“Why should we rise because 'tis light?
Did we lie down because t'was night?”
William Shakespeare book Shakespeare's Sonnets
Source: Shakespeare's Sonnets
Break of Day, stanza 1
“Why should we rise because 'tis light?
Did we lie down because t'was night?”
William Shakespeare book Shakespeare's Sonnets
Source: Shakespeare's Sonnets
Robert Chambers (publisher, born 1802) (1802–1871) Scottish publisher and writer
Source: Sanitary Economy (1850), p. 29-30
Context: The rise of each generation gives new ties towards the future, which insensibly dissolves those which bind us to the past; and the natural old age of the human race seems to have adjusted itself to that period beyond which the human being would feel isolated and desolate in the midst of the new objects of attachment which the progress of time brings into existence.
Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792–1822) English Romantic poet
St. 1 <br class="br"> Song: Rarely, Rarely, Comest Thou http://www.poetryconnection.net/poets/Percy_Bysshe_Shelley/17889 (1821)
Richard Francis Burton (1821–1890) British explorer, geographer, translator, writer, soldier, orientalist, cartographer, ethnologist, spy, lin…
The Kasîdah of Hâjî Abdû El-Yezdî (1870)
Omar Khayyám (1048–1131) Persian poet, philosopher, mathematician, and astronomer
The Rubaiyat (1120)
“… love is the sum of our choices, the strength of our commitments, the ties that bind us together.”
Emily Giffin (1972) American writer
Source: Love the One You're With
“We are tied down to a language which makes up in obscurity what it lacks in style.”
Tom Stoppard (1937) British playwright
Source: Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead