| John Bartlett (18201905). Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. 1919. |
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| Page 284 |
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| | | Mathew Henry. (16621714) (continued) |
| | | 3077 | | Those that are above business. |
| Commentaries. Matthew xx. |
| 3078 | | Better late than never. 1 |
| Commentaries. Matthew xxi. |
| 3079 | | Saying and doing are two things. |
| Commentaries. Matthew xxi. |
| 3080 | | Judas had given them the slip. |
| Commentaries. Matthew xxii. |
| 3081 | | After a storm comes a calm. |
| Commentaries. Acts ix. |
| 3082 | | Men of polite learning and a liberal education. |
| Commentaries. Acts x. |
| 3083 | | It is good news, worthy of all acceptation; and yet not too good to be true. |
| Commentaries. Timothy i. |
| 3084 | | It is not fit the public trusts should be lodged in the hands of any, till they are first proved and found fit for the business they are to be entrusted with. 2 |
| Commentaries. Timothy iii. |
| | | Richard Bentley. (16621742) |
| | | 3085 | | It is a maxim with me that no man was ever written out of reputation but by himself. |
| Monks Life of Bentley. Page 90. |
| 3086 | | Whatever is, is not, is the maxim of the anarchist, as often as anything comes across him in the shape of a law which he happens not to like. 3 |
| Declaration of Rights. |
| 3087 | | The fortuitous or casual concourse of atoms. 4 |
| Sermons, vii. Works, Vol. iii. p. 147 (1692). |
| | Note 1. See Heywood, Quotation 52. [back] | Note 2. See Appendix, Quotation 45. [back] | Note 3. See Dryden, Quotation 91. [back] | Note 4. That fortuitous concourse of atoms.Review of Sir Robert Peels Address. Quarterly Review, vol. liii. p. 270 (1835).
In this article a party was described as a fortuitous concourse of atoms,a phrase supposed to have been used for the first time many years afterwards by Lord John Russell.Croker Papers, vol. ii. p. 54. [back] |
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