Monday, December 23, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Miguel de Cervantes

« All quotes from this author
 

Forewarned forearmed.
--
Part II, Book III, ch. 10.

 
Miguel de Cervantes

» Miguel de Cervantes - all quotes »



Tags: Miguel de Cervantes Quotes, Authors starting by C


Similar quotes

 

Forewarned, forearmed, is sheer nonsense. Who is so indefatigable a scribbler as your abundantly damned author? Which of our orators speak so long and so often as he whom nobody listens to? What actors are so constantly before the public as those whom the town will not go to see? Who so easy to deceive as the dupe who has been taken in all his days? The gamester is a legitimate child of that frail couple, Flesh and Blood; he loses a fourth of what he is worth at the first throw—esteems himself lucky if he loses less today than he did yesterday—goes on staking and forfeiting hour by hour—and parts with his last guinea by exactly the same turn of the dice which lost him his first. Experience leaves fools as foolish as ever.

 
Samuel Laman Blanchard
 

However well equipped our language, it can never be forearmed against all possible cases that may arise and call for description: fact is richer than diction.

 
J. L. Austin
 

They multiplied into the Sirens' throng,
Forewarned by fear of whom he stood bound fast
Hand and foot helpless to the vessel's mast,
Yet would not stop his ears: daring their song
He groaned and sweated till that shore was past.

 
Robert Graves
 

As we look upon that agony and those tearful prayers, let us not only look with thankfulness; but lot that kneeling Saviour teach us that in prayer alone can we be forearmed against our lesser sorrows; that strength to bear flows into the heart that is opened in supplication; and that a sorrow which we are made able to endure is more truly cohijuered than a sorrow which we avoid.

 
Alexander Maclaren
 

My beliefs are clearly that of a hardened skeptic […] I use the term "occult" to refer to any of all of these subjects. The reader is forewarned that The Skeptics Dictionary does not try to present a balanced account of occult subjects. If anything, this book is a Davidian counterbalance to the Goliath of occult literature. I hope that an occasional missile hits its mark…

 
Robert Todd Carroll
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact