Christina Stead Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy the top 83 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Christina Stead.
Famous Quotes By Christina Stead
I never wanted to marry anyone like my father; I always preferred those more shoddy. — Christina Stead
It's immoral to work to make money. There's something unlucky in it. You got to work for the work. You got to work on a farm, for the farm - then it makes money. — Christina Stead
A bank is a confidence trick. If you put up the right signs, the wizards of finance themselves will come in and ask you to take their money. — Christina Stead
She was able to feel active creation going on around her in the rocks and hills, where the mystery of lust took place; and in herself, where all was yet only the night of senses and wild dreams, the work of passion going on. — Christina Stead
The City is a machine miraculously organised for extracting gold from the seas, airs, clouds, from barren lands, holds of ships, mines, plantations, cottage hearth-stones, trees and rocks; and he, wretchedly waiting in the exterior halls, could not even get his finger on one tiny, tiny lever. — Christina Stead
Every work of art should give utterance, or indicate, the awful blind strength and the cruelty of the creative impulse, that is why they must all have what are called errors, both of taste and style. — Christina Stead
I shall never be a dangerous woman; I can make men love, but I cannot make them suffer. It would be much better the other way about. I have seen women able to make men suffer who could not make them love. The more they suffered the more they hung around for a showdown. In the end they did better than I, for it is strange what people will do to be able to suffer and say to themselves, in the night, I have suffered, I have lived indeed. — Christina Stead
There'll be no sense in sexual theories until women start telling their minds; and, of course, until they have some. — Christina Stead
When people are collecting gold they aren't doing business ... Gold is constipation: even bankruptcy is more fluid. Gold isn't wealth: positions in markets are wealth. — Christina Stead
A self-made man is one who believes in luck and sends his son to Oxford. — Christina Stead
Altruism is selfishness out with a pair of field glasses and imagination. — Christina Stead
Venus can see at night without eyes. — Christina Stead
It's fine to be a great democrat when you've a slave to rub your boots on. — Christina Stead
A woman can't be, until a girl dies ... I mean the sprites that girls are, so different from us, all their fancies, their illusions, their flower world, the dreams they live in. — Christina Stead
Anyone would think a thin stick like me, weak and miserable would go down with everything: do you think I get more than my cough every winter? I bet I live till ninety, with all my aches and pains. To think that's fifty more years of the Great-I-Am. — Christina Stead
Why is it every careerist tries to turn his mother into a Madonna
to prove his intellect is a virgin birth, papa had nothing to do with it? It's the sign of the misogynist. — Christina Stead
Loneliness is a terrible blindness. — Christina Stead
Los Angeles is a Yukon for crime-story writers. — Christina Stead
Money is a jealous mistress If you want money you must want only money ... I must tell you the one secret of life, there is only one: everything is a jealous mistress, everything is terribly possessive, and, by God, we want to be terribly possessed if we want to get somewhere - and we want to be terribly possessed - anyhow; or what is life? — Christina Stead
Money goes where money is, money yearns where money is. — Christina Stead
Socialist writers are made of sterner stuff than those who only let their characters steeplechase through trouble in order to comeout first in the happy ending of moral uplift. — Christina Stead
A single girl must lead a double life don't you think? — Christina Stead
Strange is the influence of Marx on character. — Christina Stead
No rich man is a patriot, no rich man is a friend. They have all only got one fatherland the Ritz-Carlton; and one friend the mistress they're promising to divorce their wives for. — Christina Stead
You want to be free and break new ground, speak your mind, fear no man, have the neighbours acknowledge that you're a good man; and at the same time you want to be a success, make money, join the country club, get the votes and kick the other man in the teeth and off the ladder. — Christina Stead
Money that is in billions and monopolies isn't money at all, because the people have none, and money is democratic, everyone has to have some or there's none at all. — Christina Stead
It is a rule of creative ability that it does nothing of any value, while it is possessed by this afflatus of vanity. — Christina Stead
Creation of something out of nothing is the most primitive of human passions and the most optimistic — Christina Stead
If misery spelled revolt, we should have had nothing but revolt from the beginning of time. On the contrary, it is quite rare. — Christina Stead
There are so may ways to kills yourself, they're just old-fashioned with their permanganate: do you think I'd take permanganate? I wouldn't want to burn my insides out and live to tell the tale as well: idiots! It's simple, I'd drown myself ... Why be in misery at the last? — Christina Stead
All middle-class novels are about the trials of three, all upper-class novels about mass fornication, all revolutionary novels about a bad man turned good by a tractor. — Christina Stead
People who don't like scandals shouldn't be in finance. — Christina Stead
The great white city of brotherhood, Washington ... — Christina Stead
All the June Saturday afternoon Sam Pollit's children were on the lookout for him as they skated round the dirt sidewalks and seamed old asphalt of R Street and Reservoir Road that bounded the deep-grassed acres of Tohoga House, their home. — Christina Stead
