Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
That friendship will not continue to the end which is begun for an end.
Francis Quarles
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Francis Quarles
Age: 52 †
Born: 1592
Born: May 8
Died: 1644
Died: September 8
Author
Poet
Writer
Havering
Literature
Ends
Begun
Continue
Friendship
More quotes by Francis Quarles
O lust, thou infernal fire, whose fuel is gluttony whose flame is pride, whose sparkles are wanton words whose smoke is infamy whose ashes are uncleanness whose end is hell.
Francis Quarles
If thou wouldst preserve a sound body, use fasting and walking if a healthful soul, fasting and praying. Walking exercises the body praying exercises the soul fasting cleanses both.
Francis Quarles
The fountain of beauty is the heart and every generous thought illustrates the walls of your chamber.
Francis Quarles
In giving of thy alms, inquire not so much into the person, as his necessity. God looks not so much upon the merits of him that requires, as into the manner of him that relieves if the man deserve not, thou hast given it to humanity.
Francis Quarles
See, here's a shadow found the human nature Is made th' umbrella to the Deity, To catch the sunbeams of thy just Creator Beneath this covert thou may'st safely lie.
Francis Quarles
Other vices make their own way this makes way for all vices. He that is a drunkard is qualified for all vice.
Francis Quarles
If thou wouldst be justified, acknowledge thine injustice. He that confesses his sin, begins his journey toward salvation. He that is sorry for it, mends his pace. He that forsakes it, is at his journey's end.
Francis Quarles
Poor thieves in halters we behold And great thieves in their chains of gold.
Francis Quarles
False world, thou ly'st: thou canst not lend The least delight: Thy favours cannot gain a friend, They are so slight.
Francis Quarles
The strong desires of man's insatiate breast may stand possess'd Of all that earth can give but earth can give no rest.
Francis Quarles
No man is born unto himself alone Who lives unto himself, he lives to none.
Francis Quarles
Be not too rash in the breaking of an inconvenient custom as it was gotten, so leave it by degrees. Danger attends upon too sudden alterations he that pulls down a bad building by the great may be ruined by the fall, but he that takes it down brick by brick may live to build a better.
Francis Quarles
I wish thee as much pleasure in the reading, as I had in the writing.
Francis Quarles
Think not thy love to God merits God's love to thee His acceptance of thy duty crowns His own gifts in thee man's love to God is nothing but a faint reflection of God's love to man.
Francis Quarles
Heaven is never deaf but when man's heart is dumb.
Francis Quarles
Be neither too early in the fashion, nor too long out of it, nor too precisely in it what custom hath civilized is become decent, till then ridiculous where the eye is the jury thy apparel is the evidence.
Francis Quarles
Proportion thy charity to the strength of thine estate, lest God proportion thine estate to the weakness of thy charity. Let the lips of the poor be the trumpet of thy gift, lest in seeking applause, thou lose thy reward. Nothing is more pleasing to God than an open hand and a closed mouth.
Francis Quarles
The goods we spend we keep and what we save We lose and only what we lose we have.
Francis Quarles
Mercy turns her back to the unmerciful.
Francis Quarles
My mind's my kingdom.
Francis Quarles