“The good things of life are not to be had singly, but come to us with a mixture.”
Charles Lamb Last Essays of Elia
Popular Fallacies: XIII, That You Must Love Me and Love My Dog.
Last Essays of Elia (1833)
Abraham Hayward, writing in the Edinburgh Review in 1848.
Attributed
“The good things of life are not to be had singly, but come to us with a mixture.”
Charles Lamb Last Essays of Elia
Popular Fallacies: XIII, That You Must Love Me and Love My Dog.
Last Essays of Elia (1833)
Walter Scott book Peveril of the Peak
Peveril of the Peak, Chap. xlii.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
“As for the brandy, "nothing extenuate;" and the water, put nought in it malice.”
Douglas William Jerrold (1803–1857) English dramatist and writer
Shakespeare Grog, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).
Robert Hall (1764–1831) British Baptist pastor
Gregory's Life of Hall, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919). Compare: "He calls drunkenness an expression identical with ruin", Diogenes Laërtius, Pythagoras, vi. "A drunkard clasp his teeth and not undo 'em, To suffer wet damnation to run through 'em", Cyril Tourneur, The Revenger’s Tragedy, Act iii, Scene 1.
“Mynheer Vandunck, though he never was drunk,
Sipped brandy and water gayly.”
George Colman the Younger (1762–1836) English dramatist and writer
Mynheer Vandunck, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).
William Edmondstoune Aytoun (1813–1865) British writer and lawyer
Poem, The Massacre of the Macpherson
Leonardo Da Vinci (1452–1519) Italian Renaissance polymath
The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci (1883), XIX Philosophical Maxims. Morals. Polemics and Speculations.
Variant: Just as iron rusts from disuse... even so does inaction spoil the intellect.
Geoffrey Hodson (1886–1983) New Zealand occultist
Matt. 17:10–13
Reincarnation & Christianity (1967)
Ally Carter (1974) American writer
Source: Uncommon Criminals