| John Bartlett (18201905). Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. 1919. |
| |
| Page 493 |
| |
| | | Sir Walter Scott. (17711832) (continued) |
| | | 5164 | No pale gradations quench his ray, No twilight dews his wrath allay. |
| Rokeby. Canto vi. Stana 21. |
| 5165 | Come as the winds come, when Forests are rended; Come as the waves come, when Navies are stranded. |
| Pibroch of Donald Dhu. |
| 5166 | | A lawyer without history or literature is a mechanic, a mere working mason; if he possesses some knowledge of these, he may venture to call himself an architect. |
| Guy Mannering. Chap. xxxvii. |
| 5167 | | Bluid is thicker than water. 1 |
| Guy Mannering. Chap. xxxviii. |
| 5168 | | It s no fish ye re buying, it s mens lives. 2 |
| The Antiquary. Chap. xi. |
| 5169 | When Israel, of the Lord belovd, Out of the land of bondage came, Her fathers God before her movd, An awful guide in smoke and flame. |
| Ivanhoe. Chap. xxxix. |
| 5170 | | Sea of upturned faces. 3 |
| Rob Roy. Chap. xx. |
| 5171 | | There s a gude time coming. |
| Rob Roy. Chap. xxxii. |
| 5172 | | My foot is on my native heath, and my name is MacGregor. |
| Rob Roy. Chap. xxxiv. |
| 5173 | | Scared out of his seven senses. 4 |
| Rob Roy. Chap. xxxiv. |
| 5174 | Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife! To all the sensual world proclaim, One crowded hour of glorious life Is worth an age without a name. |
| Old Mortality. Chap. xxxiv. |
| | Note 1. This proverb, so frequently ascribed to Scott, is a common proverb of the seventeenth century. It is found in Ray and other collections of proverbs. [back] | Note 2. It is not linen you re wearing out, But human creaturess lives. Thomas Hood: Song of the Shirt. [back] | Note 3. Daniel Webster: Speech, Sept. 30, 1842. [back] | Note 4. Huzzaed out of my seven senses.Spectator, No. 616, Nov. 5, 1774. [back] |
| |
|
|