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Charles Buxton

Read through the most famous quotes from Charles Buxton




You will never find time for anything. If you want time you must make it.


— Charles Buxton


#find #make #must #never #time

Silence is sometimes the severest criticism.


— Charles Buxton


#severest #silence #sometimes

Experience shows that success is due less to ability than to zeal.


— Charles Buxton


#due #experience #less #shows #success

If we do what is necessary, all the odds are in our favor.


— Charles Buxton


#necessary #odds #our

In life, as in chess, forethought wins.


— Charles Buxton


#forethought #life #wins

Success soon palls. The joyous time is when the breeze first strikes your sails, and the waters rustle under your bows.


— Charles Buxton


#breeze #first #joyous #rustle #sails

The first duty to children is to make them happy. If you have not made them so, you have wronged them. No other good they may get can make up for that.


— Charles Buxton


#duty #first #get #good #happy

The rule in carving holds good as to criticism; never cut with a knife what you can cut with a spoon.


— Charles Buxton


#criticism #cut #good #holds #knife

To make pleasures pleasant shortens them.


— Charles Buxton


#pleasant #pleasures #shortens #them

You must never find time for anything. If you want time you must make it.


— Charles Buxton


#find #make #must #never #time






About Charles Buxton






Did you know about Charles Buxton?

Around 1850 he commissioned construction of a house Foxholm (now Grade II listed) on Redhill Road Cobham for the Chaplain to Queen Victoria. Following his father's death Buxton commissioned architect Samuel Sanders Teulon to design the Buxton Memorial Fountain to commemorate his father's role with others in the abolition of slavery. On 7 February 1850 he married Emily Mary Holland the eldest daughter of physician Henry Holland (physician to Queen Victoria and later president of the Royal Institution).

He later wrote a history Slavery and Freedom in the British West Indies publiCharles Buxtond in 1860. The fountain was initially erected in Parliament Square but was later moved to its current position in Victoria Tower Gardens Westminster. His son Sydney Buxton was also an MP and governor of South Africa.

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