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Home Quotes - Page 159

Home-keeping youth have ever homely wits.

'The Two Gentlemen Of Verona' (1592-3) act 1, sc. 1, l. 2

Forced from home, and all its pleasures, afric coast I left forlorn; to increase a stranger's treasures, o the raging billows borne. Men from England bought and sold me, paid my price in paltry gold; but, though theirs they have enroll'd me, minds are never to be sold.

William Cowper, James Thomson (1851). “The Works of Cowper and Thomson: Including Many Letters and Poems Never Before Published in this Country : with a New and Interesting Memoir of the Life of Thomson”, p.122

No outward doors of a man's house can in general be broken open to execute any civil process; though in criminal cases the public safety supersedes the private.

Sir William Blackstone (1869). “The Student's Blackstone: Commentaries on the Laws of England, in Four Books”, p.508

One is always at home in one's past.

Vladimir Nabokov (2011). “The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov”, p.492, Vintage