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Quotations from Drama /Poetry of different ages

BCS mn AwaKvsk cÖwZ‡hvwMZvg~jK cixÿvq weL¨vZ Bs‡iR Kwe, mvwnwZ¨K Ges gbxlx‡`i Dw³i Dci cÖkœ n‡q _v‡K| Bs‡iwR mvwn‡Z¨
cÖPzi †Kv‡Ukb i‡q‡Q, hv mswÿß cwim‡i †`Iqv m¤¢e bq| William Shakespeare Gi †jLv †_‡K me‡P‡q †ewk †Kv‡Ukb Kgb
cvIqv hvq| GQvovI Francis Bacon, Marlowe, Pope, Shelley, Keats, Wordsworth, Coleridge , John Donne cÖgyL
mvwnwZ¨‡Ki weL¨vZ Dw³¸‡jvi Dci we‡kl ¸iæZ¡ w`‡Z n‡e| ZvB ¸iæZ¡c~Y© mvwnwZ¨K‡`i weL¨vZ Dw³ evsjv A_©, DrmMÖš’ I Dw³Kvixi
bvgmn ms‡hvRb Kiv n‡q‡Q| GQvovI Quotations from Different Discipline bv‡g Avjv`v Av‡qvRb i‡q‡Q|
William Shakespeare Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source(Drm) Quotation & quoter (Dw³ I Dw³Kvixi bvg )
King Lear ➢ ‘I am a man more sinned against than sinning.’
(Avwg hZUv Ab¨vq K‡iwQ Zvi †P‡q †ewk m‡qwQ|) – King Lear
➢ ‘My love is richer than my tongue.’ (Avgvi fv‡jvevmv gy‡L †evSv‡bv m¤¢e bq|)
– Cordelia, Lear’s youngest daughter
N.B: It is an example of hyperbole.
➢ ‘Nothing will come of nothing.’ (KviY webv Kvh© nq bv) – Lear to Cordelia
➢ ‘How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is to have than thankless child!’
(AK…ZÁ mšÍvb mv‡ci wel`vu‡Zi †P‡qI Zxÿè) – King Lear
➢ ‘Unhappy I am, I can’t heave
My heart into my mouth, I love your majesty
According to my bond, no more, nor less.’ (AmyLx Avwg,g‡bi K_v gy‡L ewj‡Z cvwi bv
ZvB, fv‡jvevwm Avcbv‡i i‡³i e܇b, Zvi Kg wKsev †ewk bq|) – Cordelia to King Lear
➢ ‘As flies to wanton boys are we to the Gods-
They kill us for their sport.’ (gvwQiv D”Q…•Lj †Q‡j‡`i Kv‡Q †hgwb †Ljv”Q‡j Lyb K‡i,
†`eZviv Avgv‡`i Kv‡Q †Zgwb|) – Glucester.
➢ ‘Ingratitude, thou marble-hearted fiend,
More hideous when thou showest thee in a child
Than a sea monster!’ (AK…ZÁ mšÍv‡bi cv_y‡i ü`q, mgy‡`ªi ˆ`Z¨ ev wckv‡Pi †P‡qI wbôzi|)
– King Lear to Goneril
➢ ‘Here I stand your slave, A poor, infirm, weak, and despised old man.’
(GLv‡b `uvwo‡q †Zvgvi `vm, `yf©vMv , RivMÖ¯Í, `ye©j I N„wYZ e„‡×i _vm|)
➢ ‘Men must endure
Their going hence even as their coming hither;
Ripeness is all.’ (hLb wec` Av‡m ZLb ‡Zvgv‡K ˆah©kxj I AvZ¥mshgx n‡Z n‡e|)
– Edgar to Gloucester.
➢ ‘Come, let’s away to prison
We two alone will sing like birds I’th cage.’
(&G‡mvB bv GKUvbv †K‡U hvK KvivMv‡i
LuvPvq Ave× cvwLi g‡Zv Mvb MvB‡Z MvB‡Z hv‡ev Icv‡i|) – King Lear to Cordelia
➢ ‘When we are born, we cry that we are come to this great stage of fools.’
(‡evKv‡`i wekvj i½g‡Â G‡m covq Rb¥‡ZB Avgiv Kuvw`| ) – King Lear
➢ ‘Have more than thou showest, speak less than thou knowest, lend less than
thou owest.’ ( ‡Zvgvi KZ UvKv Av‡Q Zv Ab¨‡`i Rvb‡Z w`Ibv, ej Kg, †kvb †ewk Ges hv
Av‡Q Zvi Kg avi `vI) – Fool
Hamlet ➢ ‘Frailty (noun), thy name is woman.’ (f½yiZv, †Zvgvi Av‡iK bvg bvix) – Prince Hamlet
➢ ‘There is nothing good or bad but thinking makes it so.’(fv‡jv ev g›` ej‡Z c„w_ex‡Z
wKQzB †bB, wPšÍvB †K‡bv wKQz‡K fv‡jv ev g›` evbvq) – Prince Hamlet
➢ ‘Brevity is the soul of wit.’ (msw¶ßZv iwmKZvi cÖvY / msw¶ßZv eyw×gËvi g~j)
– Polonius to Claudius
➢ ‘To be or not to be that is the question.’(GB Dw³wU Øviv gvbeg‡bi wm×všÍnxbZvi ewn:cÖKvk
N‡U‡Q|) – Prince Hamlet
N.B: It is an example of soliloquy.
➢ ‘A little more than kin, less than kind.’
(AvZ¥x‡qi †P‡q GKUy ‡ewk Ges mvayi Zzjbvq Kg) – Prince Hamlet
➢ ‘I'll speak daggers to her, but use none.’
( Avwg Zv‡K K_vi AvNv‡Z RR©wiZ Kie, A‡¯¿ bq) – Prince Hamlet
➢ ‘When sorrows come, they come not single spies but in battalions.’
(wec` KLbI GKv Av‡m bv) –Claudius to Gertrude
➢ ‘There are more things in heaven and earth.’ (¯^M© I c„w_ex‡Z Av‡iv A‡bK wRwbm i‡q‡Q
Avgv‡`i ¯^cœ I `k©‡b) – Prince Hamlet
➢ ‘I must be cruel only to be kind; Thus bad begins and worse remains behind.’
(Aek¨B Avwg wbôzi n‡ev `qvjy nIqvi Rb¨; Zv bv n‡j g›` ïiæ n‡e, g›`Zi i‡e wc‡Q) – Hamlet
➢ ‘O God! O God! How weary stale and unprofitable; seem to me all the uses of
this world.’( ‡n Ck^i wK K¬vwšÍKi, RivRxY© I wbi_©K mewKQz; cvw_©eZv †hb †RŠjyknxb, Zey Pwj
Qy‡U Gi wcQz|) Hamlet
➢ ‘What is a man ; If this chief good and market of this time
Be but to sleep and feed ? A beast, no more.’ (wK wb‡q gvbyl gË G f‡e! †L‡q, Nywg‡qB
Aw¯ÍZ¡ †kl, cï bq wK Z‡e?) – Hamlet
➢ ‘Give every man thine ear, but few thy voice; Take each man's censure, but
reserve thy judgment.’(cÖ‡Z¨‡Ki K_v ‡kvb, wKš‘ Aí †jv‡Ki mv‡_ e‡jv; cÖ‡Z¨‡Ki Aby‡hvM
†kvb wKš‘ P‡jv Avcb wePv‡i|) – Polonius to his son, Laertes
➢ ‘One step forward and two steps backward.’(GKcv AvMv‡j `yÕcv wcQvB)
➢ ‘Forty thousand brother’s love
Could not with all their quantity of love
Make up my sum.’ (Avgvi fv‡jvevmv mywekvj| Pwjøk nvRvi fvB‡qi fv‡jvevmv GKÎ
Ki‡j Avgvi fv‡jvevmvi mgvb n‡e bv|) – Hamlet
N.B: It is an example of hyperbole.
➢ ‘All that live must die
Passing through nature to eternity.’ (MwZnxbfv‡e e‡m _vK‡j Pj‡e bv KviY cÖwZwU
Rxe‡KB g‡i †h‡Z n‡e|) – Gertrude to Hamlet.
➢ ‘Neither a borrower nor a lender be; For loan oft loses both itself and
friend.’(A‡b¨i KvQ ‡_‡K avi Ki‡e bv ev Ab¨‡K avi ‡`‡e I bv, Zvn‡j UvKv, eÜy `yB B
nviv‡e|) – Polonius to his son, Laertes.
➢ “We know what we are, but know not what we may.” (eZ©gvb m¤ú‡K© Avgiv Rvb‡Z
cvi‡jI fwel¨Z Avgv‡`i ARvbv) – Ophelia to Claudius.
➢ ‘God hath given you one face and you make yourself another.’ ( weavZvi †`Iqv
iæ‡c Zzwg mš‘ó bq †h cÖmvabx e¨env‡i bZzb iæc aviY K‡iQ|) – Ophelia to Claudius.
Macbeth ➢ ‘Fair is foul, and Foul is Fair.’ (me fv‡jv fv‡jv bq,Avevi Lvivc ‡_‡KI fv‡jv wKQy nq|) –
Three witches
N.B: It is an example of alliteration.
➢ ‘Here is still the smell of blood. All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten
this little hand.’ (GL‡bv Avgvi nv‡Z i‡³i NªvY i‡q †M‡Q| mgMÖ Avie Rvnv‡bi myevm Avgvi
†QvU nvZ‡K myevwmZ Ki‡Z cvi‡e bv) – Lady Macbeth
N.B: It is an example of hyperbole.

