Top 65 Anthony Trollope Quotes December 26, 2020 by Krista Leave a Comment “When the ivy has found its tower, when the delicate creeper has found its strong wall, we know how the parasite plants grow and prosper.”― Anthony Trollope“And though it is much to be a nobleman, it is more to be a gentleman.”― Anthony Trollope“As to that leisure evening of life, I must say that I do not want it. I can conceive of no contentment of which toil is not to be the immediate parent.”― Anthony Trollope“I hold that gentleman to be the best-dressed whose dress no one observes.”― Anthony Trollope“Book love… is your pass to the greatest, the purest, and the most perfect pleasure that God has prepared for His creatures.”― Anthony Trollope“Passionate love, I take it, rarely lasts long, and is very troublesome while it does last. Mutual esteem is very much more valuable.”― Anthony Trollope“No man thinks there is much ado about nothing when the ado is about himself.”― Anthony Trollope“There are some achievements which are never done in the presence of those who hear of them. Catching salmon is one, and working all night is another.”― Anthony Trollope“It has now become the doctrine of a large clan of politicians that political honesty is unnecessary, slow, subversive of a man’s interests, and incompatible with quick onward movement.”― Anthony Trollope“It may almost be a question whether such wisdom as many of us have in our mature years has not come from the dying out of the power of temptation, rather than as the results of thought and resolution.”― Anthony Trollope“Marvelous is the power which can be exercised, almost unconsciously, over a company, or an individual, or even upon a crowd by one person gifted with good temper, good digestion, good intellects, and good looks.”― Anthony Trollope“There is no road to wealth so easy and respectable as that of matrimony.”― Anthony Trollope“They are best dressed, whose dress no one observes.”― Anthony Trollope“Success is the necessary misfortune of life, but it is only to the very unfortunate that it comes early.”― Anthony Trollope“It is a comfortable feeling to know that you stand on your own ground. Land is about the only thing that can’t fly away.”― Anthony Trollope“I think the greatest rogues are they who talk most of their honesty.”― Anthony Trollope“There is no human bliss equal to twelve hours of work with only six hours in which to do it.”― Anthony Trollope“A man’s love, till it has been chastened and fastened by the feeling of duty which marriage brings with it, is instigated mainly by the difficulty of pursuit.”― Anthony Trollope“There is no happiness in love, except at the end of an English novel.”― Anthony Trollope“Oxford is the most dangerous place to which a young man can be sent.”― Anthony Trollope“The true picture of life as it is, if it could be adequately painted, would show men what they are, and how they might rise, not, indeed to perfection, but one step first, and then another on the ladder.”― Anthony Trollope“Don’t let love interfere with your appetite. It never does with mine.”― Anthony Trollope“The satirist who writes nothing but satire should write but little – or it will seem that his satire springs rather from his own caustic nature than from the sins of the world in which he lives.”― Anthony Trollope“The habit of reading is the only enjoyment in which there is no alloy; it lasts when all other pleasures fade.”― Anthony Trollope“Love is like any other luxury. You have no right to it unless you can afford it.”― Anthony Trollope“Life is so unlike theory.”― Anthony Trollope“There is no way of writing well and also of writing easily.”― Anthony Trollope“Three hours a day will produce as much as a man ought to write.”― Anthony Trollope“There is no royal road to learning; no short cut to the acquirement of any art.”― Anthony Trollope“It has been the great fault of our politicians that they have all wanted to do something.”― Anthony Trollope“I doubt whether any girl would be satisfied with her lover’s mind if she knew the whole of it.”― Anthony Trollope“A man’s mind will very gradually refuse to make itself up until it is driven and compelled by emergency.”― Anthony Trollope“Never think that you’re not good enough. A man should never think that. People will take you very much at your own reckoning.”― Anthony Trollope“As to happiness in this life it is hardly compatible with that diminished respect which ever attends the relinquishing of labour.”― Anthony Trollope“It is hard to rescue a man from the slough of luxury and idleness combined. If anything can do it, it is a cradle filled annually.”― Anthony Trollope“It is necessary to get a lot of men together, for the show of the thing, otherwise the world will not believe. That is the meaning of committees. But the real work must always be done by one or two men.”― Anthony Trollope“I never knew a government yet that wanted to do anything.”― Anthony Trollope“Neither money nor position can atone to me for low birth.”― Anthony Trollope“Cham is the only thing to screw one up when one is down a peg.”― Anthony Trollope“It has become a certainty now that if you will only advertise sufficiently you may make a fortune by selling anything.”― Anthony Trollope“It is self-evident that at sixty-five a man has done all that he is fit to do.”― Anthony Trollope“When a man is ill nothing is so important to him as his own illness.”― Anthony Trollope“A husband is very much like a house or a horse.”― Anthony Trollope“I have no ambition to surprise my reader. Castles with unknown passages are not compatible with my homely muse.”― Anthony Trollope“Since woman’s rights have come up a young woman is better able to fight her own battle.”― Anthony Trollope“I ain’t a bit ashamed of anything.”― Anthony Trollope“What is there that money will not do?”― Anthony Trollope“It is the test of a novel writer’s art that he conceal his snake-in-the-grass; but the reader may be sure that it is always there.”― Anthony Trollope“When men think much, they can rarely decide.”― Anthony Trollope“A woman’s life is not perfect or whole till she has added herself to a husband. Nor is a man’s life perfect or whole till he has added to himself a wife.”― Anthony Trollope“High rank and soft manners may not always belong to a true heart.”― Anthony Trollope“This at least should be a rule through the letter-writing world: that no angry letter be posted till four-and-twenty hours will have elapsed since it was written.”― Anthony Trollope“It is a grand thing to rise in the world. The ambition to do so is the very salt of the earth. It is the parent of all enterprise, and the cause of all improvement.”― Anthony Trollope“In these days a man is nobody unless his biography is kept so far posted up that it may be ready for the national breakfast-table on the morning after his demise.”― Anthony Trollope“My sweetheart is to me more than a coined hemisphere.”― Anthony Trollope“Wine is valued by its price, not its flavour.”― Anthony Trollope“When it comes to money nobody should give up anything.”― Anthony Trollope“Poverty, to be picturesque, should be rural. Suburban misery is as hideous as it is pitiable.”― Anthony Trollope“But then in novels the most indifferent hero comes out right at last. Some god comes out of a theatrical cloud and leaves the poor devil ten thousand-a-year and a title.”― Anthony Trollope“An author must be nothing if he do not love truth; a barrister must be nothing if he do.”― Anthony Trollope“A fellow oughtn’t to let his family property go to pieces.”― Anthony Trollope“Dance with a girl three times, and if you like the light of her eye and the tone of voice with which she, breathless, answers your little questions about horseflesh and music about affairs masculine and feminine, then take the leap in the dark.”― Anthony Trollope“I do like a little romance… just a sniff, as I call it, of the rocks and valleys. Of course, bread-and-cheese is the real thing. The rocks and valleys are no good at all, if you haven’t got that.”― Anthony Trollope“I do not know whether there be, as a rule, more vocal expression of the sentiment of love between a man and a woman, than there is between two thrushes. They whistle and call to each other, guided by instinct rather than by reason.”― Anthony Trollope“They who do not understand that a man may be brought to hope that which of all things is the most grievous to him, have not observed with sufficient closeness the perversity of the human mind.”― Anthony Trollope
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