Robert Aris Willmott Quotes About Romance

We have collected for you the TOP of Robert Aris Willmott's best quotes about Romance! Here are collected all the quotes about Romance starting from the birthday of the Author – 1809! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 4 sayings of Robert Aris Willmott about Romance. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • Romance is the truth of imagination and boyhood. Homer's horses clear the world at a bound. The child's eye needs no horizon to its prospect. The oriental tale is not too vast. Pearls dropping from trees are only falling leaves in autumn. The palace that grew up in a night merely awakens a wish to live in it. The impossibilities of fifty years are the commonplaces of five.

    Robert Aris WILLMOTT (1851). “Pleasures,objects and advantages of literature”, p.60
  • What philosopher of the schoolroom, with the mental dowry of four summers, ever questions the power of the wand that opened the dark eyes of the beautiful princess, or subtracts a single inch from the stride of seven leagues?

    Robert Aris Willmott (1907). “Pleasures of Literature”
  • The importance of the romantic element does not rest upon conjecture. Pleasing testimonies abound. Hannah More traced her earliest impressions of virtue to works of fiction; and Adam Clarke gives a list of tales that won his boyish admiration. Books of entertainment led him to believe in a spiritual world; and he felt sure of having been a coward, but for romances. He declared that he had learned more of his duty to God, his neighbor and himself from Robinson Crusoe than from all the books, except the Bible, that were known to his youth.

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    Robert Aris Willmott (1907). “Pleasures of Literature”
  • History presents the pleasantest features of poetry and fiction,--the majesty of the epic, the moving accidents of the drama, the surprises and moral of the romance. Wallace is a ruder Hector; Robinson Crusoe is not stranger that Croesus; the Knights of Ashby never burnish the page of Scott with richer lights of lance and armor than the Carthaginians, winding down the Alps, cast upon Livy.

    Robert Aris Willmott (1907). “Pleasures of Literature”
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