Top 9 Quotes & Sayings by Alice Tisdale Hobart

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American novelist Alice Tisdale Hobart.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Alice Tisdale Hobart

Alice Tisdale Hobart born Alice Nourse in Lockport, New York, was an American novelist. Her most famous book, Oil for the Lamps of China, which was also made into a film, drew heavily on her experiences as the wife of an American oil executive in China amid the turmoil of the overthrow of the Manchu Dynasty in 1912.

To lose faith in oneself is to cease to create; to cease to create is to cease to exist.
Commerce unites; religion divides.
How much ... did the volume of disease in a nation account for its spirit? If so, the eradication of sickness, as far as it was possible, was a responsibility a democracy must assume for its people.
nothing is so binding as pity. — © Alice Tisdale Hobart
nothing is so binding as pity.
What is memory for if not to fortify and sustain?
we've got to find a better way to handle the expense of disease. Odd as it may seem, the more efficient we become in eliminating disease, the more our services are out of reach of the people.
Every theory in medicine, if medicine is to remain healthy, must be beaten out on the anvil of skepticism. So do we weed out charlatanism.
There was bondage in love; no one had told her that love took away freedom.
We are fast moving toward an aristocracy of health.
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