➢ ‘Life is a tale, told by an idiot.’ (Rxeb GKwU wb‡e©v‡ai ejv Mí) – Macbeth
N.B: It is an example of metaphor.
➢ ‘Life’s but a walking shadow.’ (Rxeb GKwU Pjgvb Qvqv Qvov wKQzB bq) – Macbeth
➢ ‘There’s daggers in man’s smiles.’ ( gvby‡li nvwmi g‡a¨B †Qviv Av‡Q)
–Donalbain to Malcolm
➢ ‘Your face, my thane is as a book, where man may read strange matters.’ (Avcbvi
gyLB GKUv Avðh© eB hw` gvbyl Zv co‡Z cv‡i|) – Lady Macbeth
N.B: It is an example of simile.
➢ ‘But love is blind and lovers can not see
The pretty follies that themselves commit.’ (Avi fv‡jvevmv GgbB AÜ †h †cÖwgK-
‡cÖwgKviv wb‡R‡`i fzj¸‡jv †`L‡Z cvq bv|) Jessica to Lorenzo
➢ ‘I have bought Golden opinions from all sorts of people.’
( Avwg mKj gvby‡li fv‡jv AwfgZ‡K AR©b K‡iwQ|) – Macbeth
➢ ‘There's no art
To find the mind's construction in the face.’
(‡KD gyL †`‡L gvby‡li cÖK…Z ˆewkó¨ e‡j w`‡Z cv‡ibv ) – King Duncan
➢ ‘Look like an innocent flower/ But be the serpent under it.’
(‡Pnvivq dy‡ji g‡Zv cªweÎZv Av‡bv, AšÍ‡i iv‡Lv mwc©j AwfmwÜ| ivRv WvbKvb‡K nZ¨vi Rb¨
g¨vK‡e_‡K Zvui ¯¿x Gfv‡e cª‡ivwPZ K‡i|) – Lady Macbeth to Macbeth
Romeo and ➢ ‘If love be blind, It best agrees with night.’
Juliet (hw` fvjevmv nq AÜ, Z‡e ivwÎi mv‡_ wgZvwjB me‡P‡q fv‡jv) – Juliet
➢ ‘It is the east, and Juliet is the sun.’ (GUv nq c~e©, hw` Rywj‡qU nq m~h©) – Romeo
➢ ‘For you and I are past our dancing day.’
(Zywg Ges Avwg Avgv‡`i ‡mvbvjx w`b cvi K‡i G‡mwQ) – Capulet

➢ ‘Tempt not a desperate man.’ (fvev_©t hw` Zzwg Db¥v` gvbyl‡K wei³ K‡iv, Z‡e Zzwg hv
cÖZ¨vkvi †P‡q †ewk k³ cÖwZwµqv †c‡Z cv‡iv) – Romeo
➢ ‘What light through yonder window breaks.’ (A`~‡ii Rvbvjv Mwj‡q Af‚Zc~e© Av‡jv †hb
wVK‡i c‡o) – Soliloquy of Romeo to Juliet
➢ ‘These voilent love delights have violent ends.”(Ggb gvivZ¥K Av‡e‡Mi fv‡jvevmv
Avb›`B wech©‡hi w`‡K avweZ K‡i‡Q|) – Friar Lawrence to Romeo
➢ ‘Love is a smoke made with the fume of sighs.’ (fv‡jvevmv GK R¦jšÍ Av‡eM hv eo
`xN©k^v‡mi m„wó K‡i) – Romeo to Juliet
A ➢ ‘The course of true love never did run smooth.’ (mwZ¨Kvi fvjevmvi c_ KLbI gm„Y nq
Midsummer bv) – Lysander to Hermina
Night’s ➢ ‘Love Looks not with the eyes but with mind.’ (hvi mv‡_ hvi g‡R gb, wKev nvwo wKev
Dream †Wvg ) – Helena
➢ ‘My soul is in the sky.’(gZ©¨ †Q‡o gg AvZœv K‡i ¯^‡M© weivR ) –Pyramus
➢ ‘Take pains, Be perfect.’ (e¨_v cvI Avi cwic~Y© nI) –Nick Bottom
Julius Caesar ➢ ‘Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste
of death but once.’ (fxiæiv givi Av‡M evi evi g‡i wKš‘ mvnmxiv g‡i GKevi|) – Julius
Caesar to Calpurnia
N.B: It is an example of Paradox .
➢ ‘Veni, Vidi, Vici’(Avmjvg, †`Ljvg, Rq Kijvg ) – Julius Caesar
N.B: It is an example of Climax.
King Henry ➢ ‘Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.’ (gyKzU cwiwnZ e¨w³ kvwšÍ‡Z Nygv‡Z cv‡i bv /
‡h wk‡i gyKyU _v‡K ‡m wki ¯^w¯Í‡Z _v‡K bv|) – King Henry
➢ ‘Men of few words are the best men.’ (¯^ífvlx gvbylB DËg gvbyl) – Henry V
➢ ‘A man can die but once.’ (ïaygvÎ GKeviB g‡i gvbyl, Kvcy‡li Aw¯ÍZ¡ †hb dvbym) – Feeble

