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Love wakes men, once a lifetime each They lift their heavy lids, and look And, lo, what one sweet page can teach They read with joy, then shut the book.
Coventry Patmore
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Coventry Patmore
Age: 73 †
Born: 1823
Born: July 23
Died: 1896
Died: November 26
Literary Critic
Poet
Writer
Redbridge
Coventry Kersey Dighton Patmore
Love
Sweet
Wakes
Joy
Lift
Teach
Lifts
Read
Shut
Look
Page
Book
Heavy
Looks
Lifetime
Coventry
Men
Pages
Lids
More quotes by Coventry Patmore
A saint is a person who does almost everything any other decent person does, only somewhat better and with a totally different motive.
Coventry Patmore
Uncommon things must be said in common words.
Coventry Patmore
Every evil is some good spelt backwards, and in it the wise know how to read Wisdom.
Coventry Patmore
Books are influential in proportion to their obscurity, provided that the obscurity be that of inexpressible Realities. The Bible is the most obscure book in the world. He must be a great fool who thinks he understands the plainest chapter of it.
Coventry Patmore
The more wild and incredible your desire, the more willing and prompt God is in fulfilling it, if you will have it so.
Coventry Patmore
It is one thing to be blind, and another to be in darkness.
Coventry Patmore
A woman is a foreign land.
Coventry Patmore
The ardour chills us which we do not share.
Coventry Patmore
All the love and joy that a man has ever received in perception is laid up in him as the sunshine of a hundred years is laid up in the bole of the oak.
Coventry Patmore
Creation differs from subsistence only as the first leap of a fountain differs from its continuance.
Coventry Patmore
What a Lover sees in the Beloved is the projected shadow of his own potential beauty in the eyes of God.
Coventry Patmore
The modern Agnostic improves upon the ancient by adding I don't care to I don't know.
Coventry Patmore
The midge's wing beats to and fro A thousand times ere one can utter O.
Coventry Patmore
Ask abundantly, for the measure of your asking shall be that of your receiving.
Coventry Patmore
The woman is the man's glory, and she naturally delights in the praises which are assurances that she is fulfilling her function and she gives herself to him who succeeds in convincing her that she, of all others, is best able to discharge it for him. A woman without this kind of vanity is a monster.
Coventry Patmore
Life is not life at all without delight.
Coventry Patmore
The Spirit of man is like a kite, which rises by means of those very forces which seem to oppose its rise the tie that joins it to the earth, the opposing winds of temptation, and the weight of earth-born affections which it carries with it into the sky.
Coventry Patmore
Let me love Thee so that the honour, riches, and pleasures of the world may seem unworthy even of hatred - may not even be encumbrances.
Coventry Patmore
If we may credit certain hints contained in the lives of the saints, love raises the spirit above the sphere of reverence and worship into one of laughter and dalliance: a sphere in which the soul says: 'Shall I, a gnat which dances in Thy ray, Dare to be reverent?'
Coventry Patmore
Then sleep the seasons, full of might While slowly swells the pod, And rounds the peach, and in the night The mushroom bursts the sod. The winter comes: the frozen rut Is bound with silver bars the white drift heaps against the hut and night is pierced with stars.
Coventry Patmore