Top 7 Quotes & Sayings by Abba Louisa Goold Woolson

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American author Abba Louisa Goold Woolson.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Abba Louisa Goold Woolson

Abba Louisa Goold Woolson was a 19th-century American writer from Maine. Woolson published several volumes, including: Women in American Society (1873); Dress Reform (1874); Browsing Among Books (1881); and George Eliot and Her Heroines (1887).

A majority of women seem to consider themselves sent into the world for the sole purpose of displaying dry goods, and it is only when acting the part of an animated milliner's block that they feel they are performing their appropriate mission.
And since all this loveliness can not be Heaven, I know in my heart it is June.
Women have in their natures something akin to owls and fireflies. While men grow stupid and sleepy towards evening, they become brighter and more open-eyed, and show a propensity to flit and sparkle under the light of chandeliers.
One must always regret that law of growth which renders necessary that kittens should spoil into demure cats, and bright, joyous school-girls develop into the spiritless, crystallized beings denominated young ladies.
Women overrate the influence of fine dress and the latest fashions upon gentlemen; and certain it is, that the very expensiveness of such attire frightens the beholder from all ideas of matrimony.
American ladies are known abroad for two distinguishing traits (besides, possibly, their beauty and self-reliance), and these are their ill-health and their extravagant devotion to dress.
The requirements of health, and the style of female attire which custom enjoins, are in direct antagonism to each other. — © Abba Louisa Goold Woolson
The requirements of health, and the style of female attire which custom enjoins, are in direct antagonism to each other.
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