Twelfth ➢ ‘Be not afraid of greatness: Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and
Night some have greatness thrust upon them.’ (L¨vwZ wb‡q fq †c‡qvbv: †KD †KD L¨vwZgvb n‡q
Rb¥vq, †KD †KD L¨vwZ AR©b K‡i Ges Kv‡iv Kv‡iv Dci L¨vwZ Pvwc‡q †`qv nq|) – Malvalio
➢ ‘All’s well that ends well (that).’ (‡kl fv‡jv hvi me fv‡jv Zvi) –Helena, scene iv
➢ ‘If music be the food of love, play on.’(hw` ev`¨ nq fvjevmvi Lv`¨, Z‡e evRvI) – Duke
Orsino
➢ ‘Love sought is good but unsought is better.’
(fv‡jvevmv Luy‡R †bIqv fv†jv wKš‘ bv PvB‡Z cvIqv Av‡iv fv‡jv) – Olivia
➢ ‘Better a witty fool, than a foolish wit.’
(‡evKv cÖÁvevb nevi ‡P‡q cÖÁvevb ‡evKv nIqv DËg|) – Feste
As You Like ➢ ‘All the world's a stage
It And all the men and women are merely players.’ (mgMÖ c„w_exUvB i½g Ges mKj
bi-bvix G g‡Âi Awf‡bZv-Awf‡bÎx|) – Jaques
➢ ‘Sweet are the uses of adversity.’
(‡h ‡Kv‡bv `y‡h©v‡MI Kj¨vY wbwnZ _v‡K / K‡ói dj wgwó nq|) – Duke Senior
➢ ‘To the last gasp with truth and loyalty.’ (mZ¨ Ges AvbyM‡Z¨i mv‡_B †kl wbtk^vm Z¨vM
Kiv ) – Adam
➢ ‘I’ll have no husband, if you be not he.’ (Avgvi †Kv‡bv ¯^vgx _vK‡e bv, hw` bv ZzwgB †m
nI) – Rosalind to Orlando
➢ ‘Love is merely a madness.’
(fv‡jvevmv DòZv Qvov wK wKQz! Av‡eMx ü‡` avIqv †bq wcQy !! ) – Rosalind
➢ ‘How bitter a thing it is to look into happiness through another man’s eyes.’
(gv‡S gv‡S A‡b¨i myL Avgv‡`i A‡bK K‡ói KviY n‡q `uvovq) – Orlando
Sonnet 18 ➢ ‘And every fair from fair sometime declines
By chance, or nature’s changing course, untrimmed;’
(Avi cÖwZwU †mŠ›`h©B GKmgq a‡m hvq wcÖqZgv, `yN©Ubvµ‡g wKsev cÖK…wZi A‡gvN wbq‡g|)
Measure for ➢ ‘The miserable have no other medicine but only hope.’
Measure (‡Kej Avkv Kiv Qvov nZfvM¨‡`i Avi †Kv‡bv Jlya bvB|) – Claudio
➢ ‘Some rise by sin and some by virtue fall.’ (cv‡c Kv‡iv DÌvb ,Avevi c~‡Y¨ Kv‡ivi cZb
nq|) – Escalus to Angelo
➢ ‘Our doubts are traitors, And makes lose the good we oft might win by fearing
to attempt.’ (m‡›`n nj PµvšÍKvix, c`‡ÿ‡ci AšÍivq, weRq †_‡K `~‡i iv‡L, KvR ïiæ Kivi
c~‡e©B Avgv‡`i _vwg‡q †`q| ) – Lucio to Isabella
➢ ‘O faithless coward, O dishonest wretch
Its not a kind of incest to take life
From thine own sister’s shame?’
(ZzB Awek^vmx Kvcyiæl, ZzB cÖZviK, Amvay bxP, ZzB wK ‡Zvi Rxeb w`we †Zvi Avgvi cv‡ci Rb¨,
†Zvi g„Zz¨ bv n‡j Avgvi kvwšÍ bvB|) – Isabella to Claudio
➢ ‘Condemn the fault and not the actor of it.’ (‡`v‡li wb›`v K‡iv, †`vlx‡K bq|) –Angelo
Othello ➢ She loved me for the dangers I had passed. (‡m fv‡jv‡e‡m‡Q Avgvi wec`msKzj w`b¸‡jv
hv Avwg AwZµg K‡iwQjvg) – Othello
➢ And I loved her that she did pity them. (Ges Avwg Zv‡K fv‡jv‡e‡mwQjvg KviY Avgvi
wec`msKzj w`b¸‡jvi cÖwZ mnvbyf~wZkxj wQ‡jv ) – Othello
➢ I am one whom loved not wisely but too well. (Avwg GgbB GKRb hv‡K Mfxifv‡e
fv‡jvevmv hvq bv wKš‘ fv‡jvfv‡e fv‡jvevmv hvq) – Othello
➢ O you are well tuned now! But I’ ll set down the pegs make this music
As honest as I am. (wK mRxe m‡ZR Zzwg GLb! Ze Mvb cÖvY†Quvqv my‡ijv; mwZ¨ ejwQ Avwg Ze
my‡ii Zvi ‡`e †`eB †K‡U| ) – Iago
The Tempest ➢ Awake, dear heart, awake, Thou has slept well. Awake.
(‡R‡M DV, wcÖq n`q, †R‡M IV| Zzwg fv‡jv Nywg‡q‡Qv| †R‡M IV) – Prospero
➢ Good wombs have borne bad sons.”
( f`ª gwnjv Lvivc mšÍv‡bi Rb¥ w`‡q‡Q) – Miranda
➢ Your tale, sir, would cure deafness.
(m¨vi,Avcbvi Kvwnbx wK ewaiZv wbivgq Ki‡e) – Miranda
➢ I am your wife if you will marry me.
(Avwg †Zvgvi ¯¿x, hw` Zywg Avgv‡K we‡q K‡iv) – Miranda to Ferdinand
➢ I would never want any companion in the world but you.
(Avwg Avcbv‡K Qvov we‡k^ Avi †Kv‡bv mnPi PvB bv) – Miranda
➢ Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows.
(`y`©kv gvbyl‡K iyp ev¯Íe mv‡_ cwiPq Kwi‡q †`q|) – Trinculo
➢ Never till this day, saw I him touched with anger so distemper’d.
( AvR ch©šÍ Zv‡K KL‡bvB GZ ivMvwš^Z n‡Z †`wLwb|)
➢ I will die and I will never return. ( g„Zy¨B Avgvi wPi cÖ¯’vb)
The ➢ All that glitters is not gold.”(PKPK Ki‡jB †mvbv nq bv) – Prince Morocco to Portia
Merchant of ➢ Love is blind, Lovers cannot see.
Venice (fvjevmv AÜ, †cÖwgK Zv †`L‡Z cv‡i bv) –Jessica
➢ It is a wise father that knows his own child.
(wZwb weÁ wcZv whwb Zvi mšÍvb m¤ú‡K© AewnZ) – Launcelot
➢ The devil can cite scripture for his purpose ( Kvh©wmw×i Rb¨ A‡bK mgq Lvivc gvbyl
fv‡jv gvby‡li iæc aviY K‡i) – Antonio
➢ The sins of the father are to be laid upon the children.” ( wcZvi cvcPv‡ii dj
cªvqB mšÍvb‡`i †fvM Ki‡Z nq|) – Launcelot to Jessica.
All’s Well ➢ Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none. (mKj‡K fv‡jvev‡mv, Aí K‡qKRb‡K wek^vm K‡iv,
That End’s Kv‡iv cÖwZ Ab¨vq K‡iv bv) – Countess of Roussillon
All ➢ A young man married is a man that’s married.
(Aí eq‡m we‡q hye‡Ki ÿwZmvab K‡i| )
Antonio and ➢ My Salad days, when I was green in Judgment. (Avgvi cig w`b wQ‡jv hLb wePvi Avgvi
Cleopatra c‡ÿ wQ‡jv ) – Cleopatra to Julius Caesar
➢ There is beggary in the love that can be reckoned. ( cÖK…Z fv‡jvevmvq Pig wbt¯^Zv
i‡q‡Q hv Acwi‡gq|) –Antony
Timon of ➢ We have seen better days. ( wPiKvj Avgv‡`i `yie¯’v wQj bv) – Flavius
Athens N.B: (This same quotation appears in As You Like It, Act II, sc. VII)
➢ Life is an uncertain voyage. (Rxeb n‡jv AwbðqZvgq ågY) –Timon
Coriolanus ➢ Nature teaches beasts to know their friends.”
(mnRvZfv‡eB cÖK…wZ cÖvYx‡`i fv‡jv-m›` eyS‡Z †kLvq)
Troilus and ➢ The common curse of mankind, - folly and ignorance”
Cressida ( gvbeRvwZi Rb¨ mvaviY Awfkvc n‡jv wbe©yw×Zv I AbwfÁZv)
Two ➢ Home-keeping youth have ever homely wits.Ó (hviv N‡i e‡m Rxeb KvUvq Zv‡`i
Gentlemen of eyw×ïw×I wbZvšÍB N‡ivqv n‡q hvq|)
Verona

Christopher Marlowe Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Dr. Faustus
➢ Fools that will laugh on earth, most weep in hell.
(†evKvivB g‡Z©¨ Avb›` K‡i Avi bi‡K Kvbœv mvM‡i †f‡m †eovq|)
➢ Make me immortal with a kiss.” (Avgv‡K †Zvgvi GK Pz¤^‡b Agi K‡i `vI)
➢ Had I as many souls as there be stars ,
I’d give them all for Mephistophills. (‡h‡nZz Avwg mewKQz Kivi ÿgZv †c‡qwQ ZvB
‡gwdm‡Uvwdjm‡K Avgvi mewKQz w`‡Z cvwi|)
The Jew of ➢ The stars move still, time runs, the clock will strike
Malta (bÿÎiv Pj‡ZB _v‡K mgq Zvi ˆewkó¨ a‡iB iv‡L, nVvr Rxe‡bi P‚ovšÍ WvK Nwo‡Z hvq †e‡R|)
➢ There is no sin but ignorance. (AÁZv Qvov †Kv‡bv cvc †bB)
Francis Bacon Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Of Studies ➢ Studies serve for delight, for ornament and for ability. (wkÿv gvbyl‡K wZbwU wRwbm
†`q-Avb›`, m¤§vb I RxweKv AR©‡bi ÿgZv)
➢ Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be
chewed and digested . (wKQz eB Dc‡fvM Ki‡Z nq, wKQz MjvatKiY Ki‡Z nq Ges Aí
wKQy eB Av‡Q hvi im Avm¦v`b Ki‡Z nq)
➢ History maketh man wise. (BwZnvm gvbyl‡K Ávbx K‡i ‡Zv‡j)
➢ Wonder is the seed of knowledge. (we¯§q Áv‡bi exR)
➢ Reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, writting an exact man.
(Aa¨qb/cvV GKRb gvbyl‡K cwic~Y©Zv `vb K‡i,Av‡jvPbvq nq Kzkjx Ges †jLvwjwL GKRb
gvbyl‡K mwVK gvbyl wn‡m‡e ˆZwi K‡i|)
➢ Read not to contradict and confute; nor to believe and take for granted; nor
to find talk and discourse; but to weigh and consider. (Aa¨q‡bi j¶¨ ïay we‡ivwaZv
ev ‡Kv‡bv gZ‡K wg_¨v cªwZcbœ Kiv bq; ‡Kv‡bv wKQy‡K mZ¨ ev AeavwiZ e‡j g‡b KivI bq; eis
Zvi D‡Ïk¨ n‡e wePvi-we‡kølY I we‡ePbvkw³ ‰Zwi|)
➢ Wives are young men's mistresses, companions for middle age, and old
men's nurses. (¯¿x hyeK‡`i cÖYqbx, gvS eqmx‡`i m½x Avi e„ׇ`i †mweKv|)
Of Marriage ➢ Unmarried men are best friends, best masters, best servants; but not always
and Single Life best subjects. (AweevwnZ cyiæ‡liv m‡ev©Ëg eÜz, †miv gwbe , me‡P‡q fv‡jv `vm wKšÍy me©`vB
wbf©i‡hvM¨ e¨w³ bq)
➢ A bachelors’ life is a fine breakfast, a flat lunch and a miserable dinner.
(GKRb Aweevwn‡Zi Rxeb cÖfv †hb cÖvZt ivk, Rxeb ga¨vý †hb bxim †fvR, Avi mvqvý †hb
ˆ`b¨cxwoZ †fvR)
➢ Hope is a good breakfast, but it is a bad supper.
(cÖZ¨vkv n‡jv m‡šÍvlRbK cÖvZtivk , wKš‘ wbùj ˆbk‡fvR)
➢ Certainly wife and children are a kind of discipline of humanity.
Of Truth ➢ A Mixture of lie does ever add pleasure.
(m‡Z¨i mv‡_ ¶wZnxb wg_¨v me©`vB Avb›``vqK)
➢ The secret of success is the constancy of purpose.
(Afxó j¶¨B mdjZvi PvweKvwV)
➢ Silence is the sleep that nourishes wisdom.
(‰btkã¨B ‡mB mylywß (sound sleep) hv Ávb‡K kvwYZ K‡i )
➢ In order for the light to shine so brightly, the darkness must be present.
(AÜKvi Av‡Q e‡jB Av‡jvi `xwß GZ ‡R¨vwZg©q)
Of Friendship ➢ A good friend is another himself. (GKRb fv‡jv eÜy n‡jv wb‡RiB Ab¨ mË¡v)

