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Home  »  Forty Thousand Quotations: Prose and Poetical  »  Wentworth Dillon

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

Wentworth Dillon

  • Abstruse and mystic thoughts you must express
  • With painful care, but seeming easiness;
  • For truth shines brightest thro’ the plainest dress.
  • Immodest words admit of no defence;
  • For want of decency is want of sense.
  • Men still had faults, and men will have them still;
  • He that hath none, and lives as angels do,
  • Must be an angel.
  • My God, my Father, and my Friend,
  • Do not forsake me in the end.
  • Praise Him, each savage furious beast
  • That on His stores do daily feast;
  • And you tame slaves, of the laborious plough,
  • Your weary knees to your Creator bow.
  • The first great work (a task performed by few)
  • Is that yourself may to yourself be true.
  • The last loud trumpet’s wondrous sound,
  • Shall thro’ the rending tombs rebound,
  • And wake the nations under ground.
  • The men, who labor and digest things most,
  • Will be much apter to despond than boast;
  • For if your author be profoundly good,
  • ’Twill cost you dear before he’s understood.
  • The press, the pulpit, and the stage,
  • Conspire to censure and expose our age.
  • Thou whom avenging pow’rs obey,
  • Cancel my debt (too great to pay)
  • Before the sad accounting day.
  • And choose an author as you choose a friend.

    But words once spoke can never be recall’d.

    The multitude is always in the wrong.