Top 21 Quotes & Sayings by Rachel Field

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American novelist Rachel Field.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Rachel Field

Rachel Lyman Field was an American novelist, poet, and children's fiction writer. She is best known for the Newbery Award–winning Hitty, Her First Hundred Years. Field also won a National Book Award, Newbery Honor award and two of her books are on the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award list. In May 2021, a complete biography of Rachel Field's life, written by author Robin Clifford Wood, will be published by She Writes Press.

I used to think I had ambition... but now I'm not so sure. It may have been only discontent. They're easily confused.
I've seen public opinion shift like the wind and put out the very fire it lighted.
There was no reality to pain when it left one, thought while it held one fast all other realities failed. — © Rachel Field
There was no reality to pain when it left one, thought while it held one fast all other realities failed.
Too much good fortune can make you smug and unaware. Happiness should be like an oasis, the greener for the desert that surrounds it.
One of the pleasantest things about book writing is that sometimes it brings one in touch with old friends.
When I was young they used to say people only threw stones at the tree that was loaded with fruit.
The difference between ambition and discontent is quite a fine line and sometimes it is hard to tell which is which and which you are feeling!
A little town is like a lantern. Nothing's hid from sight.
I was never one to begrudge people their memories. From a child I would listen when they spoke of the past.
You know the public is more easily swayed by persons than by principles.
There was no reality to pain when it left one, though while it held one fast all other realities faded.
And scandal has a way of catching up with those who disregard its power.
Something told the wild geese It was time to go. Though the fields lay golden Something whispered, "snow." Leaves were green and stirring, Berries, luster-glossed, But beneath warm feathers Something cautioned, "frost." All the sagging orchards Steamed with amber spice But each wild breast stiffened At remembered ice. Something told the wild geese It was time to fly- Summer sun was on their wings, Winter in their cry.
There's plenty of fire in the coldest flint!
Isn?t it strange some people make You feel so tired inside, Your thoughts begin to shrivel up Like leaves all brown and dried!But when you?re with some other ones It?s stranger still to find Your thought as thick as fireflies All shiny in your mind!
It's terrible when the weak are also cruel for then we are defenseless against them.
The sight of a cage is only frightening to the bird that has once been caught.
no matter how hard and faithfully we may try we can never compensate another for some lack in his or her life.
No hardy perennial has the enduring quality of hope. Cut it to the roots, stamp it underfoot, let frost and fire work their will, and still some valiant shoot will push, to grow again on such scanty fare as it can find. Only time and the cruel quicklime of fact can destroy that stubborn urgency.
Doorbells are like a magic game,
Or the grab-bag at a fair --
You never know when you hear one ring
Who may be waiting there. — © Rachel Field
Doorbells are like a magic game, Or the grab-bag at a fair -- You never know when you hear one ring Who may be waiting there.
...his hoofbeats fall like rain, over and over again.
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