Robertson Davies Quotes About Pleasure

We have collected for you the TOP of Robertson Davies's best quotes about Pleasure! Here are collected all the quotes about Pleasure starting from the birthday of the Novelist – August 28, 1913! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 7 sayings of Robertson Davies about Pleasure. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • If we seek the pleasures of love, passion should be occasional, and common sense continual.

    "The Pleasures of Love," in "Saturday Night", December 23, 1961.
  • The pleasures of love are for those who are hopelessly addicted to another living creature.

    "The Pleasures of Love". 1961.
  • The pleasures of love are for those who are hopelessly addicted to another living creature. The reasons for such addiction are so many that I suspect they are never the same in any two cases. It includes passion but does not survive by passion; it has its whiffs of the agreeable vertigo of young love, but it is stable more often than dizzy; it is a growing, changing thing, and it is tactful enough to give the addicted parties occasional rests from strong and exhausting feeling of any kind.

    "The Pleasures of Love". Book by Robertson Davies, 1961.
  • Love affairs are for emotional sprinters; the pleasures of love are for the emotional marathoners.

  • The clerisy are those who read for pleasure, but not for idleness; who read for pastime but not to kill time; who love books, but do not live by books

    Robertson Davies (2008). “Selected Works on the Pleasures of Reading”, Penguin Group Canada
  • That was what stuck in the craws of all the good women of Deptford: Mrs Dempster had not been raped, as a decent woman would have been-no, she had yielded because a man wanted her. The subject was not one that could be freely discussed even among intimates, but it was understood without saying that if women began to yield for such reasons as that, marriage and society would not last long. Any man who spoke up for Mrs Dempster probably believed in Free Love. Certainly he associated sex with pleasure, and that put him in a class with filthy thinkers like Cece Athelstan.

    Robertson Davies (1996). “Fifth business”, Penguin, 1996
  • Nobody who looks as though he enjoyed life is ever called distinguished, though he is a man in a million.

    Robertson Davies (1949). “The Table Talk of Samuel Marchbanks”, Clarke, Irwin
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