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A pleasure so exquisite as almost to amount to pain.
Leigh Hunt
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Leigh Hunt
Age: 74 †
Born: 1784
Born: October 19
Died: 1859
Died: August 28
Autobiographer
Journalist
Literary Critic
Poet
Translator
Southgate
London
James Henry Leigh Hunt
Exquisite
Amount
Almost
Pleasure
Pain
More quotes by Leigh Hunt
Central depth of purple, Leaves more bright than rose, Who shall tell what brightest thought Out of darkness grows? Who, through what funereal pain, Souls to love and peace attain? - Leigh Hunt (James Henry Leigh Hunt
Leigh Hunt
Light is, perhaps, the most wonderful of all visible things.
Leigh Hunt
An exquisite invention this, Worthy of Love's most honeyed kiss,-- This art of writing billet-doux-- In buds, and odors, and bright hues! In saying all one feels and thinks In clever daffodils and pinks In puns of tulips and in phrases, Charming for their truth, of daisies.
Leigh Hunt
Occupation is the necessary basis of all enjoyment.
Leigh Hunt
If you are melancholy for the first time, you will find, upon a little inquiry, that others have been melancholy many times, and yet are cheerful now.
Leigh Hunt
Danger for danger's sake is senseless.
Leigh Hunt
With spots of sunny openings, and with nooks To lie and read in, sloping into brooks.
Leigh Hunt
If you are ever at a loss to support a flagging conversation, introduce the subject of eating.
Leigh Hunt
Oh for a seat in some poetic nook, Just hid with trees and sparkling with a brook!
Leigh Hunt
The person who can be only serious or only cheerful, is but half a man.
Leigh Hunt
The beautiful attracts the beautiful.
Leigh Hunt
Mankind are creatures of books, as well as of other circumstances and such they eternally remain,--proofs, that the race is a noble and believing race, and capable of whatever books can stimulate.
Leigh Hunt
The last excessive feelings of delight are always grave.
Leigh Hunt
Did you ever observe that immoderate laughter always ends in a sigh?
Leigh Hunt
An author is like a baker it is for him to make the sweets, and others to buy and enjoy them.
Leigh Hunt
The groundwork of all happiness is health.
Leigh Hunt
Affection, like melancholy, magnifies trifles but the magnifying of the one is like looking through a telescope at heavenly objects that of the other, like enlarging monsters with a microscope.
Leigh Hunt
A dog can have a friend he has affections and character, he can enjoy equally the field and the fireside he dreams, he caresses, he propitiates he offends, and is pardoned he stands by you in adversity he is a good fellow.
Leigh Hunt
Improvement is nature.
Leigh Hunt
Beauty too often sacrifices to fashion. The spirit of fashion is not the beautiful, but the wilful not the graceful, but the fantastic not the superior in the abstract, but the superior in the worst of all concretes,-the vulgar.
Leigh Hunt