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C.N. Douglas, comp. Forty Thousand Quotations: Prose and Poetical. 1917.

Lord Lansdowne

  • Fate holds the strings, and men like children, move
  • But as they’re led; success is from above.
  • One destin’d period men in common have,
  • The great, the base, the coward, and the brave,
  • All food alike for worms, companions in the grave.
  • The kiss you take is paid by that you give:
  • The joy is mutual, and I’m still in debt.
  • Thy thoughts to nobler meditations give,
  • And study how to die, not how to live.
  • ’Tis sweet to love; but when with scorn we meet,
  • Revenge supplies the loss with joys as great.
  • To die and part is a less evil; but to part and live, there, there is the torment.

    To doubt is an injury; to suspect a friend is breach of friendship; jealousy is a seed sown but in vicious minds; prone to distrust, because apt to deceive.