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Zelda Fitzgerald

Read through the most famous quotes from Zelda Fitzgerald




Nobody has ever measured, not even poets, how much the heart can hold.


— Zelda Fitzgerald


#even #ever #heart #hold #how

She refused to be bored chiefly because she wasn't boring.


— Zelda Fitzgerald


#write

I don't want to live, I want to love first and live incidentally.


— Zelda Fitzgerald


#life #love #life

I love you, even if there isn’t any me, or any love, or even any life. I love you.


— Zelda Fitzgerald


#love #life

All I want to be is very young always and very irresponsible and to feel that my life is my own-to live and be happy and die in my own way to please myself


— Zelda Fitzgerald


#youth #life

And only weaklings...who lack courage and the power to feel they're right when the whole world says they're wrong, ever lose.


— Zelda Fitzgerald


#courage

They hadn't much faith in travel, nor a great belief in a change of scene as a panacea for spiritual ills; they were simply glad to be going.


— Zelda Fitzgerald


#travel #change

. . . she tried to weave the strength of her father and the young beauty of her first love with David, the happy oblivion of her teens and her warm protected childhood into a magic cloak.


— Zelda Fitzgerald


#strength #beauty

By the time a person has achieved years adequate for choosing a direction, the die is cast and the moment has long since passed which determined the future.


— Zelda Fitzgerald


#adequate #by the time #cast #choosing #determined

It is the loose ends with which men hang themselves.


— Zelda Fitzgerald


#hang #loose #men #themselves #which






About Zelda Fitzgerald

Zelda Fitzgerald Quotes




Did you know about Zelda Fitzgerald?

Seeking an artistic identity of her own Zelda wrote magazine articles and short stories and at 27 became obsessed with a career as a ballerina practicing to exhaustion. Minor Williamson Brinson) (1886–1960) Rosalind Sayre (Mrs.

Scott died in Hollywood in 1940 having last seen Zelda a year and a half earlier. The strain of her tempestuous marriage Scott's increasing alcoholism and her growing instability presaged Zelda's admittance to the Sheppard Pratt sanatorium in 1930. She was diagnosed with Bipolar disorder.

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