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Slow seems their speed whose thoughts before them run.
William Davenant
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William Davenant
Age: 62 †
Born: 1606
Born: February 1
Died: 1668
Died: April 7
Playwright
Poet
Writer
Speed
Whose
Thoughts
Running
Seems
Slow
More quotes by William Davenant
Be not with honor's gilded baits beguil'd, Nor think ambition wise, because 'tis brave For though we like it, as a forward child, 'Tis so unsound, her cradle is the grave.
William Davenant
All slander must still be strangled in its birth, or time will soon conspire to make it strong enough to overcome the truth.
William Davenant
Calamity is the perfect glass wherein we truly see and know ourselves.
William Davenant
Honor is the moral conscience of the great.
William Davenant
Ambition is the mind's immodesty.
William Davenant
Since knowledge is but sorrow's spy, It is not safe to know.
William Davenant
O harmless Death! whom still the valiant brave, The wise expect, the sorrowful invite, And all the good embrace, who know the grave A short dark passage to eternal light.
William Davenant
Small are the seeds fate does unheeded sow Of slight beginnings to important ends.
William Davenant
Think not ambition wise, because 't is brave.
William Davenant
All jealousy must be strangled in its birth.
William Davenant
How beautiful is sorrow when it is dressed by virgin innocence! it makes felicity in others seem deformed.
William Davenant
Faith lights us through the dark to Deity.
William Davenant
What one cannot, another can.
William Davenant
Ambition's monstrous stomach does increase By eating, and it fears to starve, unless It still may feed, and all it sees devour Ambition is not tir'd with toll nor cloy'd with power.
William Davenant
Generous souls Are still most subject to credulity.
William Davenant
Actions rare and sudden do commonly proceed from fierce necessity, of else from some oblique design, which is ashamed to show itself in the public road.
William Davenant
How much pleasure they lose (and even the pleasures of heroic poesy are not unprofitable) who take away the liberty of a poet, and fetter his feet in the shackles of a historian.
William Davenant
Go! dive into the Southern Sea, and when Th'ast found, to trouble the nice sight of men, A swelling pearl, and such whose single worth Boasts all the wonders which the seas bring forth, Give it Endymion's love, whose ev'ry tear Would more enrich the skilful jeweller.
William Davenant
Had laws not been, we never had been blam'd For not to know we sinn'd is innocence.
William Davenant
To be rich be diligent move on Like heav'ns great movers that enrich the earth Whose moment's sloth would show the world undone And make the spring straight bury all her birth. Rich are the diligent who can command Time--nature's stock.
William Davenant