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Others may use the ocean as their road Only the English make it their abode.
Edmund Waller
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Edmund Waller
Age: 81 †
Born: 1606
Born: March 3
Died: 1687
Died: October 21
Poet
Politician
Writer
Coleshill
Buckinghamshire
Gentleman that loves the peace
True son of the Church of England and a lover of his countries liberty
Edmund Waller
Road
Ocean
Use
Others
May
Make
Abode
English
More quotes by Edmund Waller
With wisdom fraught not such as books, but such as practice taught.
Edmund Waller
Go, lovely rose, Tell her that wastes her time and me, That now she knows, When I resemble her to thee, How sweet and fair she seems to be.
Edmund Waller
How small a part of time they share, That are so wondrous sweet and fair!
Edmund Waller
The soul's dark cottage, batter'd and decay'd, Lets in new light through chinks that Time has made.
Edmund Waller
Happy the innocent whose equal thoughts are free from anguish as they are from faults.
Edmund Waller
And keeps the palace of the soul.
Edmund Waller
What use of oaths, of promise, or of test, where men regard no God but interest?
Edmund Waller
Music so softens and disarms the mind That not an arrow does resistance find.
Edmund Waller
The rising sun complies with our weak sight, First gilds the clouds, then shows his globe of light At such a distance from our eyes, as though He knew what harm his hasty beams would do.
Edmund Waller
All human things Of dearest value hang on slender strings.
Edmund Waller
The fear of God is freedom, joy, and peace And makes all ills that vex us here to cease.
Edmund Waller
Virtue's a stronger guard than brass.
Edmund Waller
Poets that lasting marble seek, Must come in Latin or in Greek.
Edmund Waller
Tea does our fancy aid, Repress those vapours which the head invade And keeps that palace of the soul serene.
Edmund Waller
Poets may boast (as safely-vain) Their work shall with the world remain: Both bound together, live, or die, The verses and the prophecy. But who can hope his lines shou'd long Last, in a daily changing tongue? While they are new, envy prevails, And as that dies, our language fails.
Edmund Waller
Vexed sailors cursed the rain, for which poor shepherds prayed in vain.
Edmund Waller
Ingenious to their ruin, every age improves the art and instruments of rage.
Edmund Waller
Under the tropic is our language spoke, And part of Flanders hath receiv'd our yoke.
Edmund Waller
Since thou wouldst needs, bewitched with some ill charms, Be buried in those monumental arms: As we can wish, is, may that earth lie light Upon thy tender limbs, and so good night.
Edmund Waller
But virtue too, as well as vice, is clad in flesh and blood.
Edmund Waller