12 Quotes & Sayings By Charlotte Turner Smith

Charlotte Turner Smith (1862-1937) was an English novelist, short story writer, and poet. She was the author of over 60 novels, many of which she wrote under the pseudonym "Susan Warner." Her best known works include The House of Pride, The Secret Garden, and The Golden Fountain.

1
Ah! candid and unadulterated mind! you have learned early to reflect; but take care lest this habit, hitherto so well applied, should totally unfit you for society. It will strew thorns in your path, while other young women of your age seek only flowers. By imagining yourself in the place of others, as you now continually do, you will learn to feel for all the unhappy, or even for those who appear so; whereas it might save a great deal of (for the most part useless) pain, if you could contrive to feel only for yourself. Charlotte Turner Smith
2
I have heard that all ideas of equality are visionary–that they can never be realized–and I believe it. But surely, though there must be hewers of wood, and drawers of water, they ought to have the absolute necessaries of life. Charlotte Turner Smith
3
Novel-writing has in one respect an affinity to the drama–that time and distance are required to soften for use the harsher features that may be exhibited from real life; that it was almost impossible to bring forward events without touching on their causes; and that any tendency to political discussion, however liberal or applicable, was not to be tolerated in a sort of work which people took up with no other design than to be amused at the least possible expence of thought. Charlotte Turner Smith
4
They say I am a reformer. They say wrong: for I have long since given up any such chimerical idea, as that of being able to make men happier who are wicked and miserable by prescription. Withdrawing, therefore, from any such Utopian and hopeless attempt, I believed the best thing I could do was, to relieve, where I could, individual distress, and to lighten the chains that villany often imposes on simplicity under the name of law. In this I have done some good, and what else ought a man to do on this earth?. Charlotte Turner Smith
5
I might, indeed, read history; but whenever I attempt to do so, I am to tell you the truth, driven from it by disgust– What is it, but a miserably mortifying detail of crimes and follies?–of the guilt of a few, and the sufferings of many, while almost every page offers an argument in favor of what I never will believe–that heaven created the human race only to destroy itself. Charlotte Turner Smith
6
If truth is not to be spoken, Sir, in a government, calling itself free, least it should be understood by the people, who are governed; and prevent their freely supplying the oil, that facilitates the movement of the cumbrous machine– If facts, which cannot be denied, be repressed; and reason, which cannot be controverted, be stifled; the time is not far distant, when such a country may say, adieu liberty! . Charlotte Turner Smith
7
I think that our form of government is certainly the best–not that can be imagined–but that has ever been experienced; and, while we are sure that practice is in its favour, it would be most absurd to dream of destroying it on theory. Charlotte Turner Smith
8
For having been educated in a convent, she knew nothing of the customs or manners of the world; and found it difficult to understand that among a people piquing themselves on their liberty, it was the custom to shut a man up in perpetual confinement, to enable him to pay his debts. Charlotte Turner Smith
9
It has been said that Shakespeare, the great delineator of human character, has failed in distinguishing his principal women–and that such as he meant to be amiable are all equally gentle and good. How difficult then it is for a novelist to give to one of his heroines any very marked feature which shall not disfigure her! Too much reason and self-command destroy the interest we take in her distresses. It has been observed, that Clarissa is so equal to every trial as to diminish our pity. Other virtues than gentleness, pity, filial obedience, or faithful attachment, hardly belong to the sex. . Charlotte Turner Smith
10
Turn your thoughts to novel writing–narrative, let it be about what it will, is read, because the mind quietly acquiesces, and it requires no trouble to think about it. On your part it will demand much less care in the composition. Never mind improbabilities–put together a sufficient number of facts–the more unlikely the better. If you are too idle to choose the trouble of inventing, collect eight or nine of the most popular works of that sort; take a piece of one, and a piece of another, and put them together, only a little altered, just to disguise them: never mind whether what the painters call keeping, can in this motley assemblage be attended to; nobody thinks about that: sprinkle the whole plentifully with horrors of some sort or other, to stimulate the languid attention, and you will have a certainty of a sale at least among the circulating libraries, which, after all, is the principal sale that can be expected; for who buy novels?– Who indeed buy books at all in these times?. Charlotte Turner Smith
11
I was told, and indeed I saw several examples, that neither time nor place was much minded, and that I might hazard being equally careless of chronology and geography; but I piqued myself on having studied Aristotle, and scrupulously attended to the probabilities of time and place. Charlotte Turner Smith