Best 110 quotes of Horace Walpole on MyQuotes

Horace Walpole

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    Horace Walpole

    When the Prince of Wales [later King George IV] and the Duke of York went to visit their brother Prince William [later William IV]at Plymouth, and all three being very loose in their manners, and coarse in their language, Prince William said to his ship's crew, "now I hope you see that I am not the greatest blackguard of my family.

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    Horace Walpole

    Who has begun has half done. Have the courage to be wise. Begin!

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    Horace Walpole

    Without grace no book can live, and with it the poorest may have its life prolonged.

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    Horace Walpole

    Heaven mocks the short-sighted views of man.

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    Horace Walpole

    I come," replied he, "to thee, Manfred, usurper of the principality of Otranto, from the renowned and invincible Knight, the Knight of the Gigantic Sabre: in the name of his Lord, Frederic, Marquis of Vicenza, he demands the Lady Isabella, daughter of that Prince, whom thou hast basely and traitorously got into thy power, by bribing her false guardians during his absence; and he requires thee to resign the principality of Otranto, which thou hast usurped from the said Lord Frederic, the nearest of blood to the last rightful Lord, Alfonso the Good. If thou dost not instantly comply with these just demands, he defies thee to single combat to the last extremity.

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    Horace Walpole

    I fear no bad angel, and have offended no good one.

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    Horace Walpole

    If you love good roads, conveniences, good inns, plenty of postilions and horses, be so kind as to never go into Sussex. We thought ourselves in the northest part of England; the whole country has a Saxon air, and the inhabitants are savage." - To George Montagu, Esq., August 26, 1749

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    Horace Walpole

    I hold visions to be wisdom, and would deny them only to ambition, which exists only by the destruction of visions of everybody else

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    Horace Walpole

    The farther I travel, the less I wonder at anything: a few days reconcile one to a new spot, or an unseen custom; and men are so much the same everywhere, that one scare perceives a change in situation.

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    Horace Walpole

    The most remarkable thing I have observed since I came abroad, is, that there are no people so obviously mad as the English.