Of Revenge ➢ Revenge is the kind of wild justice. (cÖwZ‡kva n‡jv GK ai‡bi DMÖ b¨vqwePvi )

Of Love ➢ It is impossible to love and to be wise.


(†cÖ‡g covi ci wb‡R‡K Ávbx fvev Am¤¢e / Ávbxiv †cÖ‡g c‡o bv|
Of Death ➢ Men fear death and children to go in the dark. ( gvbyl ‡hgb g„Zy¨‡K fq cvq, wkïiv
†Zgwb AÜKvi‡K fq cvq|)
Of Suspicion ➢ Suspicion amongst thoughts are like bats amongst birds, they never fly by
twilight. (wPšÍvi g‡a¨ m‡›`n †hgb cvwL‡`i g‡a¨ ev`yi †Zgb, Zviv KL‡bv evmv evua‡Z mgq †bq bv|)
A Letter of ➢ Opportunity makes a thief.
Advice to the (dvuK ‡c‡j mevB †Pvi nq/ my‡hvMB gvbyl‡K †Pvi evbvq|)
Earl of Essex

The Essays ➢ A wise man will make more opportunities than he finds.
( Ávbxiv hZUv my‡hvM cvq Zvi †P‡q †ewk ˆZwi K‡i †bb|)
➢ Money is a great servant but a bad master.
( A_© `vm wn‡m‡e cÖK…ó n‡jI gwbe wn‡m‡e AcK…ó )
➢ Knowledge itself is power. (Ávb wb‡RB kw³)
➢ I would live to study, and not study to live.
(Avwg Aa¨qb Kivi Rb¨ †eu‡P _vKe, †eu‡P _vKvi Rb¨ Aa¨qb Kie bv)
➢ I will never be an old man. (Avwg KL‡bvB cðvrc` /†m‡K‡j n‡Z PvB bv)
Civil and Moral ➢ Travel, in the younger sort, is a part of education; in the elder, a part of
experience. (ÿz`ªv‡_© ågY wkÿvi Ask Avi e„n`v‡ÿ© AwfÁZvi Ask)

P. B. Shelley Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)

Ode to the West ➢ If winter comes, can spring be far behind ?


Wind (‡gN ‡`‡L ‡KD Kwim‡b fq Avov‡j Zvi m~h© nv‡m|
fvev_© : AÜKvi †K‡U wM‡q Av‡jvi c„w_ex f‡i DV‡eB )
➢ Oh! Lift me as wave, a leaf, a cloud!
I fall upon the thorns of life.
(In! Avgv‡K Zi½, GKwU cvZv, GKwU †gN wn‡m‡e D‡Ëvjb Kiæb)
➢ Drive my dead thought over the universe.(‡gvi RbvRxY© fvebv‡K Qwo‡q wek^ Ry‡o)
Ode To A ➢ Our sweetest songs are those that tell of the saddest thought.
Skylark (‡gv‡`i gayi m½xZ¸‡jvB Zv, hv †e`bvi K_v e‡j / wei‡ni MvbB n‡jv gayi Mvb|

➢ We look before and after, And pine for what is not.”


(AZxZ I fwel¨Z `yw`‡KB †gviv †NvivB †PvL; hv GL‡bv cvBwb Rxe‡b, ZvB wb‡q Kwi †kvK)
Ozymandias ➢ My name is Ozymandias, King of King. (Avgvi bvg ARvBg¨vbwWqvm, ivRvi ivRv)
A Defence of ➢ Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world.
Poetry (KweMY n‡jb we‡k^i A¯^xK…Z AvBb cª‡YZv)

➢ Poetry is a mirror which makes beautiful that which is distorted.


(Kve¨ n‡jv †mB `c©Y hv Amy›`i wRwbm‡K my›`ifv‡e Dc¯’vcb K‡i)
Queen Mab ➢ Fear not for the future, weep not for the past.
(fwel¨Z wb‡q fq K‡iv bv, AZxZ wb‡q `ytL †Kv‡iv bv)

➢ Soul meets soul on lovers lips. (‡cÖwgK-‡cÖwgKvi Pz¤^b †hb `ywU AvZ¥vi wgjb )
The Cloud ➢ I am the daughter of Earth and Water,
And the nursling of the Sky.
(c„w_ex I mvMiKb¨v Avwg fvmgvb †gN; AvKv‡ki wcÖq wkï, Avb‡›` fvwm evwo‡q †eM)
The Revolt of ➢ ‘The more we study, the more we discover our ignorance.’
Islam (Avgiv hZB Aa¨qb Kwi, ZZB wb‡R‡`i AÁZv‡KB †hb Avwe®‹vi Kwi)

William Wordsworth Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
I wandered ➢ I wandered lonely as a cloud
lonely as a That floats on high o’er value and hills.
cloud(Daffodils) (Avwg Ny‡iwQjvg wbtm½ †g‡Ni b¨vq, DcZ¨Kv I cvnv‡oi Dci w`‡q hv †f‡m hvq)
My Heart Leaps ➢ Child is the father of the man.
Up (Nywg‡q Av‡Q wkïi wcZv me wkïiB AšÍ‡i) (Example of Paradox )

The Daffodils ➢ All at once I saw a crowd, a host of golden daffodils. Ten Thousand saw I
at a glance tossing their heads In sprightly dance. (Avwg GK bR‡i `k nvRvi dzj
†`Ljvg)
N.B:It is an example of Hyperbole .
Tintern Abbey ➢ Nature never did betray the heart that loved her.
(cÖK…wZ‡K fvjevm‡j cÖK…wZ KL‡bv wek^vmNvZKZv K‡i bv)
Preface to ➢ Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.
Lyrical Ballads (KweZv n‡”Q cÖej Av‡e‡Mi ¯^ZtùzZ© ewntcÖKvk)
➢ The best portion of a good man’s life, his little, nameless, unremembered
act of kindness and love. (GKRb myK…wZ gvby‡li Rxe‡bi AmvaviY AskUzKzB n‡jv AbyMÖn
I fv‡jvevmvi †QvÆ, AL¨vZ, Awe¯§iYxq KvR¸‡jv)
➢ Poetry is the breath and finer spirit of knowledge
( Áv‡bi cÖvY I m~² ‡PZbvB Kve¨ )
The Solitary ➢ The Music in my heart I bore, Long after it was heard no more. (Avgvi ü`‡q
Reaper †mB myi `xN©w`b hver Avi kÖæZ nw”Qj bv )
➢ Behold Behold her, single in the field,
yon on solitary Highland Lass!’ ( †`L, †`L Zv‡i †P‡q GKvKx `uvwo‡q gv‡V; A`~‡ii
wbR©b cve©Z¨ f‚‡g Zvi mgqKv‡U )
- ➢ Every great poet is a teacher. (c«‡Z¨K gnvKweB GKRb wkÿv¸iæ|)

The Tables urned ➢ Come forth into the light of things, Let nature be your teacher. (cÖK…wZi mvwb‡a¨
Av‡mv Ges ¸iæ e‡j gv‡bv)
Ode to ➢ Our birth is but a sleep and forgetting. (ÿ‡Y ÿ‡Y g„Zy¨ Avwg Zvnv‡iB ewj)
Intimation
Waggoner and ➢ Faith is a passionate intuition. (Av‡e‡M c~Y© mÁvB wek¦vm)
Other Works
Sir Philip Sidney Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source Quotation

➢ Poetry, a speaking picture to teach and delight.


