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Poetry in love is no more to be avoided than jealousy.
William Wycherley
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William Wycherley
Age: 75 †
Born: 1640
Born: January 1
Died: 1715
Died: December 31
Dramatist
Playwright
Poet
Writer
Clive
Shropshire
Love
Avoided
Jealousy
Poetry
More quotes by William Wycherley
Come, for my part I will have only those glorious, manly pleasures of being very drunk, and very slovenly.
William Wycherley
Good fellowship and friendship are lasting, rational and manly pleasures.
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Temperance is the nurse of chastity.
William Wycherley
Poets, like whores, are only hated by each other.
William Wycherley
Charity and good-nature give a sanction to the most common actions and pride and ill-nature make our best virtues despicable.
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Hunger, revenge, to sleep are petty foes, But only death the jealous eyes can close.
William Wycherley
I have heard people eat most heartily of another man's meat, that is, what they do not pay for.
William Wycherley
He's a fool that marries but he's a greater fool that does not marry a fool.
William Wycherley
Ceremony and great professing renders friendship as much suspect as it does religion.
William Wycherley
Conversation augments pleasure and diminishes pain by our having shares in either for silent woes are greatest, as silent satisfaction leas since sometimes our pleasure would be none but for telling of it, and our grief insupportable but for participation.
William Wycherley
Drinking with women is as unnatural as scolding with 'em.
William Wycherley
Go to your business, pleasure, whilst I go to my pleasure, business.
William Wycherley
Grief is so far from retrieving a loss that it makes it greater but the way to lessen it is by a comparison with others' losses.
William Wycherley
Wit has as few true judges as painting.
William Wycherley
Women serve but to keep a man from better company.
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A beauty masked, like the sun in eclipse, gathers together more gazers than if it shined out.
William Wycherley
Necessity, mother of invention.
William Wycherley
Money makes up in a measure all other wants in men.
William Wycherley
Thy books should, like thy friends, not many be/Yet such wherein men may thy judgment see.
William Wycherley
Wine gives you liberty, love takes it away.
William Wycherley