Quote by: Zelda Fitzgerald

With adolescent Nietzscheanism, she already planned to escape on the world's reversals from the sense of suffocation that seemed to her to be eclipsing her family, her sisters, and mother. She, she told herself, would move brightly along high places and stop to trespass and admire, and if the fine was a heavy one—well, there was no good in saving up beforehand to pay it. Full of these presumptuous resolves, she promised herself that if, in the future, her soul should come starving and crying for bread it should eat the stone she might have to offer without complaint or remorse. Relentlessly she convinced herself that the only thing of any significance was to take what she wanted when she could. She did her best.


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Author Bio


  • NameZelda Fitzgerald
  • DescriptionNovelist, wife of F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • BornJuly 24, 1900
  • DiedMarch 10, 1948
  • CountryUnited States Of America
  • ProfessionWoman Of Letters; Novelist; Poet; Autobiographer