(KweZv n‡jv wkÿv cÖ`vb I Avb›` †`evi GK RxešÍ Qwe)
➢ Either I will find a way, or I will make one.
An Apology for Poetry ( nq Avwg c_ Lyu‡R cv‡ev bv nq bZzb c‡_i m„wó Kie|)

John Donne Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
The ➢ For God’s sake, hold your tongue and let me love.
Canonization (‡`vnvB †Zv‡`i GKUzKy Pzc K‡i, fv‡jvevwmev‡i †` ‡gv‡i Aemi)
➢ Soldiers find wars, and lawyers find out still
Litigious men, which quarrels move,

T Though she and I do love. (‰mb¨iv hy× K‡i, AvBbRxexiv GL‡bv cvq gvgjvevR

gvbyl hviv wec` euvavq, Avwg Avi wcÖqZgv ci¯ú‡i fv‡jvevwm|)


The Good ➢ I wonder by my truth, what thou and I did till we love?
Morrow (Avgvi wek^v‡mi Kmg, mwZ¨B Avwg AevK nB Zzwg Avwi Avwg wK K‡iwQjvg GK Aci‡K
fv‡jvevmvi Av‡M?)
➢ For love, all love of other sights control and make a little room and
everywhere. (‡Zvgvi fv‡jvevmvi Z‡i, wemR©b w`‡Z cvwi Ab¨ mKj fv‡jvevmv, Avi †QvÆ
iæ‡g Mo‡Z cvwi wek^ PivPi(‡cÖ‡gi Avcb f~eb)
A Valediction: ➢ If they be two, they are two so,
Forbidding As stiff twin compasses are two.
Mourning (‡Zvgvi Avi Avgvi fv‡jvevmv †fRvj weewR©Z wbðqB ZvB Ggb †cÖg †eu‡P _v‡K AbšÍKvj, wbišÍi
†cÖiYvi Drm n‡q)
The Sun Rising ➢ She’s all states and all princesses I
Nothing else is” (Avgvi wcªqZgvB mKj ivóª, Avi AvwgB mKj ivRKzgvi Avi‡Zv wKQz bB|)
➢ Love, all alike no season knows, nor clime
Nor hours, days, months, which are the rags of time.
(‡cÖg, Bnvi bvB †Kv‡bv Kvj, †bB †`k, N›Uv †bB, w`bÿY †bB, gvm †bB, GmeB‡Zv gnvKv‡ji
wQbœ †bKov)
fvev_© t mgq ev Amgq, GLb bv ZLb, dv¸b, kvIb ey‡S †cÖg Av‡m bv|
‡m mgq KL‡bv ‡ev‡S bv, ‡cÖg, mgq KL‡bv ‡ev‡S bv|
➢ This bed thy centre is,these walls they sphere.
(GB weQvbvUv †Zvgvi ‡K›`ª; GB †`qvjUvB †Zv †Zvgvi Kÿc_ )
John Keats Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Ode on a ➢ Heard melodies are sweet ; those unheard are sweeter.
Grecian Urn (‡kvbv myi e‡ovB gayi wKš‘ bv †kvbv myi gayiZi/hvi nv‡Zi ivbœv LvBwb, †m eo ivuaywb ; hv‡K
Kfz †`wLwb, †m eo my›`wi / gvbyl ARvbv‡K Rvb‡Z Pvq)
➢ Beauty is truth, truth beauty. (my›`iB mZ¨; mZ¨B my›`i)
Endymion,” ➢ A thing of beauty is a joy forever:
Book I (my›`i wRwbm wPiKvjB Avb›`vqK)
Ode to a ➢ My heart aches and a drowsy numbness pains. My sense, as though of
Nightingale hemlock I had drunk. (‡e`bvKvZi ü`q Avgvi, wSwg‡q co‡Q Amvo ‡e`bvq, fvwe ‡hb
PygyK w`‡qwQ ‡ngj‡Ki ‡cqvjvq|)
To George and ➢ Nothing ever becomes real ‘till it is experienced,
Georgiana Keats (bv AvuPv‡j wek¦vm nq bv|)
Letter to ➢ Scenery is fine - but human nature is finer.
Benjamin Baily ( ‰bm©wMK †kvfv my›`i wKš‘ gbyl¨cÖK„wZ AwaKZi my›`i)

S.T. Coleridge Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
The Rime of the ➢ And all the boaeds did shrink;water,water,everywhere
Ancient Mariner Water, water, everywhere, Nor any drop to drink.
(cvwb, cvwb, Pvicv‡k ïay cvwb, ‡MvUv‡bv me cvUvZb;
cvwb cvwb meLv‡b ïay cvwb, cvb Kievi †bB GK ‡dvuUv cvwb)
N.B. It is an example of alliteration.
➢ Alone, alone, all, all alone, Alone on a wide, wide sea.”
(GKv, GKvKx, cy‡iv mxgvnxb GKv, GKv GB mxgvnxb mgy‡`ª)
N.B. It is an example of alliteration.
➢ He prayeth best who loveth best.
All things both great and small. (Rx‡e †cÖg K‡i †hBRb, †mBRb †mwe‡Q Ck¦i)

Thomas Gray Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Elegy Written in ➢ Full many a flower is born to blush unseen, and waste its sweetness on
a Country desert air.” (c‡_i av‡i bvg bvRvbv kZ dzj †h dz‡U; dzj`vwb‡Z Zv‡`i Kq R‡bi ¯’vb Ry‡U?
Churchyard fvev_© t GB c„w_exi c‡i, KZ dzj †dv‡U Avi S‡i,
†m K_v wK †Kvbw`b, KL‡bv Kv‡iv g‡b c‡o?Ó)
➢ The paths of glory lead but to grave. (‡MŠi‡ei c_¸‡jv Kei e¨ZxZ Ab¨ †Kv_vI
avweZ K‡i bv )
Ode on a Distant ➢ Where ignorance is bliss, it is folly to be wise. (g~L©ZvB †hLv‡b cig myL (Avkxe©v`),
Prospect of Etone †mLv‡b Ávbx nIqvUvB †evKvwg)
College
Lord Alfred Tennyson Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Ulysses ➢ I will never rest from travels,
I will drink life to the lees. (Avwg Avgvi Rxe‡bi cwiågY †_‡K weiwZ †be bv, Avgvi
meUzKy kw³ w`‡q Rxeb‡K Dc‡fvM Ki‡ev)
➢ Who are wise in love, love most, say least.
(evP‡b bq; K‡g©B m‡ev©”P ewntcÖKvk N‡U)

➢ Made weak by time and fate,but strong in will


To strive,to seek,to find,and not to yield.

(n‡q cwo `ye©j mgq Avi fv‡M¨i Kv‡Q, wKš‘ B”Qvkw³ Av‡Q cÖej, msMÖvg Kivi, AbymÜvb Kivi,
Avwe®‹vi Kivi wKš‘ gv_v †bvqvevi bq|)
Morte D’ Arthur ➢ The old order changeth, yielding place to new.
(G‡m‡Q bZzb wkï, Zv‡K †Q‡o w`‡Z n‡e ¯’vb)
➢ More things are wrought by prayers than this world dreams of.
(cvw_©e wPšÍvi †P‡qI A‡bK wRwbm cÖv_©bvq †g‡j)
➢ Authority forgets a dying king.
(cªvwaKvi fy‡j hvq gyg~l©y Aaxk¦i / wmsnvmb bv gv‡b Ck^i)
Locksley Hall ➢ Knowledge comes but wisdom lingers. (Ávb mn‡RB Av‡m wKš‘ eyw× ‡`wi‡Z nq)
Lotus Eaters ➢ Death is the end of life, Ah! Why should life all labour be.
(g„Zy¨B †Zv Rxe‡bi mgvwß| Zvn‡j GZ cwikÖg K‡i Kx jvf?)
In Memoriam ➢ It is better to have loved and lost
Than never to have loved at all.
(G‡Kev‡i KL‡bvB bv cvevi †P‡q fv‡jvevmv †c‡q nviv‡bv fv‡jv)
➢ Sorrows are the best educators”( `ytL- `y`©kv gvby‡li me©‡kÖô wkÿv¸iæ)
➢ A man can see farther through tear than a telescope.
(K‡ji ‡P‡q µ›`b A‡bK `~i c_ ‡`Lvq )
[

