“A Rose is sweeter in the budde than full blowne.”
John Lyly (1554–1606) English politician
Source: Euphues and his England, P. 314. Compare: "The rose is fairest when 't is budding new", Sir Walter Scott, Lady of the Lake, canto iii. st. 1.
Bk. XI, l. 121.
The Prelude (1799-1805)
“A Rose is sweeter in the budde than full blowne.”
John Lyly (1554–1606) English politician
Source: Euphues and his England, P. 314. Compare: "The rose is fairest when 't is budding new", Sir Walter Scott, Lady of the Lake, canto iii. st. 1.
“As though a rose should shut and be a bud again.”
John Keats The Eve of St. Agnes
Stanza 27
Poems (1820), The Eve of St. Agnes
Robert Herrick book Hesperides
"The Rose" (published c. 1648). Compare: "Flower of all hue, and without thorn the rose", John Milton, Paradise Lost, book iv. line 256.; "Every rose has it's thorn", Poison, "Every Rose Has Its Thorn".
Hesperides (1648)
“The best way to killing a rose is to force it open when it is still only the promise of a bud.”
José Saramago book The Cave
Source: The Cave (2000), p. 89 (Vintage 2003)
“I seek a form that my style cannot discover,
a bud of thought that wants to be a rose.”
Rubén Darío (1867–1916) Nicaraguan poet and writer
Prosas Profanas y Otros Poemas (Profane Hymns and Other Poems). I Seek a Form (1896).
Walter Scott (1771–1832) Scottish historical novelist, playwright, and poet
Canto IV, stanza 1. <br class="br"> The Lady of the Lake http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/3011 (1810)
“Life is full of paradoxes, as roses are of thorns.”
Fernando Pessoa book The Book of Disquiet
Source: The Book of Disquiet