“In fine, that it is not enough to be good, without behaving in such a manner as shall make others acknowledge us to be so.””
Quotes by Eliza Haywood
“She has too deep a root within my Soul ever to be remov'd””
“She said little in answer to the strenuous Pressures with which at last he ventur’d to enfold her, but not thinking it Decent, for the Character she had assum’d, to yield so suddenly, and unable to deny both his and her own Inclinations, she counterfeited a fainting, and fell motionless upon his Breast.””
“Traitor! (cried she,) as soon as she had read them, 'tis thus our silly, fond,believing Sex are served when they put Faith in Man””
“wisely considering that Complaints, Tears, Swoonings, and all the Extrava-gancies which Women make use of in such Cases have little Prevalence over a Heart inclined to rove and only serve to render those who practice themmore contemptible by robbing them of that Beauty which alone can bring back the fugitive Love””
“And if he should be false, grow satiated, like other Men, I shall but, at the worst, have the private Vexation of knowing I have lost him””
“(...)through the Blindness of Fortune, and Partiality of the World, Merit frequently goes unrewarded, and (that) those of the best Pretentions meet with the least Encouragement””
Eliza Haywood was a prominent English novelist, playwright, and pamphleteer of the early 18th century, known for her contributions to the development of the novel as a literary form. Born in London, s...