Sir John Davies Quotes
Hence it is that old men do plant young trees, the fruit whereof another age shall take.
Sir John Davies (1869). “The Complete Poems: (including Psalms I. to L. in Verse, and Other Hitherto Unpublished Mss.)”, p.137
Sir John Davies (1786). “Historical Tracts”, p.215
Sir John Davies (1876). “Complete Poems”, p.19
Robert Anderson, Geoffrey Chaucer, Henry Howard Earl of Surrey, Sir Thomas Wyatt, Thomas Sackville Earl of Dorset (1795). “The Works of the British Poets. With Prefaces”, p.695
Sir John Davies (1733). “A Poem on the Immortality of the Soul: By Sir John Davis. To which is Prefixed an Essay Upon the Same Subject”, p.14
"Scene of Folly", p. 147, as quoted in Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations, p. 184-87, 1922.
Sir John Davies (1759). “The Original, Nature, and Immortality of the Soul: A Poem”, p.59
Sir John Davies (1759). “The Original, Nature and Immortality of the Soul, a Poem. With an Introduction Concerning Human Knowledge ... The Fourth Edition, Corrected. With an Account of the Author's Life and Writings”, p.82
Robert Anderson, Geoffrey Chaucer, Henry Howard Earl of Surrey, Sir Thomas Wyatt, Thomas Sackville Earl of Dorset (1795). “The Works of the British Poets. With Prefaces”, p.683
I know myself a Man-- Which is a proud and yet a wretched thing.
'Nosce Teipsum' st. 45
Robert Anderson, Geoffrey Chaucer, Henry Howard Earl of Surrey, Sir Thomas Wyatt, Thomas Sackville Earl of Dorset (1795). “The Works of the British Poets. With Prefaces”, p.713