Alexander Pope Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
An Essay on ➢ Fools rush in where angels fear to tread. (KZ nvwZ †Mj Zj, gkv e‡j KZ Rj)
Criticism ➢ A little learning is a dangerous thing. ( Aíwe`¨v fqsKix )
➢ To err is human, to forgive is divine. (gvbyl gvÎB fz‡ji Aaxb; Avi ¶gv ¯^M©xq|)
An Essay on ➢ An honest man is the noblest work of God.
Man (GKRb fv‡jv gvbyl ¯ªóvi ‡kÖô KxwZ©)
➢ Charms strike the sight but merit strikes the heart.`
(‡mŠ›`h© †PvL Ryovq, Ávb AvZ¥v‡K)
➢ The proper study of mankind is man.`
(gvbeRvwZ wb‡q M‡elYv KivB gvby‡li cÖavb KvR)
➢ Hope spring eternal in the human breast.
(gvbyl nZvkvi gv‡SI me©`v Avkvi Av‡jv LyuR‡Z cv‡i)
➢ Order is heaven’s first law.” (myk„•LjZv ¯^‡M©i cÖ_g K_v )
John Milton Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Paradise Lost ➢ It is better to reign in hell than to serve in heav’n.
(¯^‡M© `vmZ¡ Kivi †P‡q bi‡K ivRZ¡ Kiv †kÖq /nvZxi †jR nIqvi †P‡q mvnmx wccov nIqv ‡kÖq)
➢ Death is the golden key that opens the place of eternity.”
(g„Zz¨i gva¨‡g gvbyl AgiZœ jvf K‡i)
Paradise ➢ Childhood shows the man as morning shows the day.
Regained (mKv‡ji m~h© †hgb w`e‡mi cÖwZ”Qwe, †Zgwb GKRb wkï GKRb cwic~Y© gvby‡li cÖwZ”Qwe)
Areopagitica ➢ Give me liberty, to know, to utter, to argue freely, according to conscience
above all of my liberties.”
(Avgv‡K ¯^vaxbfv‡e K_v ej‡Z `vI, Rvb‡Z `vI, `vI gy³fv‡e hyw³ Zz‡j ai‡Z, `vI ¯^vaxbZv)
➢ Books are not absolutely dead things, bit do contain a potency of life.
(eB cy‡ivcywi g„Z e¯‘ bq eis Gi gv‡S Rxebxkw³I we`¨gvb i‡q‡Q|)
➢ Many a man lives a burden to the earth
but a good book is the precious life-blood of a master spirit.”
(c„w_ex‡Z A‡bK gvbylB A‡b¨i †evSv n‡q evm K‡i wKš‘ gnr ü`‡qi gvbyl‡`i g~j¨evb Rxebxkw³
n‡jv eB)
G. B. Shaw Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Arms and the ➢ Nine soldiers out of ten are born fools. (AwaKvsk ˆmwbK Rb¥MZfv‡eB wb‡ev©a)
Man †jL‡Ki g‡Z: ‰mwbKiv wb‡Ri Rxeb‡K wecbœ K‡i jovB K‡i| GUv‡K ‡m ‡evKvwg e‡j‡Q|
A_©vr, ‰mwbK wn‡m‡e ‡hvM ‡`IqvUvB ‡evKvgx| hviv Rb¥MZfv‡e ‡evKvivB ZvivB ‰mwbK wn‡m‡e
‡hvM ‡`q|)
➢ It is our duty to live as long as we can.
(Avgiv hZÿY cvwi ZZÿY ‡e‡uP _vKvUv Avgv‡`i `vwqZ¡)
Man and ➢ There are two tragedies in life: One is not to get your heart’s desire, the
Superman other is not to get it.
(Rxe‡b `yÕai‡bi Kó Av‡Q: GKwU AšÍ‡ii Kvw•ÿZ e¯‘‡K jvf Kivi Avi Ab¨wU Zv nviv‡bvi)
Saint Joan ➢ God is on the side of big battalions. (fvev_©: Ck^i _v‡Kb f`ª cjøx‡Z)
- ➢ Beware of false knowledge; it is more dangerous than ignorance.
(fzj Áv‡bi e¨vcv‡i _vKv PvB mZK©; fzj RvbvUv †ewk fqsKi, ‡bB G e¨vcv‡i weZK©)

Charles Dickens Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Martin Chuzzlewit ➢ Charity begins at home and justice begins next door.
(wn‰ZwlZvi cÖvi¤¢ nq wbR M„‡n Avi mywePv‡ii m~Pbv N‡U cowk‡Z)
Great Expectations ➢ The success is not mine, the failure is not mine, but the two
together make me. (mvdj¨ Avgvi bq, e¨_©ZvI Avgvi bq Z‡e G `y‡q wg‡j Avwg)
➢ We need never be ashamed of our tears.
(Kvbœvq Avgv‡`i j¾v cvIqv DwPZ bq KviY G‡Z Avgvi `ytL, Kó `~ixf‚Z nq)
Hard Times ➢ Depth answers only to depth . (Ávbx‡`i DËi Mfxi nq)
➢ Thou are an angel. Bless thee, bless thee!
(Zzwg n‡j wb®úvc , Abycg| Avjøvn †Zvgvi Avkxe©v` KiæK, Avjøvn †Zvgvi mnvq †nvK!)
A Tale of Two ➢ There is prodigious strength in sorrow and despair.
Cities (`ytL- nZvkvi gv‡S e¨vcK wecyj kw³ wbwnZ _v‡K)
➢ I wish you to know that you have been the last dream of my soul.
(Avwg PvB Zzwg Rv‡bv ZzwgB Avgvi AšÍ‡ii †kl PvIqv)
W.B. Yeats Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
The Second ➢ Things fall apart; the center cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the
Coming world. (mewKQz ZQbQ, c‡o †f‡O, †K›`ª cv‡i bv ivL‡Z a‡i; c„w_ex Amnvq ZQbQ ˆbivR¨
Avi AwePv‡ii cvMjv S‡o )
Easter 1916 ➢ All changed, changed utterly / A terribly beauty is born.
( me e`‡j †M‡Q, m¤ú~Y©iæ‡c e`j; Kvj ˆekv‡Li †e‡k Gevi H my›`i Av‡m|)
➢ Too long sacrifice can make a stone of the heart.”
(my`xN© G AvZ¥vûwZ Mo‡Z cv‡i gvby‡li cv_y‡i ü`q )
Gladstone Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Criminology ➢ Justice delayed is justice denied. (wej‡¤^ wePvi wePv‡ii bv‡g cÖnmb|)
Legal Journals ➢ Justice hurried is justice buried. (Zvovû‡ov K‡i wePvi Kiv gv‡b b¨vqwePvi‡K Kei
†`Iqv|)
Matthew Arnold Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Sohrab and ➢ Truth sits upon the lips of dying man. (g„Zz¨c_hvÎx e¨w³i †Vuv‡U mZ¨ mvIqvi nq)
Rustum
The Study of ➢ Even silence will appear incomplete without poetry.
Poetry (Kve¨ we‡b weÁvb‡K Am¤ú~Y© †`Lvq / g‡b nq )
Philomena ➢ Eternal passion! eternal pain.
(wKQz‡ZB hvqbv Av‡e‡Mi So, gvbe ü`q †hb e¨_vi wPišÍb Ni )
Lord Byron Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Don Juan ➢ Love is of man's life a thing apart
'Tis woman's whole existence, (‡cÖg cyiy‡li Kv‡Q Rxe‡bi GKwU Ask we‡kl Avi bvixi
Kv‡Q mgMÖ Aw¯ÍZ¡ )
➢ Sweet is revenge-especially to women. (cÖwZ‡kva MÖnY gayi-we‡kl K‡i bvixi Dci)
➢ Pleasure’s is a pain, and sometimes si’s a pleasure.
(Avb›` gv‡bB cvc Avi gv‡S gv‡S cvcB Avb›`|)
Works of Lord ➢ Man's conscience is the oracle of God. (gvby‡li we‡eK Ck¦‡ii hvRK|)
Byron

