18 quotes found
Novelist · English · 1884–1969
English novelist (1884–1969)
“Real life seems to have no plots.”
“The most original novelist now writing in English.”
“Pushing forty? She's clinging on to it for dear life!”
“There is more difference within the sexes than between them.”
“We can build upon foundations anywhere if they are well and truly laid.”
“As regards plots I find real life no help at all. Real life seems to have no plots. And as I think a plot desirable and almost necessary, I have this extra grudge against real life. But I think the...”
“Real charity and a real ability never to condemn-the one real virtue-is so often the result of a waking experience that gives a glimpse of what lies beneath things.”
“It is no good to think that other people are out to serve our interests.”
“There is nothing like living together for blinding people to each other.”
“There is probably nothing like living together for blinding people to each other.”
“A leopard does not change his spots, or change his feeling that spots are rather a credit.”
“Well, of course, people are only human, said Dudley to his brother, as they walked to the house behind the women. But it really does not seem much for them to be.”
“Appearances are not held to be a clue to the truth, said his cousin. But we seem to have no other.”
“Time has too much credit, said Bridget. I never agree with the compliments paid to it. It is not a great healer. It is an indifferent and perfunctory one. Sometimes it does not heal at all. And som...”
“Anyone who picks up a Compton-Burnett finds it very hard not to put it down.”
“In the age of the concentration camp, when from 1935 to 1947 or so, she wrote her very best novels, no writer did more to illumine the springs of human cruelty, suffering and bravery.”
“Un des plus grands romanciers que l'Angleterre ait jamais eus. (One of the greatest novelists that England has ever had.)”