Top 18 Quotes & Sayings by Katharine Tynan

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Irish writer Katharine Tynan.
Last updated on December 25, 2024.
Katharine Tynan

Katharine Tynan was an Irish writer, known mainly for her novels and poetry. After her marriage in 1893 to the Trinity College scholar, writer and barrister Henry Albert Hinkson (1865–1919) she usually wrote under the name Katharine Tynan Hinkson, or variations thereof. Tynan's younger sister Nora O'Mahony was also a poet and one of her three children, Pamela Hinkson (1900–1982), was also known as a writer. The Katharine Tynan Road in Belgard, Tallaght is named after her.

It is a horrible demoralizing thing to be a lawyer. You look for such low motives in everyone and everything.
The Irish always jest even though they jest with tears.
Drawbacks are good when you are on holiday. If the holiday were too good you might not want to go home again. — © Katharine Tynan
Drawbacks are good when you are on holiday. If the holiday were too good you might not want to go home again.
I have often heard it said that the Irish are too ready to forgive. It is a noble failing.
To be a saint does not exclude fine dresses nor a beautiful house.
The kind need kindness most of all.
There is an Irish way of paying compliments as though they were irresistible truths which makes what would otherwise be an impertinence delightful.
O, the red rose may be fair, And the lily statelier; But my shamrock, one in three Takes the very heart of me!
Irish people have a trick of over-statement, at which one ceases to wince as one grows older.
The life in which nothing happens goes the fastest, because it has no landmarks.
Often our bad moments are self-propelled ... And the drama is almost exclusively within our heads and hearts.
January has only one thing to be said for it: it is followed by February. Nothing so well becomes its passing.
It's a strange thing now how people will know they're dying themselves when no one else could suspect anything wrong at all with them.
the way with Ireland is that no sooner do you get away from her than the golden mists begin to close about her, and she lies, an Island of the Blest, something enchanted in our dreams. When you come back you may think you are disillusioned, but you know well that the fairy mists will begin to gather about her once more.
... Hope is at the bottom of the Pandora's box of Irish troubles, and I believe proudly and firmly in the ultimate destinies of my country.
I have always believed that hair is a very sure index of character.
Religion dies hard in the Irish. — © Katharine Tynan
Religion dies hard in the Irish.
The trouble with the Irish question always has been that it was an English question.
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