“Let us have wine and women, mirth and laughter, sermons and soda water the day after.”
“With mirth and laughter let old wrinkles come.”
Source: The Merchant of Venice
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William Shakespeare 699
English playwright and poet 1564–1616Related quotes
Letter to Colonel A. F. Rockwell (13 August 1866)
1860s
"Address to certain Gold-fishes"
Poems (1851)
“Women are not forgiven for aging. Robert Redford's lines of distinction are my old-age wrinkles.”
Michael Perry. Jane's wrinkled but Fonda herself now. Sydney Morning Herald, 22 December 1985 http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=2a1WAAAAIBAJ&sjid=e-gDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5135,3817429
Christ, Old Student in a New School (1972)
Context: Ten thousand times a million sons of sons move
Through one great and towering town
Wearing their wits, which means their laughter,
As their crown. Set free upon the earth
By simple gifts of knowing how mere mirth can cut the bonds
And pull the blood spikes out;
Their conversation shouts of "Fool!"
The Song of Seventy.
A Thousand Lines (1846)
Four Riddles, no. III
Rhyme? and Reason? (1883)