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Richard Brinsley Sheridan

Read through the most famous quotes from Richard Brinsley Sheridan




The surest way to fail is not to determine to succeed.


— Richard Brinsley Sheridan


#fail #succeed #surest #surest way #way

There is not a passion so strongly rooted in the human heart as envy.


— Richard Brinsley Sheridan


#heart #human #human heart #passion #rooted

There's no possibility of being witty without a little ill-nature.


— Richard Brinsley Sheridan


#little #possibility #without #witty

Those that vow the most are the least sincere.


— Richard Brinsley Sheridan


#most #sincere #those #vow

'Tis safest in matrimony to begin with a little aversion.


— Richard Brinsley Sheridan


#begin #little #matrimony #safest #tis

You know it is not my interest to pay the principal, or my principal to pay the interest.


— Richard Brinsley Sheridan


#know #pay #principal #you

You write with ease to show your breeding, but easy writing's curst hard reading.


— Richard Brinsley Sheridan


#ease #easy #hard #reading #show

My valor is certainly going, it is sneaking off! I feel it oozing out as it were, at the palms of my hands!


— Richard Brinsley Sheridan


#feel #going #hands #i #i feel

Won't you come into the garden? I would like my roses to see you.


— Richard Brinsley Sheridan


#garden #i #into #like #roses

A fluent tongue is the only thing a mother don't like her daughter to resemble her in.


— Richard Brinsley Sheridan


#fluent #her #like #mother #only






About Richard Brinsley Sheridan

Richard Brinsley Sheridan Quotes




Did you know about Richard Brinsley Sheridan?

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Member of Parliament
In 1780 Sheridan entered Parliament as the ally of Charles James Fox on the side of the American Colonials in the political debate of that year. B. 9 April 1876) m.

Richard Brinsley Butler Sheridan (30 October 1751 – 7 July 1816) was an Irish playwright and poet and long-term owner of the London Theatre Royal Drury Lane. For thirty-two years he was also a Whig Member of the British House of Commons for Stafford (1780–1806) Westminster (1806–1807) and Ilchester (1807–1812). Such was the esteem he was held in by his contemporaries when he died that he was buried at Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey.

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