Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Canadian author Sara Jeannette Duncan.
Last updated on November 19, 2024.
Sara Jeannette Duncan was a Canadian author and journalist, who also published as Mrs. Everard Cotes and Garth Grafton among other names. First trained as a teacher in a normal school, she took to poetry early in life and after a brief teaching period worked as a travel writer for Canadian newspapers and a columnist for the Toronto Globe. Afterward she wrote for the Washington Post where she was put in charge of the current literature section. Later she made a journey to India and married an Anglo-Indian civil servant thereafter dividing her time between England and India. She wrote 22 works of fiction, many with international themes and settings. Her novels met with mixed acclaim and are rarely read today. In 2016, she was named a National Historic Person on the advice of the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada.
We often say that we fear no invasion from the south, but the armies of the south have already crossed the border - American enterprise, American capital is taking rapid possession of our mines and our water power, our oil areas and our timber limits.
If you have anything to tell me of importance, for God's sake begin at the end.
Ah, the camel of Cairo! ... He went quietly and comfortably through the narrowest lanes and the densest crowds by the mere force of his personality. He was the most impressive living thing we saw in Egypt, not excepting two Pashas and a Bey. He was engaged with large philosophies, one could see that.
I know Americans talk a great deal about the price of things - more, I consider, than is entertaining, sometimes!
When God gave men tongues, he never dreamed that they would want to talk about the Himalayas; there are consequently no words in the world to do it with.
Clothes and courage have so much to do with each other.
When two friends understand each other totally, the words are soft and strong like an orchid's perfume.
Why is it that when people have no capacity for private usefulness they should be so anxious to serve the public?
Human beings aren't orchids; we must draw something from the soil we grow in.
It is also possible, I believe, if one lives in India long enough, to come across a globe-trotter who is modest and teachable, but we have been out here only twenty-two years, and I am going home without having seen one.
Englishmen have a genius for looking uncomfortable. Their feelings are terribly mixed up with their personal appearance.