
Source: Essay on Translated Verse (1684), Line 173.
Panegyric to My Lord Protector (or Panegyric on Cromwell).
Poetical Works of Edmund Waller and Sir John Denham (1857)
Source: Essay on Translated Verse (1684), Line 173.
“It is noble to be shy, illustrious not to know how to act, great not to have a gift for living.”
Ibid., p. 86
The Book of Disquiet
Original: É nobre ser tímido, ilustre não saber agir, grande não ter jeito para viver.
"A Kind Word", in DNRC Newsletter #9 (December 1995) http://web.archive.org/web/19970412134441/www.unitedmedia.com/comics/dilbert/newsletter/html/newsletter09.html
“It is we who infuse life with meaning through our actions and the stories we create with them.”
Penguin Books 2015 edition, page 45.
No Place to Hide (2014)
“Every time that I fill a high office, I create a hundred discontented men and an ingrate.”
Toutes les fois que je donne une place vacante, je fais cent mécontents et un ingrat.
Quoted in Voltaire, Le Siècle de Louis XIV (1751), ch.26
Mont Saint Michel and Chartres (1904)
Context: In any case God's act was the union of Mind with Matter by the same act or will which created both. No intermediate cause or condition intervened; no secondary influence had anything whatever to do with the result. Time had nothing to do with it. Every individual that has existed or shall exist was created by the same instantaneous act, for all time. "When the question regards the universal agent who produces beings and time, we cannot consider him as acting now and before, according to the succession of time." God emanated time, force, matter, mind, as he might emanate gravitation, not as a part of his substance but as an energy of his will, and maintains them in their activity by the same act, not by a new one. Every individual is a part of the direct act, not a secondary outcome.
“In order to create and to heal, to do and to serve,.. to act we need detachment.”
All Will be Well (2004)
“Driven away by barbarian thrumming the Muse has spurned the six-footed exercise ever since she beheld these patrons seven feet high.”
Ex hoc barbaricis abacta plectris<br/>spernit senipedem stilum Thalia,<br/>ex quo septipedes videt patronos.
Ex hoc barbaricis abacta plectris
spernit senipedem stilum Thalia,
ex quo septipedes videt patronos.
Carmen 12, line 9; vol. 1, p. 213.
Carmina