| Quote | Author | Source | Email Quote |
|---|
| It is so much easier to forgive a failure than a success. | Charles Dudley Warner | A Little Journey in the World |  |
| If success is rare and slow, everybody knows how quick and easy ruin is. | William Makepeace Thackeray | Vanity Fair |  |
| " . . . there is a pale shade of bribery which is sometimes called prosperity." | George Eliot | Middlemarch |  |
| "We must have ideals and try to live up to them, even if we never quite succeed. Life would be a sorry business without them. With them it's grand and great." | Lucy Maud Montgomery | Anne Of Avonlea |  |
| . . . for when women are the advisers, the lords of creation don't take the advice till they have persuaded themselves that it is just what they intended to do. Then they act upon it, and, if it succeeds, they give the weaker vessel half the credit of it. If it fails, they generously give her the whole. | Louisa May Alcott | Little Women |  |
| The best chess-player in Christendom may be little more than the best player of chess; but proficiency in whist implies capacity for success in all those more important undertakings where mind struggles with mind. | Edgar Allan Poe | The Murders in the Rue Morgue |  |
| The worst class of sum worked in the every-day world is cyphered by the diseased arithmeticians who are always in the rule of Subtraction as to the merits and successes of others, and never in Addition as to their own. | Charles Dickens | Little Dorrit |  |
| I have been very fortunate in worldly matters; many men have worked much harder, and not succeeded half so well; but I never could have done what I have done, without the habits of punctuality, order, and diligence, without the determination to concentrate myself on one object at a time, no matter how quickly its successor should come upon its heels, which I then formed. | Charles Dickens | David Copperfield |  |
| "We learn from failure, not from success!" | Bram Stoker | Dracula |  |
| "Moderation is a fatal thing, Lady Hunstanton. Nothing succeeds like excess." | Oscar Wilde | A Woman of No Importance |  |