Top 4 Quotes & Sayings by Elizabeth Madox Roberts

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a novelist Elizabeth Madox Roberts.
Last updated on December 22, 2024.
Elizabeth Madox Roberts

Elizabeth Madox Roberts was a Kentucky novelist and poet, primarily known for her novels and stories set in central Kentucky's Washington County, including The Time of Man (1926), "My Heart and My Flesh," The Great Meadow (1930) and A Buried Treasure (1931). All of her writings are characterized by her distinct, rhythmic prose. Robert Penn Warren called "The Time of Man" a classic; the eminent Southern critic and Southern Review editor Lewis P. Simpson counted her among the half dozen major Southern renascence writers. Three book-length studies of her work, three collections of critical articles, a major conference on her 100th birthday, a collection of her unpublished poems, and a flourishing Roberts Society that generates 20-odd papers at its annual April conferences have yet to revive wide interest in her work.

First, there is the person one thinks he is and the appearance one thinks he has. Then there is the thing one actually is, and there is that which the others think, and here a myriad-faced being arose in her thought, but the second came back as being more difficult to know, for what eyes would see it and where would it stay?
I never was lost. I was bewildered right bad once for as much as a week, but not lost. — © Elizabeth Madox Roberts
I never was lost. I was bewildered right bad once for as much as a week, but not lost.
Does the devil know he is a devil?
What's devil to some is good to some others.
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