Top 6 Quotes & Sayings by William Johnson Cory

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English poet William Johnson Cory.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
William Johnson Cory

William Johnson Cory, born William Johnson, was an English educator and poet. He was dismissed from his post at Eton for encouraging a culture of intimacy, possibly innocent, between teachers and pupils. He is widely known for his English version of the elegy Heraclitus by Callimachus.

They told me, Heraclitus, they told me you were dead, / They brought me bitter news to hear, and bitter tears to shed.
All beauteous things for which we live By laws of space and time decay. But Oh, the very reason why I clasp them, is because they die.
Jolly boating weather,
And a hay harvest breeze,
Blade on the feather,
Shade off the trees. — © William Johnson Cory
Jolly boating weather, And a hay harvest breeze, Blade on the feather, Shade off the trees.
But you go to a great school, not for knowledge so much as for arts and habits; for the habit of attention, for the art of expression, for the art of assuming at a moment's notice a new intellectual posture, for the art of entering quickly into another person's thoughts, for the habit of submitting to censure and refutation, for the art of indicating assent or dissent in graduated terms, for the habit of regarding minute points of accuracy, for the habit of working out what is possible in a given time, for taste, for discrimination, for mental courage and mental soberness.
Somewhere there must one Made for this soul, to move it.
Your chilly stars I can forgo, this warm kind world is all I know.
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