Dainty Quotes Page 2

Part 2 of the dainty quotations list about elegant and backgammon sayings citing Anonymous, David Bowie and Emily Dickinson captions

  • The children now love luxury; they have bad manners, contempt for authority; they allow disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise. Children now are tyrants, not the servants of their households. They no longer rise when elders enter the room. They contradict their parents, chatter before company, gobble up dainties at the table, cross their legs, and tyrannize their teachers.

    — Anonymous
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  • With a suit, always wear big British shoes, the ones with large welts.

    There's nothing worse than dainty little Italian jobs at the end of the leg line.

    — David Bowie
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  • Sisters are brittle things. God was penurious with me, which makes me shrewd with Him. One is a dainty sum! One bird, one cage, one flight; one song in those far woods, as yet suspected by faith only!

    — Emily Dickinson
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  • Cats are the runes of beauty, invincibility, wonder, pride, freedom, coldness, self-sufficiency, and dainty individuality - the qualities of sensitive, enlightened, mentally developed, pagan, cynical, poetic, philosophic, dispassionate, reserved, independent, Nietzschean, unbroken, civilised, master-class men.

    — H. P. Lovecraft
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  • These are very dainty and superrefined, but really vile.

    — Manolo Blahnik
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  • You know what, I think maybe it's because men like to fart, and the host wants to be able to sit in his writers' room and just pass gas freely. Me, I'm a lady. I'm dainty. I know to get up and leave the room and go to my office.

    — Wanda Sykes
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  • Women do not avoid fighting because they are dainty or scared, but because they have a greater stake than men in staying alive to rear their offspring. Women compete with each other just as tenaciously as men, but with a stealth and subtlety that reduces their chances of being killed or injured.

    — Anne Campbell
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  • For a guy who is always banging on about the masculine virtues, Nixon had this remarkable proclivity for very dainty gestures.

    — Harry Shearer
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  • A table full of welcome makes scarce one dainty dish.

    — William Shakespeare
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  • Gamaun is a dainty steed, Strong, black, and of a noble breed, Full of fire, and full of bone, With all his line of fathers known; Fine his nose, his nostrils thin, But blown abroad by the pride within; His mane is like a river flowing, And his eyes like embers glowing In the darkness of the night, And his pace as swift as light.

    — Bryan Procter
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  • To live On means not yours--be brave in silks and laces, Gallant in steeds;

    splendid in banquets; all Not yours. Given, uninherited, unpaid for; This is to be a trickster; and to filch Men's art and labour, which to them is wealth, Life, daily bread;--quitting all scores with "friend, You're troublesome!" Why this, forgive me, Is what, when done with a less dainty grace, Plain folks call "Theft.

    — Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton
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  • I hope the day will come when a wasp-waist and a pair of thin shoulders will not be esteemed beauty: we have had our ideas ruined by trash novels, praising 'fragile forms' and 'delicate beauty,' 'dainty waists,' 'snow-drop faces,' and a lot of other nonsense.

    — Julia McNair Wright
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  • Related To Dainty Quotations

    • appetizing quotes
    • dainties quotes
    • delicacy quotes
    • yon quotes
    • thrifty quotes
    • idler
    • savory
    • delicate
    • daintiness
    • serpent
    • meats
    • succulent
    • buttocks
    • decked
    • avarice
    • ungraceful
    • gentlest
    • chestnut
    • morsel
    • tomatoes
    • laudanum
    • repast
    • roasted
    • exquisite
    • delicious
    • squanders
    • astride
    • delectable
    • backgammon
    • elegant
  • The dainties of the great are the teares of the poore.

    — George Herbert
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  • Without good company all dainties Lose their true relish, and like painted grapes, Are only seen, not tasted.

    — Philip Massinger
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  • It is not elegant to gnaw Indian corn.

    The kernels should be scored with a knife, scraped off into the plate, and then eaten with a fork. Ladies should be particularly careful how they manage so ticklish a dainty, lest the exhibition rub off a little desirable romance.

    — Charlie Day
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  • It is agreed by most men, that the Eele is a most daintie fish;

    the Romans have esteemed her the Helena of their feasts, and some The Queen of pleasure.

    — Izaak Walton
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  • There is to me a daintiness about early flowers that touches me like poetry.

    They blow out with such a simple loveliness among the common herbs of pastures, and breathe their lives so unobtrusively, like hearts whose beatings are too gentle for the world.

    — Nathaniel Parker Willis
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  • Let take a cat, and foster her with milk And tender flesh, and make her couch of silk, And let her see a mouse go by the wall, Anon she leaveth milk and flesh, and all, And every dainty that is in that house, Such appetite hath she to eat the mouse. Lo, here hath kind her domination, And appetite banishes discretion.

    — Oswald Barron
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  • Go along, go along quickly, and set all you have on the table for us.

