Mary Stewart Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Mary Stewart's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Novelist Mary Stewart's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 35 quotes on this page collected since September 17, 1916! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • The gods only go with you if you put yourself in their path. And that takes courage.

    Mary Stewart “The Crystal Cave”
  • The essence of wisdom is to know when to be doing, and when it's useless even to try

    Mary Stewart (1979). “The Last Enchantment”
  • Where two Greeks are gathered together, there will be at least three political parties represented, and possibly more.

    Mary Stewart (2011). “This Rough Magic”, p.11, Hachette UK
  • Take love easy, as the leaves grow on the trees.

    Mary Stewart (1998). “Rose Cottage”, Wheeler Pub Incorporated
  • You never know how you'll turn out till you've been down to half a dollar and no prospects.

    Mary Stewart (2011). “The Ivy Tree”, p.202, Hachette UK
  • It does not do to neglect the gods of a place, whoever they may be. In the end, they are all one.

    Mary Stewart “The Crystal Cave”
  • I'm very much to blame for not seeing it before, but who on earth goes about suspecting an impossible outlandish thing like murder? That's something that happens in books, not among people you know.

    Mary Stewart (1969). “Nine Coaches Waiting”
  • To plant a garden is the chief of the arts of peace.

  • There are few men more superstitious than soldiers. They are, after all, the men who live closest to death.

    Mary Stewart (1979). “The Last Enchantment”
  • I reached for sleep and drew it round me like a blanket muffling pain and thought together in the merciful dark

    Sleep  
    Mary Stewart (1978). “Hollow Hills”, Fawcett
  • The best way of forgetting how you think you feel is to concentrate on what you know you know.

    Mary Stewart (2011). “This Rough Magic”, p.55, Hachette UK
  • I can say 'reduce your stress level' until I'm blue in the face.

  • To remember love after long sleep; to turn again to poetry after a year in the market place, or to youth after resignation to drowsy and stiffening age; to remember what once you thought life could hold, after telling over with muddied and calculating fingers what it has offered; this is music, made after long silence. The soul flexes its wings, and, clumsy as any fledgling, tries the air again

    Sleep   Air   Years  
    Mary Stewart (1978). “Hollow Hills”, Fawcett
  • It is not true that women cannot keep secrets. Where they love, they can be trusted to death and beyond, against all sense and reason. It is their weakness, and their great strength.

    Mary Stewart (1978). “Hollow Hills”, Fawcett
  • Perhaps loneliness had nothing to do with place or circumstance; perhaps it was in you; yourself. Perhaps, wherever you were, you took your little circle of loneliness with you.

    Mary Stewart (2011). “Nine Coaches Waiting”, p.12, Hachette UK
  • There are such people, unfortunates who have to be angry before they can feel alive. I had sometimes wondered if it were some old relic of pagan superstition, the fear of risking the jealousy and anger of the gods, that made such people afraid of even small happinesses. Or perhaps it was only that tragedy is more self-important than laughter.

  • I had always been content to know that there was more in the living world than we could hope to understand.

    Mary Stewart (2011). “Thornyhold”, p.84, Hachette UK
  • Have you ever thought, when something dreadful happens, 'a moment ago things were not like this; let it be then, not now, anything but now'? And you try and try to remake then, but you know you can't. So you try to hold the moment quite still and not let it move on and show itself.

    Mary Stewart (2011). “Nine Coaches Waiting”, p.98, Hachette UK
  • The sense of smell is the hair-trigger of memory.

    Mary Stewart (1998). “Rose Cottage”, Wheeler Pub Incorporated
  • But I have noticed this about ambitious men, or men in power, that they fear even the slightest and least likely threat to it.

    Mary Stewart “The Crystal Cave”
  • I sometimes think it's a mistake to have been happy when one was a child. One should always want to go on, not back.

    Mary Stewart (2011). “Stormy Petrel”, p.56, Hachette UK
  • I knew that I had turned my world back to cinders, sunk my lovely ship with my own stupid, wicked hands.

    Mary Stewart (1969). “Nine Coaches Waiting”
  • It seems to me you can be awfully happy in this life if you stand aside and watch and mind your own business, and let other people do as they like about damaging themselves and one another. You go on kidding yourself that you're impartial and tolerant and all that, then all of a sudden you realize you're dead, and you've never been alive at all.

  • I suppose one gets to know men quickest by the things they take for granted.

    Mary Stewart (2011). “My Brother Michael”, p.66, Hachette UK
  • The mills of God work like lightning compared with the law.

    Mary Stewart (1981). “Touch not the cat”, Fawcett Books
  • Sometimes, I think, our impulses come not from the past, but from the future.

    Mary Stewart (1961). “The Ivy Tree”
  • ...the floss-silk manes tossed up like the crest of a breaking wave....Light ran and glittered on them. They were obedient...you would have sworn...as the white horses of the wave crests are to pull of the moon.

  • Every man carries the seed of his own death, and you will not be more than a man. You will have everything; you cannot have more.

    Mary Stewart (1978). “Hollow Hills”, Fawcett
  • Every life has a death, and every light a shadow. Be content to stand in the light, and let the shadow fall where it will.

    Mary Stewart (1978). “Hollow Hills”, Fawcett
  • Well, what was luck for if it was never to be tempted?

    Mary Stewart (2011). “Nine Coaches Waiting”, p.199, Hachette UK
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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 35 quotes from the Novelist Mary Stewart, starting from September 17, 1916! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
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