Poems List

“It is very lonesome at the summit!” “Like a man’s life, when he has climbed to eminence.”

The New Yale Book of Quotations

7

God will give him blood to drink!

The New Yale Book of Quotations

7

It is my belief—yes, and my prophecy, should I die before it happens—that, when my sex shall achieve its rights, there will be ten eloquent women where there is now one eloquent man. Thus far, no woman in the world has ever once spoken out her whole heart and her whole mind. The mistrust and disapproval of the vast bulk of society throttles us, as with two gigantic hands at our throats! We mumble a few weak words, and leave a thousand better ones unsaid.

The New Yale Book of Quotations

8

She assured them, too, of her firm belief, that, at some brighter period, when the world should have grown ripe for it, in Heaven’s own time, a new truth would be revealed, in order to establish the whole relation between man and woman on a surer ground of mutual happiness.

The New Yale Book of Quotations

7

Not to be deficient in this particular, the author has provided himself with a moral;—the truth, namely, that the wrong-doing of one generation lives into the successive ones.

The New Yale Book of Quotations

8

We must not always talk in the market-place of what happens to us in the forest.

The New Yale Book of Quotations

7

The scarlet letter was her passport into regions where other women dared not tread. Shame, Despair, Solitude! These had been her teachers,—stern and wild ones,—and they had made her strong, but taught her much amiss.

The New Yale Book of Quotations

17

What we did had a consecration of its own.

The New Yale Book of Quotations

9

Let the black flower blossom as it may!

The New Yale Book of Quotations

7

But there is a fatality, a feeling so irresistible and inevitable that it has the force of doom, which almost invariably compels human beings to linger around and haunt, ghost-like, the spot where some great and marked event has given the color to their lifetime; and still the more irresistibly, the darker the tinge that saddens it.

The New Yale Book of Quotations

7

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