"Samuel Warren, though able, yet vainest of men, Could he guide with discretion his tongue and his pen, His course would be clear for—"Ten Thousand a Year," But limited else to a brief—"Now and Then.""
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
On Samuel Warren, Author of Ten Thousand a Year, Now and Then, and other Novels"
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/George_Rose_(barrister)
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
George Rose (barrister)
Sir George Rose (1 May 1782 – 3 December 1873) was an English barrister and law reporter, a master in chancery.
3 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by George Rose (barrister) →
Related Quotes
"Why should Honesty seek any safer retreat From the lawyers or barges, odd-rot-'em? For the lawyers are just at the to…"
"O thou who read'st what 's written here, Commiserate the lot severe, By which, compell'd, I write them. In vain Sophi…"
"The more I thought about it, the more obsessed I became with the idea of a swimming journey. I started to dream ever …"
"From water level, I observed the mating joined in flight like refuelling aircraft, and the random progress of the clo…"
"It is through trees that we see and hear the wind: woodland people can tell the species of a tree from the sound it m…"
"Waterlog (1999), Roger's now-classic account of swimming through Britain, published twenty years ago this year, opens…"
"In 1973, Roger Deakin, a British writer and environmental activist, acquired a tumbledown sixteenth-century farmhouse…"
"Der lange Marsch durch die Institutionen."
"In a certain sense, many of us mutilate the mind and render it impotent, for there is in the nature of man an irresis…"
"Lamb had written to Coleridge about one of their old masters, who had been a severe disciplinarian, intimating that h…"