James Wood, comp. Dictionary of Quotations. 1899.
Churchill
Apt alliteration’s artful aid.
Authors alone, with more than savage rage, / Unnatural war with brother authors wage.
Be England what she will, / With all her faults she is my country still.
But spite of all the criticising elves, / Those that would make us feel, must feel themselves.
Childhood, who like an April morn appears, / Sunshine and rain, hopes clouded o’er with fears.
Children of night, of indigestion bred.Of dreams.
Constant attention wears the active mind, / Blots out her powers, and leaves a blank behind.
Fashion, a word which fools use, / Their knavery and folly to excuse.
Fortune makes folly her peculiar care.
If honour calls, where’er she points the way, / The sons of honour follow and obey.
Knaves starve not in the land of fools.
Learned without sense and venerably dull.
Let ev’ry man enjoy his whim; / What’s he to me or I to him?
Nature listening stood whilst Shakespeare play’d, / And wonder’d at the work herself had made.
No crime is so great as daring to excel.
No statesman e’er will find it worth his pains / To tax our labours and excise our brains.
No two on earth in all things can agree; / All have some darling singularity.
Those who would make us feel must feel themselves.
With curious art the brain, too finely wrought, / Preys on herself, and is destroyed by thought.