Friday, November 22, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

William Cowper

« All quotes from this author
 

I cannot talk with civet in the room,
A fine puss-gentleman that's all perfume.
--
Line 283.

 
William Cowper

» William Cowper - all quotes »



Tags: William Cowper Quotes, Authors starting by C


Similar quotes

 

Things have come to such a point in good society that, if you want to be polite, you can no longer ask a man from what country he comes, for if he is a Norman or a Calabrian he has, when he tells you so, to beg your pardon, or, if he is from the Pays de Vaud, to say he is Swiss. Nor will you ask a nobleman what his arms are, for if he does not know the jargon of heraldry you will embarrass him. you must not compliment a gentleman on his fine hair, for if it is a wig, he may think you are mocking him, nor praise a man or a woman on their fine teeth, for they may be false.

 
Giacomo (Jacques Casanova de Seingal) Casanova
 

He's a true gentleman. - Josep Guardiola, FC Barcelona coach after Terry visited the Barcelona dressing room and shook hands with each member of their playing and coaching staff following a controversial match. The Barça team and staff applauded him out of the room after.

 
John Terry
 

He was able. He was a patriotic American. He was a fine gentleman. The country's loss is great, and so is mine.

 
Forrest Sherman
 

I saw clearly only when I saw with love. Or can one ever remember love? It's like trying to summon up the smell of roses in a cellar. You might see a rose, but never the perfume. And that's the truth of roses, isn't it? — The perfume?

 
Arthur Miller
 

The night room heaves a sigh, yes Heaves, a Sigh — old-fashioned comical room, oh me I'm hopeless, born a joker never change, flirting away through the mirrorframe in something green-striped, pantalooned, and ruffled — meantime though, it is quaint, most rooms today hum you know, have been known also to "breathe," yes even wait in hushed expectancy and that ought to be the rather sinister tradition here, long slender creatures, heavy perfume and capes in rooms assailed by midnight, pierced with spiral stairways, blue-petaled pergolas, an ambience in which no one, however provoked or out of touch, my dear young lady, ever, Heaves, a Sigh. It is not done.

 
Thomas Pynchon
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact