Top 18 Quotes & Sayings by Rosamond Lehmann

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English novelist Rosamond Lehmann.
Last updated on April 20, 2025.
Rosamond Lehmann

Rosamond Nina Lehmann was an English novelist and translator. Her first novel, Dusty Answer (1927), was a succès de scandale; she subsequently became established in the literary world and intimate with members of the Bloomsbury set. Her novel The Ballad and the Source received particular critical acclaim.

Looking back into childhood is like looking into a semi-transparent globe within which people and places lie embedded. A shake - and they stir, rise up, circle in inter-weaving groups, then settle down again.
It's the thought that counts.
[On Ian Fleming:] The trouble with Ian is that he gets off with women because he can't get on with them. — © Rosamond Lehmann
[On Ian Fleming:] The trouble with Ian is that he gets off with women because he can't get on with them.
One should always act from one's inner sense of rhythm.
I have decided to keep a record of my inmost real-self thoughts. Perhaps it will help me to find out what I really am like: horrid, I know: selfish, conceited, and material-minded. For instance, lately whenever I've tried to concentrate on anything serious or beautiful, I've started thinking about the Spencers' dance next week. I am ashamed of my pettiness. I'm going to try to do better this year--develop my character more and not always be thinking about enjoying myself. I've always been so happy, I dread disappointment and unhappiness, but they would be good for me. But I don't want them.
Convention is another name for the habits of society.
Advice to Young Journal Keepers. Be lenient with yourself. Conceal your worst faults, leave out your most shameful thoughts, actions, and temptations. Give yourself all the good and interesting qualities you want and haven't got. If you should die young, what comfort would it be to your relatives to read the truth and have to say: It is not a pearl we have lost, but a swine?
The novel will never die, but it will keep changing and evolving and taking different shapes.
One must have the humility and the imagination to honor all deep human experiences - not least those one has never come near to sharing.
anything that becomes a cult, or a mass movement, loses its moral and spiritual value. The crusade has to be personal, individual. As soon as it becomes collective it loses its purpose.
when two people unite, kindness must be mutual, or shocking things will happen.
People have been saying the novel is dead for as far back as I can remember. The novel will never die, but it will keep changing and evolving and taking different shapes. Storytelling, which is the basis of the novel, has always existed and always will.
In a corner of the churchyard grew a plantation of white violets, enormously plump and prosperous-looking. ... I saw the dead stretched out under me in the earth, feeding these flowers with a thin milk drawn from their bones.
A writer works from the material she has, but it comes from the unconscious. Everything is stored up and one never knows what comes up to the surface at a given moment. A period of gestation is certainly needed, what Wordsworth called ‘emotion recollected in tranquility.’ You cannot write about an experience when you are living it, suffering it. You are too busy surviving to look at it objectively. At least I can’t.
One can present people with opportunities. One cannot make them equal to them.
But poetry is not to be lived, except for the few to whom it is more important than self-preservation.
Holidays, if you enjoy them, have no history. — © Rosamond Lehmann
Holidays, if you enjoy them, have no history.
How long, I wonder, will ignorance spell purity and knowledge shame?
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