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Are not the mountains, waves, and skies as much a part of me, as I of them?
Lord Byron
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Lord Byron
Age: 36 †
Born: 1788
Born: January 22
Died: 1824
Died: April 19
Autobiographer
Baron Byron
Diarist
Librettist
Lyricist
Military Personnel
Playwright
Poet
Politician
Translator
Writer
London
England
George Gordon Byron
George Gordon Byron
6th Baron Byron
Noel Byron
Xhorxh Bajroni
Bajron
George Gordon
Jerzy Gordon Byron
Pai-lun
Baron Byron George Gordon Byron
6th Baron Byron George Gordon Noel
Byron
George Gordon Byron
Baron Byron
6th Baron Byron George Gordon Byron
George Gordon Noël Byron Byron
Bayrěn
Payrěn
George Gordon By
Sky
Mountain
Part
Much
Skies
Waves
Mountains
Wave
More quotes by Lord Byron
If I don't write to empty my mind, I go mad. As to that regular, uninterrupted love of writing. I do not understand it. I feel it as a torture, which I must get rid of, but never as a pleasure. On the contrary, I think composition a great pain.
Lord Byron
There are some feelings time cannot benumb, Nor torture shake.
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A change came o'er the spirit of my dream.
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[Armenian] is a rich language, however, and would amply repay any one the trouble of learning it.
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Hearts will break - yet brokenly, live on.
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A woman who gives any advantage to a man may expect a lover - but will sooner or later find a tyrant.
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Now I shall go to sleep. Goodnight.
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What should I have known or written had I been a quiet, mercantile politician or a lord in waiting? A man must travel, and turmoil, or there is no existence.
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For truth is always strange stranger than fiction.
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Like to the apples on the Dead Sea's shore, All ashes to the taste.
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In itself a thought, a slumbering thought is capable of years and curdles a long life into one hour.
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Let us have wine and women, mirth and laughter, sermons and soda water the day after.
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The simple Wordsworth . . . / Who, both by precept and example, shows / That prose is verse, and verse is merely prose.
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But 'midst the crowd, the hum, the shock of men, To hear, to see, to feel, and to possess, And roam along, the world's tired denizen, With none who bless us, none whom we can bless.
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Pure friendship's well-feigned blush.
Lord Byron
Ah, nut-brown partridges! Ah, brilliant pheasants! And ah, ye poachers!--'Tis no sport for peasants.
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If a man proves too clearly and convincingly to himself...that a tiger is an optical illusion--well, he will find out he is wrong. The tiger will himself intervene in the discussion, in a manner which will be in every sense conclusive.
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Better to sink beneath the shock Than moulder piecemeal on the rock!
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A small drop of ink makes thousands, perhaps millions... think.
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You should have a softer pillow than my heart.
Lord Byron