“And torture one poor word ten thousand ways.”
John Dryden (1631–1700) English poet and playwright of the XVIIth century
Britannia Rediviva (1688), line 208.
Source: Mac Flecknoe (1682), l. 205–208.
“And torture one poor word ten thousand ways.”
John Dryden (1631–1700) English poet and playwright of the XVIIth century
Britannia Rediviva (1688), line 208.
“Thy words are like a cloud of winged snakes;
And yet I pity those they torture not.”
Percy Bysshe Shelley Prometheus Unbound
Prometheus, Act I, l. 632
Prometheus Unbound (1818–1819; publ. 1820)
Letitia Elizabeth Landon (1802–1838) English poet and novelist
(2nd August 1823) both from Songs
The London Literary Gazette, 1823
Elizabeth Rowe (1674–1737) poet and writer
Reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), p. 272.
William Tyndale (1494–1536) Bible translator and agitator from England
The Obedience of A Christian Man (1528)
Marcus Aurelius book Meditations
Meditations. iv. 17.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)