19 Quotes & Sayings By Rafael Sabatini

Rafael Sabatini was an Italian author. He is best known for his adventure novels, about which he wrote prolifically. During the 1930s, Sabatini was also a successful playwright.

1
But he looks no more than thirty. He's very handsome-- so much you will admit; nor will you deny that he is very wealthy and very powerful; the greatest nobleman in Brittany. He will make me a great lady.'' God made you that, Aline. Rafael Sabatini
2
And yet she was content to pair off with this dull young adventurer in the tarnished lace! It was, he supposed, the sort of thing to be expected of a sex that all philosophy had taught him to regard as the maddest part of a mad species. Rafael Sabatini
3
Do you know, André, I sometimes think that you have no heart.' 'Presumably because I sometimes betray intelligence. Rafael Sabatini
4
Mind being the seat of the soul, and literature being the expression of the mind, literature, it follows, is the soul of an age, the surviving and immortal part of it. Rafael Sabatini
5
Life is an ephemeral business, and we waste too much of it in judging where it would beseem us better to accept, that we ourselves may come to be accepted by such future ages as may pursue the study of us. Rafael Sabatini
6
Speed will follow when the mechanism of the movements is more assured. Rafael Sabatini
7
We are all, he says, the sport of destiny. Ah, but not quite. Destiny is an intelligent force, moving with purpose. Rafael Sabatini
8
You behold him at the age of four-and-twenty stuffed with learning enough to produce an intellectual indigestion in an ordinary mind. Rafael Sabatini
9
I am very poor - for a know nothing, understand nothing. It is not a calamitous condition until it is realized. Rafael Sabatini
10
To do what you imply would require nothing short of divine intervention. you must change man, not systems. Can you and our vapouring friends of the Literary Chamber of Rennes, or any other learned society of France, devise a system of government that has never yet been tried? Surely not. And can we say of any system tried that it proved other than failure in the end? My dear Philippe, the future is to be read with certainty only in the past. Ad actu ad posse valet consecutio. Man never changes. He is always greedy, always acquisitive, always vile. I am speaking of Man in the bulk. Rafael Sabatini
11
I desire a society which selects its rulers from the best elements of every class and denies the right of any class or corporation to usurp the government itself--whether it be the nobles, the clergy, the bourgeoisie, or the proletariat. For government by any class is fatal to the welfare of the whole, Rafael Sabatini
12
It is a futile and ridiculous struggle–but then... it is human nature, I suppose, to be futile and ridiculous. Rafael Sabatini
13
With you it is always the law, never equity. Rafael Sabatini
14
What a man dares to do, he should dare to confess- unless he is a coward. Rafael Sabatini
15
Without entering here into a dissertation upon the historical romance, it may be said that in proper hands it has been and should continue to be one of the most valued and valuable expressions of the literary art. To render and maintain it so, however, it is necessary that certain well-defined limits should be set upon the licence which its writers are to enjoy; it is necessary that the work should be honest work; that preparation for it should be made by a sound, painstaking study of the period to be represented, to the end that a true impression may first be formed and then conveyed. Thus, considering how much more far-reaching is the novel than any other form of literature, the good results that must wait upon such endeavours are beyond question. The neglect of them–the distortion of character to suit the romancer's ends, the like distortion of historical facts, the gross anachronisms arising out of a lack of study, have done much to bring the historical romance into disrepute. . Rafael Sabatini
16
Out of his zestful study of Man, from Thucydides to the Encyclopaedists, from Seneca to Rousseau, he had confirmed into an unassailable conviction his earliest conscious impressions of the general insanity of his own species. Rafael Sabatini
17
Oh, you are mad! " she exclaimed, quite out of patience." Possibly. But I like my madness. Rafael Sabatini
18
He was born with a gift of laughter and a sense that the world was mad. Rafael Sabatini