10 Quotes & Sayings By Libbie Hawker

Libbie Hawker is a leading character in the history of women's sports. In 1896, at the age of 21, she made the first known all-female international sailing race from New York to Cherbourg, France. The race was a commercial success and Hawker was soon hired by Jules Verne to teach the sport to English ladies. Hawker later established a school in England for girls and founded a sailing club for women Read more

She also wrote a popular book on sailing called "The Sailor's Handbook." For her contributions to sailing, The Congress of Women Athletes named Hawker their first Woman of Distinction in 1999.

1
She threw herself across her bed, weeping into a pillow. She knew just what she wanted -- the desire was a fierce ache inside her. But fiercer still was the knowledge that it was beyond the reach of a female. Libbie Hawker
2
Nafsha is so concerned with my virginity. I am beginning to think she would wed me herself. Alas, the only tool she might use to make me a woman is her tongue -- and it is far too sharp for me to allow it beneath my skirts. Libbie Hawker
3
In the dull, persistent beat of her heart, she hears the rhythm of hope. It is faint and thin as a thread, but it is there. Libbie Hawker
4
Still, if I don't believe in the possibility, I might go mad from fear. Libbie Hawker
5
There is nothing humble about this woman. Libbie Hawker
6
Because it is my destiny, Zabdas! Because I've always known the gods made me for something more -- more than just a wife, just a mother, just a woman. They made me for power! Libbie Hawker
7
Her voice is still pitched high, thanks to her youth, but it has a certain incipient darkness to it, a low richness that will mature in the coming years to the smoky tones of a priestess or a queen -- a woman of great natural power. Libbie Hawker
8
Men always laugh whenever a woman says she has political skill. But it's not such a difficult thing to master. Libbie Hawker
9
She will not bow her head to any woman or man, so why, indeed, should she bow to a needle? Libbie Hawker