Then if children make so much trouble, why do people have ’em?
– Thomas Hardy
Related Quotes:
- Don’t be fretting…about me marrying. Marrying’s a trouble and not marrying’s a trouble and I sticks to the trouble I knows. – LM Montgomery
- Why children?’ he asked. ‘Why always children? For love to end where it begins is far more beautiful, and Nature knows it. – EM Forster
- Oh, man, why is this the life? Why is it? Why is one rich and the other poor? Why is one black and the other white? – Tony DSouza
- Preston doesn’t do well with trouble. But that’s why I’m here. That’s why my name is Mommy. – Sadeqa Johnson
- I swear that I will never cause trouble for anybody, as long as I live!! So please! Nobody cause any trouble for me, either!! – Minoru Furuya
- Trouble and perplexity drive me to prayer, and prayer drives away perplexity and trouble. – Elizabeth George
- Every second around this girl was asking for trouble and he’d never wanted to be in trouble so bad in his life. – Cindi Madsen
- His smile was sexy and warned of trouble, but I’d made up my mind that not all trouble was bad. – Becca Fitzpatrick
- A children’s story that can only be enjoyed by children is not a good children’s story in the slightest. – CS Lewis
- I’ve got a pretty good idea what children are, and we’re not children. Children can lose sometimes, and nobody cares. – Orson Scott Card
- Did it never strike your mind that what every woman says, some women may feel? – Thomas Hardy
- When a strong woman recklessly throws away her strength she is worse than a weak woman who has never had any strength to throw away. – Thomas Hardy
- Was once lost always lost really true of chastity? – Thomas Hardy
- It is the effect of marriage to engender in several directions some of the reserve it annihilates in one. – Thomas Hardy
- There’s a friendly tie of some sort between music and eating. – Thomas Hardy
- Geoffrey’s own heart felt inconveniently large just then. – Thomas Hardy
- My eyes were dazed by you for a little, and that was all. – Thomas Hardy
- A blaze of love and extinction, was better than a lantern glimmer of the same which should last long years. – Thomas Hardy
- We colour and mould according to the wants within us whatever our eyes bring in. – Thomas Hardy
- She seemed to be occupied with of inner chamber of ideas and to have slight need for visible objects. – Thomas Hardy
- When yellow lights struggle with blue shades in hairlike lines. – Thomas Hardy
- You concede nothing to me and I have to concede everything to you. – Thomas Hardy
- It was part of his nature to extenuate nothing and live on as one of his own worst accusers. – Thomas Hardy
- Altogether he was one in whom no man would have seen anything to admire, and in whom no woman would have seen anything to dislike. – Thomas Hardy
- The purpose of a chronicler of moods and deeds does not require him to express his personal views upon the grave controversy above given. – Thomas Hardy
- Don’t that make your bosom plim? – Thomas Hardy
- Many besides Angel have learnt that the magnitude of lives is not as to their external displacements but as to their subjective experiences. – Thomas Hardy
- I want to question my belief, so that what is left after I have questioned it, will be even stronger. – Thomas Hardy
- If she had not been imprudence incarnate, she would not have acted as she did when she met Henchard by accident a day or two later. – Thomas Hardy
- Idiosyncrasy and vicissitude had combined to stamp Sergeant Troy as an exceptional being. – Thomas Hardy
- Better to choose a limit capriciously than to have none. – Thomas Hardy
- They had done nothing but wait, and had become poetical. How easy to the smallest building; how impossible to most men. – Thomas Hardy
- Like enthusiasts in general, he made no inquiries into details of procedure. – Thomas Hardy
- being a harp which the least wind of emotion from another’s heart could make to vibrate as readily as a radical stir in her own. – Thomas Hardy
- I have sometimes thought–that under the affectation of independent views you are as enslaved to the social code as any woman I know! – Thomas Hardy
- you are absolutely the most ethereal, least sensual woman I ever knew to exist without inhuman sexlessness. – Thomas Hardy
- I am only a peasant by position, not by nature! – Thomas Hardy
- The smile on your mouth was the deadest thing. – Thomas Hardy
- And strange-eyed constellations reignHis stars eternally. – Thomas Hardy
- Her suspense was terrible. – Thomas Hardy