“Give all thou canst; high Heaven rejects the lore
Of nicely calculated less or more.”

Part III, No. 43 - Inside of King's College Chapel, Cambridge.
Ecclesiastical Sonnets (1821)

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Do you have more details about the quote "Give all thou canst; high Heaven rejects the lore Of nicely calculated less or more." by William Wordsworth?
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William Wordsworth 306
English Romantic poet 1770–1850

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“With what reason canst thou expect that thy children should follow thy good instructions, when thou thyself givest them an ill example? Thou dost but as it were beckon to them with thy head, and shew them the way to heaven by thy good counsel, but thou takest them by the hand and leadest them in the way to hell by thy contrary example.”

John Tillotson (1630–1694) Archbishop of Canterbury

Sermon 62: On the Education of Children, in The Works of Dr. John Tillotson (1772) edited by Thomas Birch, Vol 3, p. 197; this is more commonly quoted as modernized and paraphrased by John Charles Ryle, Anglican Bishop of Liverpool (1880–1900): "To give children good instruction, and a bad example, is but a beckoning to them with the head to show them the way to heaven, while we take them by the hand and lead them in the way to hell."

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“Not what we would, but what we must
Makes up the sum of living;
Heaven is both more and less than just
In taking and in giving.”

Richard Henry Stoddard (1825–1903) American poet

The Country Life.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)

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