Elizabeth Bibesco

Elizabeth Bibesco

25 quotes

Biography

Elizabeth, Princess Bibesco was an English socialite and a writer between 1921 and 1940. She was the daughter of H.

"We often call a certainty a hope, to bring it luck."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Friendship is a difficult, dangerous job. It is also (though we rarely admit it) extremely exhausting."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Of what help is anyone who can only be approached with the right words?"

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Blessed are those who give without remembering and take without forgetting."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Life more often teaches us how to perfect our weaknesses than how to develop our strengths."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Those we love are entitled to resent the allowances we make for them."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"To be on a pedestal is to be in a corner."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"What we buy belongs to us only when the price is forgotten."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"It is easier to be generous than to be just."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Each play worth seeing should be watched a second time on the faces of the audience."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Winter draws what summer paints."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"The image of ourselves in the minds of others is the picture of a stranger we shall never see."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"We learn nothing by being right."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"We are bound to those we love by their imperfections — their perfections help us to explain them to others."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Our losses should frequently be put on the credit side."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"To regret your sins of commission as much as your sins of omission is to prove yourself a most unworthy sinner."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Death is part of this life and not of the next."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Perfect moments don't turn into half-hours."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"My soul has gained the freedom of the night."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"I always felt a deep malaise in her — her writing and the fluctuations of her brilliant and esoteic conversation led her everywhere but to self-satisfaction."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Prince Antoine Bibesco, when asked (by her mother, Margot Asquith) why his wife didn't do more "good works", such as visiting a hospital, replied, "Dearest Margot, Elizabeth visits a hospital three times a week, with the result that the lame walk, the blind see, and the dumb would speak if they could get a word in edgeways.""

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Princess Bibesco delighted in a semi-ideal world — a world which, though having a counterpart in her experience, was to a great extent brought into being by her own temperament and, one might say, flair."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"A brilliant woman whose perpetual wit made my head swim."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"Miss Asquith, who was probably unsurpassed in intelligence by any of her contemporaries … looked like a lovely figure in an Italian fresco."

Elizabeth Bibesco

"She is pasty and podgy, with the eyes of a currant bun, suddenly protruding with animation."

Elizabeth Bibesco