
Diary (14 July 1889)
Diary and Letters of Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1922 - 1926)
The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers (c. 230)
Diary (14 July 1889)
Diary and Letters of Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1922 - 1926)
The Other World (1657)
Si est del riche orguillus:
Ja del povre n'avra merci
Pur sa pleinte ne pur sun cri;
Mes se cil s'en peüst vengier,
Dunc le verreit l'um suzpleier.
Fables, no. 10, "The Fox and the Eagle", line 18; cited from Mary Lou Martin (trans.) The Fables of Marie de France (Birmingham, Alabama: Summa, 1984) pp. 54-6. Translation from the same source, p. 55.
“Praise enough
To fill the ambition of a private man,
That Chatham's language was his mother tongue.”
Source: The Task (1785), Book II, The Timepiece, Line 235.
Act II
A Man for All Seasons (1960)
“Remote from man, with God he passed the days;
Prayer all his business, all his pleasure praise.”
The Hermit, line 5.
“Every man is rich or poor according to the proportion between his desires and his enjoyments”
No. 163 (8 October 1751)
The Rambler (1750–1752)
Context: Every man is rich or poor according to the proportion between his desires and his enjoyments; any enlargement of wishes is therefore equally destructive to happiness with the diminution of possession, and he that teaches another to long for what he never shall obtain is no less an enemy to his quiet than if he had robbed him of part of his patrimony.