“There isso mortifying as to fall in love with someone who does not share one's sentiments.”

—  Georgette Heyer , book Venetia

Source: Venetia

Last update June 3, 2021. History

Help us to complete the source, original and additional information

Do you have more details about the quote "There isso mortifying as to fall in love with someone who does not share one's sentiments." by Georgette Heyer?
Georgette Heyer photo
Georgette Heyer 39
British historical romance and detective fiction novelist 1902–1974

Related quotes

Leo Buscaglia photo

“One does not fall "in" or "out" of love. One grows in love.”

Leo Buscaglia (1924–1998) Motivational speaker, writer

LOVE (1972)

David Levithan photo

“It's one thing to fall in love. It's another to feel someone else falling in love with you, and to feel a responsibility toward that love.”

Variant: It's one thing to fall in love. It's another to feel someone else fall in love with you, and to feel a responsibility toward that love.
Source: Every Day

Prevale photo

“Excessive jealousy is the alibi of someone who does not give enough value to the one who calls love.”

Prevale (1983) Italian DJ and producer

Original: (it) L'eccessiva gelosia è l'alibi di chi non dà abbastanza valore a colui che chiama amore.
Source: prevale.net

Ovid photo

“Let the man who does not wish to be idle fall in love!”
Qui nolet fieri desidiosus, amet!

Ovid book Amores

Book I; ix, 46
Amores (Love Affairs)

Ernesto Sábato photo

“A genius is someone who discovers that the stone that falls and the moon that doesn't fall represent one and the same phenomenon.”

Ernesto Sábato (1911–2011) Argentine writer, painter and physicist

Un genio es alguien que descubre que la piedra que cae y la luna que no cae representan un solo y mismo fenómeno.
Ernesto Sábato, in On Heroes and Tombs [Sobre héroes y tumbas] (1961), Ch. X
Variant translation: A genius is someone who discovers that the falling stone and the moon that falls represent one and the same phenomenon.

Lionel Shriver photo
Paul Auster photo
Sherrilyn Kenyon photo
Orhan Pamuk photo

“Tell me then, does love make one a fool or do only fools fall in love?”

Orhan Pamuk (1952) Turkish novelist, screenwriter, and Nobel Prize in Literature recipient

Source: My Name is Red

Related topics