Dr. Samuel Johnson Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
➢ Great works are performed not by strength but by perseverance.
__ (gnr KvR¸‡jv kw³i Øviv bq eis ‰a‡h¨©i Øviv m¤úvw`Z nq|)
➢ My dear friend, clear your mind of cant. (wcÖq myü`, ‡Zvgvi gv‡Si KcUZv¸‡jv nUvI)
➢ Kindness is in our power, even when fondness is not.
(`qv Avgv‡`i ÿgZvq i‡q‡Q, GgbwK hLb †¯œnI †bB|)
George Eliot Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Silas Marner Nobody can be happy than we are. (Avgv‡`i †P†q †KD myLx n‡Z cv‡I bv)
➢ Nobody could be happier than we are. (Avgv‡`i †P†q Avi †KD myLx n‡Z
cvi‡Zv bv )
Wit and Wisdom of No man can be wise on empty stomach. (ÿzavZ© D`‡i Ávbx nIqv hvq bv )
George Eliot
The Mill on the Floss ➢ Don’t judge a book by its cover. (evwn¨K †mŠ›`h© †`‡L †KvbwKQzi gvb wba©viY
Kiv DwPZ bq)
Robert Browning Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
The Inn Ablum ➢ Ignorance is not innocence but sin. (AÁZv wbg©jZv bq, cvc)
➢ Oppression makes the wise man mad. (wbcxob Ávbx gvbyl‡K Db¥v` K‡i †d‡j)
Fifine at the Fair ➢ So absolutely good is truth, truth nevers hurts the teller.
(wbwðZfv‡eB fv‡jvB mZ¨ Avi mZ¨ KL‡bvB mZ¨evw`‡K †e`bv †`qbv )
Apollo and the ➢ A minute’s success pays the failure of years.
Fates (GK gyn~‡Z©i mvdj¨ eû eQ‡ii e¨_©Zv‡K ‡X‡K †`q)

Edmund Burke Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Reflection on the ➢ Superstition is the religion of feeble minds.
Revolution in France (Kzms¯‹vi n‡jv `ye©jwP‡Ëi gvby‡li ag© )
➢ The greater the power, the more dangerous the abuse.
(ÿgZv hZ eo, Ace¨envi ZZ wec¾bK )
➢ Power and authority are sometimes bought by kindness.
(ÿgZv I KZ©…Z¡ gv‡S gv‡S `qv `¦vivI †Kbv hvq )
➢ A perfect democracy is therefore the most shameless thing in the
world.”( cÖK…Z MYZš¿B c„w_ex‡Z me‡P‡q `ywe©bxZ welq)

William Blake Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
––– ➢ It is easier to forgive an enemy than to forgive a friend.”
(eÜzi †_‡K kÎæ‡K ÿgv Kiv mnR )
➢ Great things are done when men and mountains meet. (evav-weNœ Qvov gnr
KvR mvwaZ nq bv)
The Divine Image ➢ All pray in their distress. (`yw`©‡b mevB cÖv_©bv K‡i)
The Proverbs of Hell ➢ The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom.
(¯^vfvweK gvÎ AwZµg K‡i Áv‡bi iv‡R¨ cÖKvk Kiv hvq )
W.M.Thackeray Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Vanity Fair ➢ Life is a mirror: if you frown at it, it frowns back; if you smile, it returns the
greeting.” (Rxeb n‡jv `c©†Yi g‡Zv, hw` Zzwg KwVb K‡i †`L Z‡e Zv KwVb Avi hw` g„„`ynv‡m¨
Dc‡fvM K‡iv Z‡e Zv Dc‡fvM¨ )
Aristotle Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
➢ Man is by nature a political animal. (gvbyl Rb¥MZfv‡eB ivR‰bwZK Rxe|)
➢ Poverty is the parent of revolution and crime.
(`vwi`ª¨Zv wecøe I Aciv‡ai m„wóKvix )
➢ A friend to all is a friend to none. (‡h mK‡ji eÜz †m Avm‡j Kv‡iviB eÜz bv )
➢ A true friend is one soul in two bodies. (cÖKzZ eÜz n‡jv `yB †`‡n GK cÖvY )
➢ Happiness depends upon oursleves. (myL Avg‡`i wb‡R‡`i Dci wbf©i K‡i )
➢ We make war that we may live in peace. (Avgiv kvwšÍ‡Z _vKvi Rb¨ hy× evavB)

Plato Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


➢ Necessity is the mother of invention. ( cÖ‡qvRbxqZv D™¢ve‡bi Rbbx)
➢ Love is a serious mental disease. (fv‡jvevmv n‡jv GK ai‡bi gvivZ¥K gvbwmK e¨vwa)
➢ At the touch love everyone becomes a poet. (fvjvevmvi †Quvqvq mevB Kwe n‡q hvq)
➢ Ignorance, the root and the stem of every evil. (AÁZvB mKj g‡›`i g~j)
➢ Knowledge becomes evil if the aim be not virtuous. (g‡bi gv‡S _vK‡j kqZvbx
SuvK, Ávb cvq bv Lu‡R mvMi c‡_ieuvK|)
➢ Books give a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the
imagination, and life to everything.”( wek^‡jv‡K ü`‡q †bq VuvB eB‡qi Øviv; gb cvq
bv Luy‡R Wvbv, eB‡qi cik Qvov| eB‡qi mvM‡i Wz‡e Kíbv hvq D‡o; eBB mewKQz‡Z Rxeb †`q
Ry‡o|)

Socrates Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


➢ Know thyself. (wb‡R‡K Rv‡bv|)
➢ The unexamined life is not worth living. (AcixwÿZ Rxeb emev‡mi Abyc‡hvMx)
➢ I know nothing except the fact of my ignorance.
( Avwg Avgvi AÁZv Avi wKQzB Rvwb bv )
➢ To find yourself, think for yourself. ( wb‡R‡K Luy‡R ‡c‡Z, wb‡R‡K wb‡q fv‡ev)
➢ Envy is the ulcer of soul. (cikªxKvZiZv AvZ¥vi fqsKi ÿZ )
Benjamin Franklin Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
➢ Honesty is the best policy. (mZZvB m‡ev©Ëg cš’v)
➢ Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man health, wealthy & wise.
(iv‡Z ZvovZvwo Nygv‡Z hvIqv Ges mKvj mKvj Nyg †_‡K DVv GKRb gvbyl‡K ¯^v¯’¨evb, cÖvPzh©evb
I cÖÁvevb K‡i †Zv‡j)
➢ Admiration is the daughter of ignorance.
(fw³ n‡jv AÁZvi Kb¨v; AÁZvB fw³ K‡i )
➢ Love your enemies, for they tell you your faults.”
(kÎæ‡K fv‡jvev‡mv, KviY †mB †Zvgvi †`vl¸‡jv awi‡q †`B)
➢ No gains without pains (Kó bv Ki‡j ‡Kó ‡g‡j bv )
➢ Well done is better than well said. (ejvi †P‡q Kiv ‡kÖq)

Charles Robert Darwin Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
The Survival of ➢ Tomorrow as yesterday only fittest will survive in the struggle for
the fittest existence”. (AZx‡Zi b¨vq AvMvgx‡ZI Aw¯Í‡Z¡i jovB‡q ïay Dchy³ivB †eu‡P _vK‡e)

O’Henry Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Hearts and ➢ My butterfly days are over. (Avgvi †Rv”Pzwii w`b †kl )
Hands ➢ Money is not everything. (A_©B mewKQz bq )

Charlotte Bronte Gi weL¨vZ Dw³


Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
Jane Eyre ➢ I am no bird; and no net ensnares me: I am a free human being with an
independent will . (Avwg †Kvb cvwL bB, †Kvb duv` Avgvq Rv‡j AvUKv‡Z cvi‡e bv,Avwg
GKRb ¯^vaxb wPšÍv †PZbv gy³ gvbyl)
Karl Marx Gi weL¨vZ Dw³
Source (Drm) Quotation (Dw³)
The Communist Manifesto ➢ The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class
struggles. (GB ch©šÍ hZ mgvR †`Lv †M‡Q cÖ‡Z¨‡Ki BwZnvm †kÖwY msMÖv‡gi
BwZnvm)
The Eighteenth Brumaire ➢ Men make their own history. (gvbyl wb‡RB Zvi BwZnvm m„wó K‡i)
of Louis Bonaparte.
A Contribution to the ➢ Religion is opium to the people.”
Critique of Hegel's (ag© gvby‡li Kv‡Q `ytL-Kó †_‡K gyw³ cvIqvi e¨_vbvkK)
Philosophy of Right
Quotations from Different Discipline
Dw³Kvixi bvg Quotation (Dw³)
John Dryden ➢ They think too little who talk much.
(‡h gy‡L I‡V K_vi So, K`vwPZB _v‡K †m_v wPšÍvi Ni)
John Bunyan ➢ In prayer it is better to have a heart without words than words without a
heart. (ü`qwenxb K_vgvjv wbf©i †gvbvRvZiZ nIqvi †P‡q kãnxb ü`‡qi cÖv_©bv †kÖq|
➢ Where there is no law, There is no freedom.
(‡hLv‡b †Kv‡bv AvBb bvB, †mLv‡b †Kv‡bv ¯^vaxbZv bvB)
➢ All wealth is the product of labor. (m¤ú` n‡jv cwikÖ‡gi dj)
➢ No man’s knowledge here can go beyond his experience.
(AwfÁZv webv Ávb jvf Am¤¢e)
George Herbert ➢ Help Thyself and God will help thee.
(wb‡R‡K mvnvh¨ Ki Avi Avjøvn †Zvgv‡K mvnvh¨ Ki‡eb)

