Sunday, December 22, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Edmund Burke

« All quotes from this author
 

Applaud us when we run, console us when we fall, cheer us when we recover.
--
Speech at Bristol Previous to the Election (06 September 1780).

 
Edmund Burke

» Edmund Burke - all quotes »



Tags: Edmund Burke Quotes, Authors starting by B


Similar quotes

 

If your not cheering for me, for what I'm doing, don't cheer for me. Don't cheer cause you think I'm cute, you know what I'm saying, screw that. Cheer for me for what I'm doing, for what I stand for, and when I go to jail you should cheer louder.

 
Tupac Shakur
 

I learned something recently: our true friends are those who are with us when the good things happen. They cheer us on and are pleased by our triumphs. False friends only appear at difficult times, with their sad, supportive faces, when, in fact, our suffering is serving to console them for their miserable lives...

 
Paulo Coelho
 

Cheer the bull, or cheer the bear; cheer both, and you will be trampled and eaten.

 
Robert Jordan
 

All this business of a labour to accomplish, before I can end, of words to say, a truth to recover, in order to say it, before I can end, of an imposed task, once known, long neglected, finally forgotten, to perform, before I can be done with speaking, done with listening, I invented it all, in the hope it would console me, help me to go on, allow me to think of myself as somewhere on a road, moving, between a beginning and an end, gaining ground, losing ground, getting lost, but somehow in the long run making headway.

 
Samuel Beckett
 

What a vast advantage has a speech over a written composition. Men are imposed upon by voice and gesture, and by all that is conducive to enhance the performance. Any little prepossession in favor of the speaker raises their admiration, and then they do their best to comprehend him; they commend his performance before he has begun, but they soon fall off asleep, doze all the time he is preaching, and only wake to applaud him. An author has no such passionate admirers; his works are read at leisure in the country or in the solitude of the study; no public meetings are held to applaud him.... However excellent his book may be, it is read with the intention of finding it but middling; it is perused, discussed, and compared to other works; a book is not composed of transient sounds lost in the air and forgotten; what is printed remains.

 
Jean de La Bruyere
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact