The man who lets himself be bored is even more contemptible than the bore.
--
The Fair Haven, Memoir of the Late John Pickard Owen, Ch. 3 (1873).Samuel(novelistButler
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Somehow or other, and with the best of intentions, we have shown the world the typical Christian in the likeness of a crashing and rather ill-natured bore—and this in the name of one who assuredly never bored a soul in those thirty-three years during which he passed through the world like a flame.
Dorothy L. Sayers
His temperament was that of a Prophet — a God-possessed man, brother to Dostoevski, and teeming with the future, a future he bore within him as the Hebrew prophets bore within them the coming of the Messiah, and as he bore within himself the past.
Rembrandt
Duly twice a morning
Would I be sprinkling it with fountain-water.
At last it grew, and grew, and bore, and bore,
Till at the length
It grew a gallows, and did bear our son,
It bore thy fruit and mine: O wicked, wicked plant.Thomas Kyd
It is a melancholy truth; yet such is the blessed effect of civilization! the most respectable women are the most oppressed; and, unless they have understandings far superiour to the common run of understandings, taking in both sexes, they must, from being treated like contemptible beings, become contemptible.
Mary Wollstonecraft
[Bill Clinton] has not a creative bone in his body. Therefore he is a bore and will always be a bore.
David Brinkley
Butler, Samuel (novelist, 1835-1902)
Butler, Samuel (poet
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