➢ Living well is the best Revenge. (fv‡jv _vKvB me‡P‡q eo cÖwZ‡kva)


Samuel Butler ➢ Self preservation is the first law of nature. (PvPv Avcb cÖvY evuPv|
g~j A_© : wec‡` cÖ_‡g wb‡R‡K evuPv‡bvB cÖK…wZi AvBb|)
Rousseau ➢ Man is born free and everywhere he is in chains.
( gvbyl ¯^vaxb n‡Z Rb¥jvf K‡i wKš‘ me©ÎB †m k„•Ljve×|)
➢ Patience is bitter but its fruit is sweet . (‰ah© aiv K‡ói wKš‘ Gi dj mywgó)
➢ People are entitled to sovereign power. (RbMYB mKj ÿgZvi Drm)

Gautama Buddha ➢ Pain is the outcome of sin. (hš¿Yv n‡jv cv‡ci dj|)

Martine Luther ➢ Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere


King Jr. (‡h †Kv‡bv ¯’v‡b msNwUZ AwePvi, me©ÎB b¨vq wePv‡ii Rb¨ ûgwK¯^iæc)

Voltaire ➢ I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to death your right to say
it. (Avwg †Zvgvi K_vi mv‡_ we›`ygvÎ GKgZ bv n‡Z cvwi, wKš‘ †Zvgvi K_v ejvi †Zvgvi
AwaKvi iÿvi Rb¨ Avwg Rxeb w`e|)
➢ Common sense is not so common. (mvaviY Ávb GZUv mvaviY bq)
➢ Prejudiece is the reason of fools (Kzms¯‹vi n‡jv †evKv‡`i hyw³)
Thomas Jefferson ➢ Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty. (¯^vaxbZv AR©‡bi †P‡q i¶v Kiv KwVb|)

Henry Ward ➢ Riches are not end of life, but an instrument of life (m¤c`B Rxe‡bi j¶¨ bq
Beecher , Rxebavi‡Yi GK DcKiY gvÎ)
Abraham Lincoln ➢ Democracy is a Government, of the people, by the people, for the people.
(MYZš¿ n‡jv RbM‡Yi Øviv RbM‡Yi Kj¨v‡Y cwiPvwjZ miKvi e¨e¯’v)
➢ If you want to test man’s character give him power. ( hw` †Kvb gvby‡li PwiÎ
hvPvB Ki‡Z PvI, Z‡e Zv‡K ÿgZv cÖ`vb K‡iv )
Henrik Ibsen ➢ The strongest man in the world is he who stands most alone.
(†mB c„w_ex‡Z me‡P‡q †ewk kw³ai, ‡h e¨w³ wb‡Ri Dci me‡P‡q †ewk wbf©ikxj)
➢ A thousand words leave not the same deep impression as does a single
deed.
➢ You have never loved me. You have only thought it pleasant to be in
love with me. ― A Doll's House
Samuel Johnson ➢ Great works are performed not by strength but by perseverance. (gnr KvR
kw³ Øviv bq eis Aa¨emvq Øviv cwiPvwjZ nq)
Thomas A Kempis ➢ Man proposes but God disposes. (gvbyl Pvq GK wKš‘ †Lv`v K‡i Av‡iK)

Thomas Carlyle ➢ Speech is great but silence is greater.


(K_v ejv fv‡jv wKš‘ Pzc _vKv AviI AwaK fv‡jv)
➢ A loving heart is the beginning of all knowledge.
(GKwU AbyivMwm³ ü`q †_‡KB mKj cÖKvi Áv‡bi ïiæ nq|)
A.P. J Abdul ➢ Dream is not that, which you see while sleeping; it is something that will
Kalam not let you sleep. (gvbyl hv Nywg‡q †`‡L Zv ¯^cœ bq, ¯^cœ Zv hv gvbyl‡K Nygv‡Z †`qbv)
➢ If you want to shine like a sun, first burn like a sun.
(m~‡h©i g‡Zv R¡j‡Z n‡j ‡Zvgv‡K cÖ_‡g m~‡h©i g‡Zv cyo‡Z n‡e)
Nelson Mandela ➢ Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the
world. (wkÿv n‡jv me‡P‡q kw³kvjx A¯¿ hv Avcwb wek^ cwieZ©‡b e¨envi Ki‡Z cv‡ib)
➢ Life is a course with endless obstacles to hurdle.
(AšÍnxb evavwecwË AwZµg Kivi c‡_i bvgB Rxeb )
Albert Einstein ➢ Imagination is more important than knowledge.
(Áv‡bi †P‡q Kíbvkw³ †ewk ¸iæZ¡c~Y©) )
➢ Scinece without religion is lame, religion without science is blind.
(ag© Qvov weÁvb c½y ; Avi weÁvb Qvov ag© AÜ )
➢ Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep balance you must keep moving.
(Rxeb n‡jv wØPµhvb,fvimvg¨ iÿv Ki‡Z †Zvgv‡K Aek¨B MwZkxj ivL‡Z n‡e)
Faequser ➢ Necessity is the mother of invention.” (cÖ‡qvRbxqZvB D™¢ve‡bi RbK)

Virginia Wolf ➢ You cannot find peace by avoiding life. (Rxeb‡K D‡cÿv K‡i kvwšÍ Lyu‡R hvqbv)

Napoleon ➢ Give me a good mother; I will give you a good nation.


Bonaparte (Zzwg Avgv‡K GKwU wkwÿZ gv `vI, Avwg †Zvgv‡K GKwU wkwÿZ RvwZ w`‡ev)
➢ Impossible is a word to be found in the dictionary of fools.
(Am¤¢e kãwU ïay †evKv‡`i Awfav‡bB cvIqv hvq)
➢ Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever. (L¨vwZ A¯’vqx wKš‘ AL¨vwZ wPi¯’vqx)
Thomas Hardy ➢ The Greater the sinner, the greater the saint. (hZ eo cvcx, ZZ eo mbœ¨vmx)
Nicolas Chamfort ➢ Success makes success, like money makes money.
(mvdj¨B mvdj¨ Av‡b, †hgb K‡i UvKvB UvKv Av‡b )
Oliver Goldsmith ➢ Handsome is that handsome does. (iƒ‡c Kv‡jv ¸‡Y fv‡jv)

Francis Bacon ➢ Knowledge is power. (ÁvbB kw³)

Ben Jonson ➢ Riches are in fortune a greater good than wisdom is in nature.
(fv‡M¨ cvIqv abm¤ú` cªK…wZ‡Z cvIqv Áv‡bi †P‡q fv‡jv)
Abraham Cowley ➢ Life is an incurable disease. (Rxeb n‡jv GK `~iv‡ivM¨ e¨vwa)

Dylan Thomas ➢ Time let me hail and climb


Golden in the heydays of his eyes,”
(mgq gš¿Yv w`Z Av‡ivnY Kivi, ‡mvbvwj †mB w`b¸‡jv hw` wd‡i cvIqv †hZ )
Nathaniel ➢ There is no good on earth and sin is but a name.
Hawthorne (G wek^eª²v‡Û fv‡jv-g›`, cvc-c~Y¨ e‡j wKQzB †bB, Gme †KejB bvg )

Saul Bellow ➢ The past is no good to us. The Futute is full of anxiety . Only the present
is real- the here –and now.
(AZx‡Z ‡bB †Kv‡bv g½j wbwnZ| fwel¨Z †hb `ytwPšÍvq cwic~Y©| eZ©gvbB ‡Kej kvk¦Z mZ¨)
Stephen Hawking ➢ Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change.
(eyw×gËv n‡jv cwieZ©‡bi mv‡_ mv‡_ wb‡R‡K Lvc LvIqv‡bv )
Roosevelt ➢ No man is above the law and no man is below it’.
(‡Kv‡bv gvbyl AvB‡bi E‡aŸ© bq, Avevi Gi wb‡PI bq)
William Congreve ➢ Music has charms to soothe a savage breast, to soften rocks, or bend a
knotted oak. (eb¨ ¯Íb‡K mshZ, cv_i‡K bgbxq A_ev MuvUhy³ IKMvQ‡K bZ Ki‡Z my‡ii
GKUv gvayh© Av‡Q)
Winston Churchill ➢ When there is no enemy within, the enemy outside can’t hurt you.
(hLb †Zvgvi g‡a¨ `ye©jZv _vK‡ebv, ZLb evwn‡ii †KD †Zvgvi ÿwZ Ki‡Z cvi‡ebv|)
Oscar Wilde ➢ Experience is simply the name we give our mistakes.
(fz‡ji gva¨‡g Avgiv AwfÁZv AR©b Kwi)
➢ Art is the most intense mode of individualism that the world has known.
(AvZ¥†Kw›`ªKZv wkí m„wói †kÖô gva¨g hv meviB Rvbv) )

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