Read The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Online
Authors: Elizabeth Knowles
found on the reverse of leaf 53 of "Popish Kingdome or reigne of Antichrist", in Latin verse by Thomas Naogeorgus, and Englished by Barnabe Googe; printed in 1570; sometimes attributed to Thomas Forde
in
Nation
15 April 1943.
attributed, among others, to Edward Wallis Hoch (1849–1945) on the grounds of it having appeared in his Kansas publication, the
Marion Record
, though in fact disclaimed by him ("behooves" sometimes substituted for "becomes")
motto of the Earls Marischal of Scotland, inscribed at Marischal College, Aberdeen, 1593; a similarly defiant motto in Greek has been found engraved in remains from classical antiquity
Stevins MS (
c.
1555)
anonymous remark, in Alice Roosevelt Longworth
Crowded Hours
(1933) ch. 21
"On Inclosures"; in
The Oxford Book of Light Verse
(1938)
Clause Four of the Labour Party's Constitution of 1918 (revised 1929); the commitment to common ownership of services was largely removed in 1995.
The American Declaration of Independence, 4 July 1776.
sung to the tune of "Auld Lang Syne", in John Brophy and Eric Partridge
Songs and Slang of the British Soldier 1914–18
(1930)
title of Negro spiritual (1865)
George Wyndham, speech in
The Times
29 March 1909
"Western Wind" (published 1790) in
New Oxford Book of Sixteenth-Century Verse
(1991)
"Pack up your Troubles" (1915 song), written by George Asaf (1880–1951)
"Go Down, Moses" (Negro spiritual).
motto of the British Special Air Service regiment, from 1942
attributed to Hiram Johnson, speaking in the US Senate, 1918, but not recorded in his speech; the first recorded use is as epigraph to Arthur Ponsonby's
Falsehood in Wartime
(1928); see
W. N. T. Beckett
A Few Naval Customs, Expressions, Traditions, and Superstitions
(1931) "Customs"
"Tom o' Bedlam"
1907 rhyme, in A. Glyn
Elinor Glyn
(1955) bk. 2, sect. 30
"Yankee Doodle" (song, 1755 or earlier); Nicholas Smith
Stories of Great National Songs
(1899) ch. 2.
recruitment slogan for First World War, coined by Eric Field, July 1914;
Advertising
(1959).
Arnold Bax (1883–1953), quoting "a sympathetic Scot" in
Farewell My Youth
(1943)
refrain of "Carillon national", popular song of the French Revolution (
c.
July 1790), tr William Doyle; the phrase is believed to originate with Benjamin Franklin, who may have uttered it in 1776 when asked for news of the American Revolution
"La Ménagerie" (1868 song) by "Théodore P. K."
description in contemporary chronicles of Pierre Bayard (1476–1524)
motto of the Order of the Garter, originated by Edward III, probably on 23 April of 1348 or 1349.
saying from the time of Louis XVI; François René, Vicomte de Chateaubriand
De la monarchie selon la charte
(1816) ch. 81
slogan used by the French army at the defence of Verdun in 1916; variously attributed to Marshal Pétain and to General Robert Nivelle, and taken up by the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War in the form "
No pasarán!
".
slogan used at Nanterre in Paris, 1968
remark dating from
c.
1664, in
Journal Oeconomique
Paris, April 1751: "Monsieur Colbert assembled several deputies of commerce at his house to ask what could be done for commerce; the most rational and the least flattering among them answered him in one word: "Laissez-nous-faire”".
after the brutal suppression of an uprising, the newspaper
Moniteur
reported, 16 September 1831,
"L'ordre et la tranquillité sont entièrement rétablis dans la capitale
[Order and calm are completely restored in the capital]"; on the same day Count Sebastiani, minister of foreign affairs, declared:
"La tranquillité règne à Varsovie
[Peace reigns in Warsaw]"
old nursery rhyme, quoted by Théodore de Banville in
Les Cariatides, les stalactites
(1842–6); tr A. E. Housman in
Last Poems
(1922) introductory
Maistre Pierre Pathelin
l. 1191 (often quoted as
"Retournons à nos moutons
[Let us return to our sheep]")
Charles Cahier
Quelques six mille proverbes
(1856) no. 1718
words inscribed on the gates of Dachau concentration camp, 1933, and subsequently on those of Auschwitz
inscription on the gate of Buchenwald concentration camp,
c.
1937
epigraph to Arthur Ponsonby
Falsehood in Wartime
(1928)
variously ascribed to the Seven Wise Men
scholiastic annotation to Sophocles's
Antigone
l. 622
Elias Philosophus
In Aristotelis Categorias Commentaria
; in A. Busse (ed.)
Commentaria in Aristotelem Graeca
(1900) vol. 18, pt. 1
French or German hymn (
c.
1743) in
Murray's Hymnal
(1852); translation based on that of F. Oakeley (1841)
motto of the Society of Jesus
Suetonius
Lives of the Caesars
"Claudius" ch. 21
"Ave Maria" or "Hail Mary", also known as "The Angelic Salutation", dating from the 11th century.
Eucharistic hymn, probably dating from the 14th century
motto of the University of Oxford
tomb inscription, of disputed meaning, often depicted in classical paintings, notably by Poussin in 1655; E. Panofsky "Et in Arcadia ego" in R. K. Klibansky and H. J. Paton (eds.)
Philosophy and History: Essays Presented to E. Cassirer
(1936)
medieval students' song, traced to 1267, but revised in the 18th century
motto of the Crown of Scotland and of all Scottish regiments