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The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Preface

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from hence to there may be blessed; thus I pray, and so be it.’<br />

In Plato ‘Phaedo’ 117b<br />

Crito, we owe a cock to Aesculapius; please pay it and don’t let it pass.<br />

In Plato ‘Phaedo’ 118, last words<br />

7.122 Solon c.630-c.555 B.C.<br />

I grow old ever learning many things.<br />

<strong>The</strong>odor Bergk (ed.) ‘Poetae Lyrici Graeci’ (1843) no. 18<br />

Laws are like spider’s webs: if some poor weak creature come up against them, it is caught; but<br />

a bigger one can break through and get away.<br />

In Diogenes Laertius ‘Lives <strong>of</strong> the Eminent Philosophers’ bk. 1, ch. 58.<br />

Call no man happy till he dies, he is at best but fortunate.<br />

In Herodotus ‘Histories’ bk. 1, ch. 32<br />

7.123 Alexander Solzhenitsyn 1918—<br />

You only have power over people as long as you don’t take everything away from them. But<br />

when you’ve robbed a man <strong>of</strong> everything he’s no longer in your power—he’s free again.<br />

‘‘ (<strong>The</strong> First Circle, 1968) ch. 17<br />

<strong>The</strong> Gulag Archipelago.<br />

Title <strong>of</strong> book (1973-5)<br />

7.124 William Somerville 1675-1742<br />

My hoarse-sounding horn<br />

Invites thee to the chase, the sport <strong>of</strong> kings;<br />

Image <strong>of</strong> war, without its guilt.<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> Chase’ (1735) bk. 1, l. 13.<br />

Hail, happy Britain! highly favoured isle,<br />

And Heaven’s peculiar care!<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> Chase’ (1735) bk. 1, l. 84<br />

7.125 Anastasio Somoza 1925-80<br />

You won the elections, but I won the count.<br />

Reply to accusation <strong>of</strong> ballot-rigging, in ‘Guardian’ 17 June 1977.<br />

7.126 Stephen Sondheim 1930—<br />

Everything’s coming up roses.<br />

Title <strong>of</strong> song (1959); music by Jule Styne<br />

Send in the clowns. Title <strong>of</strong> song (1973)<br />

7.127 Susan Sontag 1933—<br />

Interpretation is the revenge <strong>of</strong> the intellect upon art.

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