Quotes about hornet

A collection of quotes on the topic of hornet, likeness, nature, bee.

Quotes about hornet

Martin Luther photo
Jonathan Swift photo

“Laws are like Cobwebs which may catch small Flies, but let Wasps and Hornets break through.”

Jonathan Swift (1667–1745) Anglo-Irish satirist, essayist, and poet

A Tritical Essay upon the Faculties of the Mind (1707)
Context: Laws are like Cobwebs which may catch small Flies, but let Wasps and Hornets break through. But in Oratory the greatest Art is to hide Art.

Daniel Handler photo
Josh Billings photo
James Beattie photo

“A fly is a fly, and a flower is a flower, but a hornet is an organization.”

Henry Schriver (1914–2011) American politician

Cows, Kids, and Co-ops

“I never heard a thrown ball make that sound before. The ball seemed to accelerate as it came close; an accelerating, impossibly fast pitch that made the noises of hornets and snakes.”

Roger Kahn (1927–2020) American baseball writer

Source: The Boys Of Summer, Chapter 1, The Trolley Car That Ran By Ebbets Field, p. 55

John Adams photo
Agatha Christie photo
Robert Jordan photo

“A jealous wife is like a hornets’ nest in your mattress.”

Old saying in Randland
A Crown of Swords (15 May 1996)

Wilt Chamberlain photo
Charles Barkley photo

“The Oklahoma Sooners and the Hornets are the only brothers in town.”

Charles Barkley (1963) American basketball player

At the time of this comment, the NBA team then known as the New Orleans Hornets (now the New Orleans Pelicans) was playing in Oklahoma City following extensive damage to New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina.
Source: As quoted in "Barkley: Oklahoma a vast wasteland" http://newsok.com/article/1757468 (10 February 2006), by Andrew Gilman, The Oklahoman

Luther Burbank photo
Aristotle photo

“I don’t need to praise anything so justly famous as Frost’s observation of and empathy with everything in Nature from a hornet to a hillside; and he has observed his own nature, one person’s random or consequential chains of thoughts and feelings and perceptions, quite as well.”

Randall Jarrell (1914–1965) poet, critic, novelist, essayist

And this person, in the poems, is not the “alienated artist” cut off from everybody who isn’t, yum-yum, another alienated artist; he is someone like normal people only more so — a normal person in the less common and more important sense of normal.
“The Other Frost”, p. 29
Poetry and the Age (1953)