
Quoted in the "Apophthegms, Sentiments, Opinions and Occasional Reflections" of Sir John Hawkins (1787-1789) in Johnsonian Miscellanies (1897), vol. II, p. 11, edited by George Birkbeck Hill
Les silences du colonel Bramble (The Silence of Colonel Bramble)
Quoted in the "Apophthegms, Sentiments, Opinions and Occasional Reflections" of Sir John Hawkins (1787-1789) in Johnsonian Miscellanies (1897), vol. II, p. 11, edited by George Birkbeck Hill
“A man who marries at my age isn’t taking a wife, he’s indenturing a nurse.”
Source: I Will Fear No Evil (1970), Chapter 14, p. 224
Reimar Vagnsson
Heimsljós (World Light) (1940), Book Four: The Beauty of the Heavens
“Man as man can never know God: His wishing, seeking, and striving are all in vain.”
In "Karl Barth's Conception of God" (1952) http://mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu/primarydocuments/Vol2/520102BarthsConceptionOfGod.pdf by Martin Luther King, Jr., King cites this as a statement of Barth's in The Epistle to the Romans, p. 91, but it does not actually appear in the 1933 translation of Edwin Hoskyns. It may be a paraphrase of some of Barth's ideas which were incorrectly cited.
Disputed
“When a Man has Married a Wife
He finds out whether
Her Knees & elbows are only
glued together.”
Poems from Blake's Notebook (c. 1800–1803)
1800s
“I would be married, but I'd have no wife, I would be married to a single life.”