Coventry Patmore quotes:

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  • Ah, whither shall a maiden flee, When a bold youth so swift pursues, And siege of tenderest courtesy, With hope perseverant, still renews!

  • The more wild and incredible your desire, the more willing and prompt God is in fulfilling it, if you will have it so.

  • Nearly all of our disasters come from a few fools having the courage of their convictions.

  • To him that waits all things reveal themselves, provided that he has the courage not to deny, in the darkness, what he has seen in the light.

  • To one who waits, all things reveal themselves so long as you have the courage not to deny in the darkness what you have seen in the light.

  • To have noughtIs to have all things without care or thought!

  • The modern Agnostic improves upon the ancient by adding "I don't care" to "I don't know.

  • Those who know God know that it is quite a mistake to suppose that there are only five senses.

  • If we may credit certain hints contained in the lives of the saints, love raises the spirit above the sphere of reverence and worship into one of laughter and dalliance: a sphere in which the soul says: 'Shall I, a gnat which dances in Thy ray, Dare to be reverent?'

  • I drew my bride, beneath the moon,Across my threshold; happy hour!But, ah, the walk that afternoonWe saw the water-flags in flower!

  • The midge's wing beats to and fro A thousand times ere one can utter O.

  • A woman is a foreign land.

  • One fool will deny more truth in half an hour than a wise man can prove in seven years.

  • A moment's fruition of a true felicity is enough and eternity not too much.

  • Ask abundantly, for the measure of your asking shall be that of your receiving.

  • The promises of God are samples of what is promised; as a handful of wheat is of the barn.

  • Books are influential in proportion to their obscurity, provided that the obscurity be that of inexpressible Realities. The Bible is the most obscure book in the world. He must be a great fool who thinks he understands the plainest chapter of it.

  • The ardour chills us which we do not share.

  • The woman is the man's glory, and she naturally delights in the praises which are assurances that she is fulfilling her function; and she gives herself to him who succeeds in convincing her that she, of all others, is best able to discharge it for him. A woman without this kind of "vanity" is a monster.

  • It is one thing to be blind, and another to be in darkness.

  • All the love and joy that a man has ever received in perception is laid up in him as the sunshine of a hundred years is laid up in the bole of the oak.

  • Love wakes men, once a lifetime each; They lift their heavy lids, and look; And, lo, what one sweet page can teach They read with joy, then shut the book.

  • A saint is a person who does almost everything any other decent person does, only somewhat better and with a totally different motive.

  • Every evil is some good spelt backwards, and in it the wise know how to read Wisdom.

  • The moods of love are like the wind, And none knows whence or why they rise.

  • Then sleep the seasons, full of might; While slowly swells the pod, And rounds the peach, and in the night The mushroom bursts the sod. The winter comes: the frozen rut Is bound with silver bars; the white drift heaps against the hut; and night is pierced with stars.

  • Ah, wasteful woman, she who may On her sweet self set her own price, Knowing man cannot choose but pay, How has she cheapened paradise; How given for nought her priceless gift, How spoiled the bread and spilled the wine, Which, spent with due respective thrift, Had made brutes men and men divine.

  • Let me love Thee so that the honour, riches, and pleasures of the world may seem unworthy even of hatred - may not even be encumbrances.

  • Great is his faith who dares believe his own eyes.

  • All reasoning ends in an appeal to self-evidence.

  • Uncommon things must be said in common words, if you would have them to be received in less than a century.

  • Life is not life at all without delight.

  • O, Heart, remember thee That Man is none, Save One.

  • Fortunately for themselves and the world, nearly all men are cowards and dare not act on what they believe. Nearly all our disasters come of a few fools having the "courage of their convictions."

  • Uncommon things must be said in common words.

  • Kind souls, you wonder why, love you, When you, you wonder why, love none We love, Fool, for the good we do, Not that which unto us is done!

  • None thrives for long upon the happiest dream.

  • For want of me the world's course will not fail;When all its work is done the lie shall rot;The truth is great and shall prevailWhen none cares whether it prevail or not.

  • The sunshine dreaming upon Salmon's heightIs not so sweet and whiteAs the most heretofore sin-spotted SoulThat darts to its delightStraight from the absolution of a faithful fight.

  • How light the touches are that kiss the music from the chords of life!

  • They who ask for no sign shall have many.

  • Creation differs from subsistence only as the first leap of a fountain differs from its continuance.

  • What a Lover sees in the Beloved is the projected shadow of his own potential beauty in the eyes of God.

  • Science is a line, art a superficies, and life or the knowledge of God, a solid.

  • The Spirit of man is like a kite, which rises by means of those very forces which seem to oppose its rise; the tie that joins it to the earth, the opposing winds of temptation, and the weight of earth-born affections which it carries with it into the sky.

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