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O what a thing is age! Death without death's quiet.
Walter Savage Landor
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Walter Savage Landor
Age: 89 †
Born: 1775
Born: January 30
Died: 1864
Died: September 17
Poet
Writer
Warwick
Warwickshire
Aging
Quiet
Age
Death
Without
Thing
More quotes by Walter Savage Landor
It is easy to look down on others to look down on ourselves is the difficulty.
Walter Savage Landor
We are poor, indeed, when we have no half-wishes left us. The heart and the imagination close the shutters the instant they are gone.
Walter Savage Landor
Cruelty is the highest pleasure to the cruel man it is his love.
Walter Savage Landor
Harmonious words render ordinary ideas acceptable less ordinary, pleasant novel and ingenious ones, delightful. As pictures and statues, and living beauty, too, show better by music-light, so is poetry irradiated, vivified, glorified', and raised into immortal life by harmony.
Walter Savage Landor
We care not how many see us in choler, when we rave and bluster, and make as much noise and bustle as we can but if the kindest and most generous affection comes across us, we suppress every sign of it, and hide ourselves in nooks and covert.
Walter Savage Landor
The happiest of pillows is not that which love first presses! it is that which death has frowned on and passed over.
Walter Savage Landor
Virtue is presupposed in friendship.
Walter Savage Landor
The tomb is the pedestal of greatness. I make a distinction between God's great and the king's great.
Walter Savage Landor
God scatters beauty as he scatters flowers O'er the wide earth, and tells us all are ours. A hundred lights in every temple burn, And at each shrine I bend my knee in turn.
Walter Savage Landor
Next in criminality to him who violates the laws of his country, is he who violates the language.
Walter Savage Landor
Vast objects of remote altitude must be looked at a long while before they are ascertained. Ages are the telescope tubes that must be lengthened out for Shakespeare and generations of men serve but a single witness to his claims.
Walter Savage Landor
How sweet and sacred idleness is!
Walter Savage Landor
The spirit of Greece, passing through and ascending above the world, hath so animated universal nature, that the very rocks and woods, the very torrents and wilds burst forth with it.
Walter Savage Landor
The worse of ingratitude lies not in the ossified heart of him who commits it, but we find it in the effect it produces on him against whom it was committed.
Walter Savage Landor
Great men always pay deference to greater.
Walter Savage Landor
Ambition is but avarice on stilts, and masked. God sometimes sends a famine, sometimes a pestilence, and sometimes a hero, for the chastisement of mankind none of them surely for our admiration.
Walter Savage Landor
A mercantile democracy may govern long and widely a mercantile aristocracy cannot stand.
Walter Savage Landor
Great men lose somewhat of their greatness by being near us ordinary men gain much.
Walter Savage Landor
Teach him to live unto God and unto thee and he will discover that women, like the plants in woods, derive their softness and tenderness from the shade.
Walter Savage Landor
Modesty and diffidence make a man unfit for public affairs they also make him unfit for brothels.
Walter Savage Landor