and material century, men have always worn precious stuffs and beautiful colours as well as women. — Wilkie Collins

I am a citizen of the world, and I have met, in my time, with so many different sorts of virtue, that I am puzzled, in my old age, to say which is the right sort and which is the wrong. — Wilkie Collins

I am thinking,’ he remarked quietly, ’whether I shall add to the disorder in this room, by scattering your brains about the fireplace. — Wilkie Collins

I have heard, as everybody else has, of a spirit's haunting a house ; but I have had my own personal experience of a house's haunting a spirit. — Wilkie Collins

I sadly want a reform in the construction of children. Nature's only idea seems to be to make them machines for the production of incessant noise. — Wilkie Collins

Any woman who is sure of her own wits, is a match, at any time, for a man who is not sure of his own temper. — Wilkie Collins

I say what other people only think, and when all the rest of the world is in a conspiracy to accept the mask for the true face, mine is the rash hand that tears off the plump pasteboard and shows the bare bones beneath. — Wilkie Collins

We neither know nor judge ourselves; others may judge, but cannot know us. God alone judges and knows us. — Wilkie Collins

Well may your heart believe the truths I tell; 'Tis virtue makes the bliss, where'er we dwell. — Wilkie Collins

She looked so irresistibly beautiful as she said those brave words that no man alive could have steel his heart against her. — Wilkie Collins

But, ah me! where is the faultless human creature who can persevere in a good resolution, without sometimes failing and falling back? — Wilkie Collins

The future of English fiction may rest with this Unknown Public - a reading public of three millions which lies right out of the pale of true literary civilization - which is now waiting to be taught the difference between a good book and a bad. — Wilkie Collins

Where is the woman who has ever really torn from her heart the image that has been once fixed in it by a true love? Books tell us that such unearthly creatures have existed - but what does our own experiences say in answer to books? — Wilkie Collins

I am an average good Christian, when you don't push my Christianity too far. And all the rest of you—which is a great comfort—are, in this respect, much the same as I am. — Wilkie Collins

Not the shadow of a doubt crossed my mind of the purpose for which the Count had left the theatre. His escape from us, that evening, was beyond all question the preliminary only to his escape from London. The mark of the Brotherhood was on his arm-I felt as certain of it as if he had shown me the brand; and the betrayal of the Brotherhood was on his conscience-I had seen it in his recognition of Pesca. — Wilkie Collins

...it will always remain my private persuasion that Nature was absorbed in making cabbages when Mrs. Vesey was born, and that the good lady suffered the consequences of a vegetable preoccupation in the mind of the Mother of us all. — Wilkie Collins

What lurking temptations to forbidden tenderness find their finding-places in a woman's dressing-gown, when she is alone in her room at night! — Wilkie Collins

I used to attend scientific experiments when I was a girl at school. They invariably ended in an explosion. If Mr. Jennings will be so very kind, I should like to be warned of the explosion this time. With a view to getting it over, if possible, before I go to bed. — Wilkie Collins

The books - the generous friends who met me without suspicion - the merciful masters who never used me ill! — Wilkie Collins

Men little know when they say hard things to us how well we remember them, and how much harm they do us. — Wilkie Collins

Tears are scientifically described as a Secretion. I can understand that a secretion may be healthy or unhealthy, but I cannot see the interest of a secretion from a sentimental point of view. — Wilkie Collins

I have noticed that the Christianity of a certain class of respectable people begins when they open their prayer-books at eleven o'clock on Sunday morning, and ends when they shut them up again at one o'clock on Sunday afternoon. Nothing so astonishes and insults Christians of this sort as reminding them of their Christianity on a week-day. — Wilkie Collins

I roused myself from the book which I was dreaming over rather than reading, and left my chambers to meet the cool night air in the suburbs. — Wilkie Collins

The fool's crime is the crime that is found out and the wise man's crime is the crime that is not found out. — Wilkie Collins

The mystery which underlies the beauty of women is never raised above the reach of all expression until it has claimed kindred with the deeper mystery in our own souls. — Wilkie Collins

I am (thank God) constitutionally superior to reason. — Wilkie Collins

But I am a just man, even to my enemy - and I will acknowledge, beforehand, that they are cleverer brains than I thought them — Wilkie Collins

Is there any wilderness of sand in the deserts of Arabia, is there any prospect of desolation among the ruins of Palestine, which can rival the repelling effect on the eye, and the depressing influence on the mind, of an English country town in the first stage of its existence, and in the transition state of its prosperity? — Wilkie Collins

Life Lessons by Wilkie Collins

Wilkie Collins is known for his exploration of social injustice and the power of the law. His works show the importance of standing up for what is right and fighting for justice. His novels also demonstrate the power of the human spirit to triumph over adversity.

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