10 Quotes by Gilbert Burnet

  • Author Gilbert Burnet
  • Quote

    . . . it a great error to waste young gentlemen's years so long in learning Latin by so tedious a grammar.

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  • Author Gilbert Burnet
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    . . . was apt to suffer things to run on till there was a great heap of papers laid before him, so then he signed them a little too precipitately.

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  • Author Gilbert Burnet
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    Let us be adventurers for another world. It is at least a fair and noble chance; and there is nothing in this worth our thoughts or our passions. If we should be disappointed, we are still no worse than the rest of our fellow-mortals; and if we succeed in our expectations we are eternally happy.

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  • Author Gilbert Burnet
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    There is no lasting pleasure but contemplation; all others grow flat and insipid upon frequent use; and when a man hath run through a set of vanities, in the declension of his age, he knows not what to do with himself, if he cannot think; he saunters about from one dull business to another, to wear out time; and hath no reason to value Life but because he is afraid of death.

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  • Author Gilbert Burnet
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    . . . for the most part the worst instructed, and the least knowing of any of their rank, I ever went amongst.

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  • Author Gilbert Burnet
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    The law of England is the greatest grievance of the nation, very expensive and dilatory.

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  • Author Gilbert Burnet
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    One of the strangest catastrophes that is in any history. A great king, with strong armies and mighty fleets, a great treasure and powerful allies, fell all at once, and his whole strength, like a spider's web, was... irrecoverably broken at a touch.

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  • Author Gilbert Burnet
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    The Duke of Buckingham gave me once a short but severe character of the two brothers. It was the more severe, because it was true: the King (he said) could see things if he would, and the Duke would see things if he could.

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  • Author Gilbert Burnet
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    An anecdote is related of Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper (1621-1683), who, in speaking of religion, said, "People differ in their discourse and profession about these matters, but men of sense are really but of one religion." To the inquiry of "What religion?" the Earl said, "Men of sense never tell it."

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