« All Unspeakable Quotes · George Eliot's Page
Unspeakable Quotes by George Eliot
- Who has not felt the beauty of a woman's arm? The unspeakable suggestions of tenderness that lie in the dimpled elbow, and all the varied…
- Deep, unspeakable suffering may well be called a baptism, a regeneration, the initiation into a new state. Suffering can be likened to a baptism -…
- What greater thing is there for two human souls than to feel that they are joined - to strengthen each other - to be at…
More Unspeakable Quotes
- Even the classics that we read to our young children are full of wolves' fangs and burning ovens and bloody feet and… — Geraldine Brooks
- The third always speaks the unspeakable words. — Tupac Shakur
- My sisters and I were fortunate to travel through Asia and Europe at very young ages. We confronted extraordinary beauty in Athens… — Mary Chapin Carpenter
- Suicide is unspeakable, and to speak it is somehow to bring it into a human, imaginable sphere, even if only in the… — Victoria Alexander
- To put it simply, no Darwin, no Hitler. Hitler tried to speed up evolution, to help it along, and millions suffered and… — D. James Kennedy
- Faith is a grand cathedral, with divinely pictured windows - standing without, you can see no glory, nor can imagine any, but… — Nathaniel Hawthorne
- This is of monumental significance. The gift has been given - what we make of it is up to us. Unless we… — F. Burton Howard
- All the talk about the so-called unspeakable horror of early capitalism can be refuted by a single statistic: precisely in these years… — Ludwig von Mises
- If the Church ever succeeds in doing that big thing, that great thing, that unspeakable thing that God purposes that we should… — John G. Lake
- I have no dog, but it must be Somewhere there's one belongs to me-- A little chap with wagging tail, And dark… — John Kendrick Bangs
- Not often in the story of mankind does a man arrive on earth who is both steel and velvet, who is as… — Carl Sandburg
- It is misery, you know, unspeakable misery for the man who lives alone and who detests sordid, casual affairs; not old enough… — Luigi Pirandello