Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English poet John Marston.
Last updated on November 27, 2024.
John Marston was an English playwright, poet and satirist during the late Elizabethan and early Jacobean periods. His career as a writer lasted only a decade. His work is remembered for its energetic and often obscure style, its contributions to the development of a distinctively Jacobean style in poetry, and its idiosyncratic vocabulary.
Through danger safety comes - through trouble rest.
Wink and shut their apprehensions up.
Men are born, and then they're formed.
Sing of the nature of women, and then the song shall be surely full of variety; old crotchets and most sweet closes. It shall be humorous, grave, fantastic, amorous, melancholy, sprightly, one in all, and all in one.
Don't be too eager to grow up. It ain't as much fun as it looks
Looks like the good Lord got your ass and face mixed up.
All the fatt's in the fire.
If you win power, remember why you wanted it.
We die alone, but we live among men.
We all have problems, and we must solve them together or we die alone.
I rode in a gang. We robbed trains, banks, held people ransom. We killed people we didn't like. Bill Williamson was in that gang. If I don't capture my former brother-in-arms, great harm will befall my family.
I just know that there are two theories when arguing with women. And neither one works.
People don't forget. Nothing gets forgiven.
You couldn't shoot a fart out of your own ass!
It's wanting that gets so many folks in trouble.
Some trees flourish, others die. Some cattle grow strong, others are taken by wolves. Some men are born rich enough and dumb enough to enjoy their lives. Ain't nothing fair. You know that.
I'm many things, most of 'em bad. But a man of political principles? No.
My side ain't chosen. My side was given.
I'm a semi-literate farmer and hired killer. I ain't in the power game.
Every man has a right to change, a chance of forgiveness.