“There is a quality about women who choose men sparingly; it appears in their walk, in their eyes, in their laughter and in their gentle hearts.”— Charles Bukowski, amazon.com
“How many young women have I watched weep their days away over disinterested men? To all of them, I want to say, Look up. Get a life, because he has.”— Cammie McGovern, amazon.com
“With the pairing family, therefore, the abduction and barter of women began—widespread symptoms, and nothing but that, of a new and much more profound change.”— Friedrich Engels, amazon.com
“The emancipation of woman will only be possible when woman can take part in production on a large, social scale, and domestic work no longer claims anything but an insignificant amount of her time.”— Friedrich Engels, amazon.com
“She looks sad. She looks angry. She looks different from everyone else I know—she cannot put on that happy face others wear when they know they are being watched. She doesn’t put on a face for me, which makes me trust her somehow.”— Matthew Quick, amazon.com
“I am a man who loves to give women breakfast in bed. All I want to receive in return is a simple "Thank you!"... ...not "Who are you?", "How did you get in here?", and "I'll call the police!"”— arvigeus, reddit.com
“there is a quality about women who choose men sparingly; it appears in their walk in their eyes in their laughter and in their gentle hearts.”— Charles Bukowski, amazon.com
“Those men think I'm purely decorative, and they're fools for not knowing better.”— Zelda Fitzgerald, amazon.ca
“If women ruled the world," said my wife, "there'd be no wars. That's true," I replied. "Wars require strategy and logic."”— bananadead, reddit.com
“Sure, I’m sad, but I’m not looking to soothe that sadness by replacing it with a new relationship. Women are allowed to be sad, and they’re allowed to be single, and they don’t need to hear that one day a man is going to make it all go away by telling her she is good enough again. She’s good enough…”— Charlotte Green, thoughtcatalog.com
“The women, I conjecture, were called doves by the Dodonaeans, because they were barbarians, and they seemed to chatter like birds; but after a time, when the woman spoke intelligibly to them, they presently reported that the dove had spoken with a human voice; for as long as she used a barbarous lan…”— Herodotus, amazon.com
“There were several ways of understanding her: there was what she said, and there was what she meant, and there was something between the two, that was neither.”— Henry James, amazon.com
“In the old times, women did not get their lives written, though I don't doubt many of them were much better worth writing than the men's.”— Harriet Beecher Stowe, amazon.com
“Women often seemed to leave things unsaid, and in his limited experience it was what they did not say that proved the most trouble.”— Robert Jordan, amazon.com
“She wears darkness as a queen wears a crown: proud, confident, beautiful and above all meant only for her.”— Sophia Carey, wnq-writers.com