“Less than the weed that grows beside thy door”
Laurence Hope India's Love Lyrics
Less Than the Dust
Indian Love Lyrics (aka Garden of Kama) (1901)
“Less than the weed that grows beside thy door”
Laurence Hope India's Love Lyrics
Less Than the Dust
Indian Love Lyrics (aka Garden of Kama) (1901)
Elijah Fenton (1683–1730) British poet
Act IV, Scene V, p. 46
Mariamne: A Tragedy (1723)
Herman Melville (1818–1891) American novelist, short story writer, essayist, and poet
Source: The Confidence-Man: His Masquerade (1857), Ch. 45
Context: I cannot tell you how thankful I am for your reminding me about the apocrypha here. For the moment, its being such escaped me. Fact is, when all is bound up together, it's sometimes confusing. The uncanonical part should be bound distinct. And, now that I think of it, how well did those learned doctors who rejected for us this whole book of Sirach. I never read anything so calculated to destroy man's confidence in man. This son of Sirach even says — I saw it but just now: 'Take heed of thy friends'; not, observe, thy seeming friends, thy hypocritical friends, thy false friends, but thy friends, thy real friends — that is to say, not the truest friend in the world is to be implicitly trusted. Can Rochefoucault equal that? I should not wonder if his view of human nature, like Machiavelli's, was taken from this Son of Sirach. And to call it wisdom — the Wisdom of the Son of Sirach! Wisdom, indeed! What an ugly thing wisdom must be! Give me the folly that dimples the cheek, say I, rather than the wisdom that curdles the blood. But no, no; it ain't wisdom; it's apocrypha, as you say, sir. For how can that be trustworthy that teaches distrust?
“Take not thine enemy for thy friend; nor thy friend for thine enemy!”
Pythagoras (-585–-495 BC) ancient Greek mathematician and philosopher
The Sayings of the Wise (1555)
George S. Clason book The Richest Man in Babylon
Source: The Richest Man in Babylon
Sri Aurobindo (1872–1950) Indian nationalist, freedom fighter, philosopher, yogi, guru and poet
Thoughts and Aphorisms (1913), Karma
“The paths to the house I seek to make,
But leave to those to come the house itself.”
Walt Whitman (1819–1892) American poet, essayist and journalist
Thou Mother with thy Equal Brood, 1
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
“First thy neighbour, and there after your own house.”
Fatimah (604–632) daughter of Muhammad and Khadijah
Fascinating Discourses of the 14 Infallibles.
William Cowper (1731–1800) (1731–1800) English poet and hymnodist
Source: Conversation (1782), Line 251.