William Watson Quotes
Empires dissolve and peoples disappear, song passes not away.
Sir William Watson, John Alfred Spender (1905). “The Poems of William Watson”
"England, my England" in "Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations" by Jehiel Keeler Hoyt, (pp. 605-609), 1922.
William Watson (1936). “The Poems of Sir William Watson: 1878-1935”
Sir William Watson, John Alfred Spender (1905). “The Poems of William Watson”
April, April Laugh thy girlish laughter; Then, the moment after, Weep thy girlish tears.
Poems (1905) vol. 1, "Song"
William Watson (1899). “The Collected Poems of William Watson”
And though circuitous and obscureThe feet of Nemesis how sure!
William Watson (1899). “The Collected Poems of William Watson”
Sir William Watson, John Alfred Spender (1905). “The Poems of William Watson”
William Watson (1909). “New Poems”
The thirst to know and understand a large and liberal discontent.
William Watson (1899). “The Collected Poems of William Watson”
William Watson (1936). “The Poems of Sir William Watson: 1878-1935”
We hold our hate too choice a thing, for light and careless lavishing.
William Watson (1936). “The Poems of Sir William Watson: 1878-1935”
1602 A Decacordon of Ten Quodlibeticall Questions Concerning Religion and State. This was an influential reworking of Ferdinand I's motto. See Ferdinand I 320:1.
William Watson (1936). “The Poems of Sir William Watson: 1878-1935”
William Watson, “Epigrams”
Threadbare his songs seem now, to lettered ken: They were worn threadbare next the hearts of men.
William Watson (1917). “Retrogression: and other poems”
William Watson, “Thomas Hood”
William Watson, “England And Her Colonies”
William Watson (1936). “The Poems of Sir William Watson: 1878-1935”