Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 31. p. 239
Henry Taylor: Cytaty po angielsku
Money.
Notes from Life (1853)
Money.
Notes from Life (1853)
The Ways of the Rich and Great.
Notes from Life (1853)
“His food
Was glory, which was poison to his mind
And peril to his body.”
Act I, sc. 5.
Philip van Artevelde (1834)
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 31. p. 235
“An unreflected light did never yet
Dazzle the vision feminine.”
Act I, sc. 5.
Philip van Artevelde (1834)
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 31 p. 236
“I have not skill
From such a sharp and waspish word as "No"
To pluck the sting.”
Act I, sc. 1.
Philip van Artevelde (1834)
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 14. p. 91
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 21. p. 144
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 29. p. 219
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 33. p. 254
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 18. p. 130
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 3. p. 20
“The hope, and not the fact, of advancement, is the spur to industry.”
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 23. p. 187
Act I, sc. 7.
Philip van Artevelde (1834)
Wariant: Such souls,
Whose sudden visitations daze the world,
Vanish like lighting, but they leave behind
A voice that in the distance far away
Wakens the slumbering ages.
“Conscience is, in most men, an anticipation of the opinions of others.”
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 9. p. 63
Źródło: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 18. p. 131