Many can brook (endure) the weather that love not the wind
More Quotes from William Shakespeare:
He was to imagine me hislove, his mistress; and I set him every day to woo me; at which
time would I, being but a moonish youth, grieve, be effeminate,
changeable, longing and liking, proud, fantastical, apish,
shallow, inconstant, full of tears, full of smiles; for every
passion something and for no passion truly anything, as boys and
women are for the most part cattle of this colour; would now like
him, now loathe him; then entertain him, then forswear him; now
weep for him, then spit at him; that I drave my suitor from his
mad humour of love to a living humour of madness; which was, to
forswear the full stream of the world and to live in a nook
merely monastic.
William Shakespeare
All the infections that the sun sucks upFrom bogs, fens, flats, on Prosper fall, and make himBy inch-meal a disease
William Shakespeare
A good heart is the sun and the moon or, rather, the sun and not the moon, for it shines bright and never changes.
William Shakespeare
My tongue-tied Muse in manners holds her still,
While comments of your praise, richly compiled,
Reserve their character with golden quill,
And precious phrase by all the Muses filed.
William Shakespeare
He that loves to be flattered is worthy of the flatterer.
William Shakespeare
Wilt thou not haply say,
"Truth needs no colour with his colour fixed,
Beauty no pencil, beauty's truth to lay,
But best is best, if never intermixed"?
William Shakespeare
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Based on Topics: Weather QuotesI didn't have any agenda or plan when I started writing stuff.
David Byrne
Feelings are like chemicals, the more you analyze them the worse they smell.
Charles Kingsley
In a word, if any kind of slavery can be vindicated by the Holy Scriptures, we are already sure our making and holding the Negroes our slaves, as we do, cannot be vindicated by any thing we can find there, but is condemned by the whole of divine revelation.
Samuel Hopkins