Sometime the worst type of weapon in the world is love.
– Jane Austen
Related Quotes:
- He shrugged. ‘I know you’re the type”Type?”The type that doesn’t let things go – Tim Weaver
- sometime am feeling proud to have ma loneliness but, sometime am so feeling lonely. – kamal parvez
- I admire all my three sons-in-law highly. Wickham, perhaps is my favourite; but I think I shall like your husband quite as well as Jane’s. – Jane Austen
- Silence is the biggest weapon sometime.. – Debolina Bhawal
- It turns out that an eerie type of chaos can lurk just behind a facade of order – and yet, deep inside the chaos lurks an even eerier type of order. – Douglas R Hofstadter
- Let me be the type man who plants a field of flowers so you can be the type of woman who picks them. – AJ Compton
- Isabelle was exactly Simon’s type-”tall, glamorous, and beautiful. Come to think of it, maybe that was everyone’s type. – Cassandra Clare
- School programs the schooled to type a CV. Life inspires the unschooled to type a business plan. – Mokokoma Mokhonoana
- A weapon does not decide whether or not to kill. A weapon is a manifestation of a decision that has already been made. – Steven Galloway
- A weapon, I told Horus. I need a weapon.I reached into the Duat and pulled out an ostrich feather.-œReally?- I yelled.Horus didn’t answer – Rick Riordan
- Language is a serious weapon in shining and sharing Truth. It is also a serious weapon used in its distortion. – Suzy Kassem
- The most incomprehensible thing in the world to a man, is a woman who rejects his offer of marriage! – Jane Austen
- A lady, without a family, was the very best preserver of furniture in the world. – Jane Austen
- Blessed with so many resources within myself the world was not necessary to me. I could do very well without it. – Jane Austen
- I have not known him long indeed, but I am much better acquainted with him than I am with any other creature in the world. – Jane Austen
- The worst type of man behaves as badly in his waking life as some men do in their dreams. – Plato
- We are all fools in love – Jane Austen
- Marianne could never love by halves; and her whole heart became, in time, as much devoted to her husband, as it had once been to Willoughby. – Jane Austen
- Sometime I wonder why I walk alone on this cold, windy road. Maybe I have no one to love or no one love me at all? – Ishmael Emmanuel Balfour
- We have all a better guide in ourselves, if we would attend to it, than any other person can be – Jane Austen
- but for my own part, if a book is well written, I always find it too short. – Jane Austen
- How much sooner one tires of anything than of a book! – Jane Austen
- Which of all my important nothings shall I tell you first? – Jane Austen
- For my part, I am determined never to speak of it again to anybody. I told my sister Phillips so the other day. – Jane Austen
- She was sensible and clever, but eager in everything; her sorrows, her joys, could have no moderation. – Jane Austen
- … a whole day’s tête-à -tête between two women can never end without a quarrel. – Jane Austen
- -¦for what after all is Youth and Beauty? – Jane Austen
- There is no other enjoyment like reading – Jane Austen
- There are secrets in all families, you know. – Jane Austen
- So long divided and so differently situated, the ties of blood were little more than nothing. – Jane Austen
- She was stronger alone-¦ – Jane Austen
- Oh! Do not attack me with your watch. A watch is always too fast or too slow. I cannot be dictated to by a watch. – Jane Austen
- An interval of meditation, serious and grateful, was the best corrective of everything dangerous. – Jane Austen
- A loss may be sometimes a gain. – Jane Austen
- We must not be so ready to fancy ourselves intentionally injured… It is very often nothing but our own vanity that deceives us. – Jane Austen
- Where people are really attached, poverty itself is wealth. – Jane Austen
- Obstinate, headstrong girl! – Jane Austen
- Alas! with all her reasoning, she found, that to retentive feelings eight years may be little more than nothing. – Jane Austen
- Much was said, and much was ate, and all went well. – Jane Austen
- A distinction to which they had been born gave no pride. – Jane Austen