STELLA BENSON QUOTES II

English novelist (1892-1933)

And you shall seek me till you reach
The tangled tide advancing,
And you shall find upon the beach
The traces of my dancing

STELLA BENSON

Twenty


Call no man foe, but never love a stranger.

STELLA BENSON

This Is the End


The Law likes to be argued with. Take away words and where is the Law? Silence always annoys it.

STELLA BENSON

This Is the End


The sun was like an angel with a flaming sword. The angel dipped his feet into the sea.

STELLA BENSON

This Is the End


The eagle and the artichoke are equally alive--and perhaps my way of life is nearer to the eagle's than the artichoke's.

STELLA BENSON

The Man Who Missed the Bus


Now there is hardly anything but magic abroad before seven o'clock in the morning. Only the disciples of magic like getting their feet wet, and being furiously happy on an empty stomach.

STELLA BENSON

Living Alone

Tags: morning


Love is a farthing piece, a bloody bribe pressed in the palm of God and thrown away.

STELLA BENSON

This Is the End

Tags: love


The more committees you belong to, the less of ordinary life you will understand. When your daily round becomes nothing more than a daily round of committees you might as well be dead.

STELLA BENSON

Living Alone


It's very wrong to take less money than you're worth.

STELLA BENSON

I Pose


This is not a real book. It does not deal with real people, nor should it be read by real people. But there are in the world so many real books already written for the benefit of real people, and there are still so many to be written, that I cannot believe that a little alien book such as this, written for the magically-inclined minority, can be considered a trespasser.

STELLA BENSON

Living Alone


There is the track my feet have worn
By which my fate may find me:
From that dim place where I was born
Those footprints run behind me.

STELLA BENSON

Twenty


London is a friend whom I can leave knowing without doubt that she will be the same to me when I return, to-morrow or forty years hence, and that, if I do not return, she will sing the same song to inheritors of my happy lot in future generations. Always, whether sleeping or waking, I shall know that in Spring the sun rides over the silver streets of Kensington, and that in the Gardens the shorn sheep find very green pasture. Always the plaited threads of traffic will wind about the reel of London; always as you up Regent Street from Pall Mall and look back, Westminster will rise with you like a dim sun over the horizon of Whitehall. That dive down Fleet Street and up to the black and white cliffs of St. Paul's will for ever bring to mind some rumour of romance.

STELLA BENSON

This Is the End


To have refused love is very much more picturesque than not to have been offered it.

STELLA BENSON

Pipers and a Dancer


Three things the sea shall never end,
Three things shall mock its power:
My singing soul, my Secret Friend,
And this, my perfect hour.

STELLA BENSON

Twenty


Go forth with crowds; in loneliness is danger.

STELLA BENSON

This Is the End


Seek not the best, the best is better hidden.

STELLA BENSON

This Is the End


What is this Charity, this clinking of money between strangers, and when did Charity cease to be a comforting and secret thing between one friend and another? Does Love make her voice heard through a committee, does Love employ an almoner to convey her message to her neighbour?

STELLA BENSON

Living Alone


I hope that the feeling of making poetry is not confined to the people who write it down.... I am sure that the great glory of poetry in one's heart does not wait on achievement.

STELLA BENSON

This Is the End

Tags: poetry


Man is potentially a son, and woman is potentially a mother; woman depends on the dependence of man. The spinster, if pathetic at all, is pathetic because she has no one to look after, not because there is no one to look after her. Bear in mind that the conventional spinster keeps a canary as a substitute for a husband.

STELLA BENSON

I Pose


Always there is a sort of dream of air between you and the hills of California, a veil of unreality in the intervening air. It gives the hills the bloom that peaches have, or grapes in the dew.

STELLA BENSON

The Poor Man