Everyone likes the obscene; that is real life. — Christina Stead
If all the rich people in the world divided up their money among themselves there wouldn't be enough to go around. — Christina Stead
Humorists are always pessimists. They're reactionaries: because they see that every golden cloud has a black lining. — Christina Stead
The more we know, the better our intuitions. — Christina Stead
I wish I had a man and not a dishrag printed over with big words like 'constitutional rights' and 'progress'! — Christina Stead
The French are a tremendously verbal race: they kill you with their assurances, their repetitions, their reasons, their platitudes, their formulae, their propositions, their solutions. — Christina Stead
Men never believe a woman can do anything. — Christina Stead
I do not want to go to heaven; I want my children, forever children, and other children, stalwart adults, and a good happy wife, that is all I ask, but not paradise; earth is good enough for me: it is because I believe earth is heaven, Naden, that I can overcome all my troubles and face down my enemies. — Christina Stead
About myself - no. I'm unimportant, an observer, a wandering animal. — Christina Stead
All new money is made through the shifting of social classes and the dispossession of old classes. — Christina Stead
Pale as a candle flame in the dusk, tallow-pale, he stalked along, holding her hand, and Louie looked up and beyond him at the enfeebled stars. Thus, for many years, she had seen her father's head, a ghostly earth flame against the heavens, from her little height. Sam looked down on the moon of her face; the dayshine was enough still to light the eyeballs swimming up to him. — Christina Stead
It is most oppressive to be an aunt. — Christina Stead
The sensuality, delicacy of literature does not exist for me; only the passion, energy and struggle ... Most of my friends deplore this: they are always telling me what I should leave out in order to have success. But I know that nothing has more success in the end than an intelligent ferocity. — Christina Stead
Life is nothing but rags and tags and filthy rags at that. Why was I ever born? — Christina Stead
If equity and human natural reason were allowed there would be no law, there would be no lawyers. — Christina Stead
A tory youth is a youth speculating on his future. — Christina Stead
Radicalism is the opium of the middle class. — Christina Stead
To me, all the juice of a book is in an unpublished manuscript, and the published book is like a dead tree - just good for cutting up and building your house with. — Christina Stead
It was easy to see how upsetting it would be if women began to love freely where love came to them. An abyss would open in the principal shopping street of every town. — Christina Stead
Pukka sahib or rank outsider
gentleman or bounder
and it's accent, accent, all the way. — Christina Stead
A dominant race did not lie, because it had the whip. — Christina Stead
Each Australian is a Ulysses. — Christina Stead
The white man in the tropics degenerates every day. — Christina Stead
Philosophy is by the timid for the timid. — Christina Stead
Intuition is not infallible; it only seems to be the truth. It is a message which we may interpret wrongly. — Christina Stead
Women have been brought up much like slaves, that is, to lie. — Christina Stead
I know your breed; all your fine officials debauch the younger girls who are afraid to lose their jobs: that's as old as Washington. — Christina Stead
We are primitive men; we taboo what we desire and need. How did the denying of love come to be associated with the idea of morality. — Christina Stead
Weak, tea-drinking, effeminate, ineffectual
masters of India, robbers of South Africa, bedevillers of all Europe. — Christina Stead
Women are outside the law; they make nothing, they say yes or no to some collections of whereases. — Christina Stead
Ye want to tell the plain truth all your life, woman, and speak straight; otherwise ye get to seeing double. — Christina Stead
Give me your honest opinion. I don't want truth with a veil on - I like naked ladies naked. — Christina Stead
Charm is a cunning self-forgetfulness. — Christina Stead
Love is feared: it dissolves society, it's unpopular, and it's very rare. — Christina Stead
A lie is real; it aims at success. A liar is a realist. — Christina Stead
The waste, the insane freaks of these money men, the cynicism and egotism of their life ... I'll show that they are not brilliant, not romantic, not delightful, not intelligent. — Christina Stead
I don't know what imagination is, if not an unpruned, tangled kind of memory. — Christina Stead
Old age and youth cannot live together. — Christina Stead
A woman is a hunter without a forest. — Christina Stead
Behind the concept of woman's strangeness is the idea that a woman may do anything: she is below society, not bound by its law, unpredictable; an attribute given to every member of the league of the unfortunate. — Christina Stead
Financiers are great mythomaniacs, their explanations and superstitions are those of primitive men; the world is a jungle to them.They perceive acutely that they are at the dawn of economic history. — Christina Stead
The Chinese are a knowing people; and I daresay that is why they once made a religious odor about old age; to prevent their sons from seeing their own future. — Christina Stead
A mother! What are we worth really? They all grow up whether you look after them or not. That poor miserable brat of his is growing up, and I certainly licked the hide off her; and she's seen marriage at its worst, and now she's dreaming about 'supermen' and 'great men'. What is the good of doing anything for them? — Christina Stead
A speculator is a man who, if he dies at the right time, has a rich widow. — Christina Stead