    We don't want doughnuts, honey buns, poppy cakes, and other dainties; bring us a whole sheep, serve a goat and forty-year old mead! And plenty of vodka, not vodka with all sorts of fancies, not with raisins and flavorings, but pure foaming vodka, that hisses and bubbles like mad.

    — Nikolai Gogol
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  • Here we supped . . ., having amongst other dainties, a dish of truffles, an earth nut found by an hogg trained to it.

    — John Evelyn
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  • No daintie flowre or herbe that growes on grownd, No arborett with painted blossoms drest And smelling sweete, but there it might be fownd To bud out faire, and throwe her sweete smels al arownd.

    — Sayings
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  • Women are of two sorts. Some of them are wiser, better learned, discreeter, and more constant than a number of men. But another and a worse sort of them...are fond, foolish, wanton, flibbergibs, tatlers, triflers, wavering, witless, without council, feeble, careless, rash, proud, dainty, nice, talebearers, eavesdroppers, rumor-raisers, evil-tongued, worse-minded, and in every way doltified with the dregs of the Devil's dunghill.

    — John Aylmer
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  • Such dainties to them, their health it might hurt;

    It 's like sending them ruffles when wanting a shirt.

    — Oliver Goldsmith
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  • Nothing surely is as potent as a law that may not be disobeyed.

    It has the force of the water drop that hollows the stone. A small dainty task, if it be really daily, will beat the labours of a spasmodic Hercules.

    — Anthony Trollope
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  • So, before leading my troops into battle, we would get drunk and drugged up, sacrifice a local teenager, drink their blood, then strip down to our shoes and go into battle wearing colourful wigs and carrying dainty purses we'd looted from civilians. We'd slaughter anyone we saw, chop their heads off and use them as soccer balls. We were nude, fearless, drunk and homicidal. We killed hundreds of people - so many I lost count.

    — General Butt Naked
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  • The children now love luxury; they have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise. Children are now tyrants, not the servants of their households. They no longer rise when elders enter the room. They contradict their parents, chatter before company, gobble up dainties at the table, cross their legs, and tyrannize their teachers.

    — Aristophanes
    0
  • Everything I do is inspired by my early life”, Bourgeois’ looked up to her mother who was the most important person in her life for many reasons, ‘Maman’ symbolizes her mother; “The friend, because my best friend was my mother and she was deliberate, clever, patient, soothing, reasonable, dainty, subtle, indispensable, neat, and as useful as a spider.

    — Louise Bourgeois
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  • The sandy cat by the Farmer's chair Mews at his knee for dainty fare;

    Old Rover in his moss-greened house Mumbles a bone, and barks at a mouse. In the dewy fields the cattle lie Chewing the cud 'neath a fading sky; Dobbin at manger pulls his hay: Gone is another summer's day.

    — Walter de La Mare
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  • We had a sunset of a very fine sort. The vast plain of the sea was marked off in bands of sharply-contrasted colors: great stretches of dark blue, others of purple, others of polished bronze; the billowy mountains showed all sorts of dainty browns and greens, blues and purples and blacks, and the rounded velvety backs of certain of them made one want to stroke them, as one would the sleek back of a cat.

    — Mark Twain
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  • She stood by the tea-table in a light-coloured muslin gown, which had a good deal of pink about it. She looked as if she was not attending to the conversation, but solely busy with the tea-cups, among which her round ivory hands moved with pretty, noiseless, daintiness.

    — Elizabeth Gaskell
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  • If I ever think you are even considering leaving me again, no matter how good you reasons, I'll have you locked in your rooms and the doors barricaded, so help me God." He lifted her foot and began to dry it. Her voice shaking, Whitney asked, "Will you stay locked in there with me?" He raised her dainty foot to his jaw and tenderly laid his cheek against it, then turned his head and kissed it. "Yes," he whispered. -Clayton Westmoreland

    — Judith McNaught
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  • I bet you Cinderella didn't get along with Prince Charming's friends.

    Oh sure, the knights and barons probably put up with her on account that she was pretty and had such dainty feet and all, but you should know every duchess and contess in the kingdom hated her guts.

    — Janette Rallison
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  • Hope in gates, hope in spoons, hope in doors, hope in tables, no hope in daintiness and determination. Hope in dates.

    — Gertrude Stein
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  • Who's that little brunette?" Suzanne asked.

    "I hate little petite types. Gregory doesn't look right with someone petite. Little face, little hands, little dainty feet." "Big boobs," Beth said, glancing up.

    — Elizabeth Chandler
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  • You lie, in faith; for you are call'd plain Kate, And bonny Kate and sometimes Kate the curst; But Kate, the prettiest Kate in Christendom Kate of Kate Hall, my super-dainty Kate, For dainties are all Kates, and therefore, Kate, Take this of me, Kate of my consolation; Hearing thy mildness praised in every town, Thy virtues spoke of, and thy beauty sounded, Yet not so deeply as to thee belongs, Myself am moved to woo thee for my wife.

    — William Shakespeare
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