Comprehensive collection of Talk Quotes. The compilation includes some good quality text submitted by users. Browse through our nice repository of Talk Quotes with latest and new quotes being added quite often. You will find unique quotes and sayings which you can rate and review. Explore best and rare collection of Talk Quotes here, select any text from the wide range and share or send using mobile. Apart from general Talk Quotes, the collection also includes some popular Talk Quotes. You can help us to enrich this collection of Talk Quotes by sending and submitting more messages from your collection to us and by providing nice ideas. This is Part – 5 of Talk Quotes.
She sits tormenting every guest, Nor gives her tongue one moment’s rest, In phrases batter’d, stale, and trite, Which modern ladies call polite.
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She spake, And his love-wilder’d and idolatrous soul Clung to the airy music of her words, Like a bird on a bough, high swaying in the wind.
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She stammers; oh, what grace in lisping lies!
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Speak gently! ’tis a little thing Dropped in the heart’s deep well: The good, the joy, that it may bring Eternity shall tell.
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Stop not, unthinking, every friend you meet To spin your wordy fabric in the street; While you are emptying your colloquial pack, The fiend Lumbago jumps upon his back.
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Talk often, but never long; in that case, if you do not please, at least you are sure not to tire your hearers. Pay your own reckoning, but do not treat the whole company; this being one of the few cases in which people do not care to be treated, every one being fully convinced that he has wherewithal to pay.
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Talk politics, talk about study and talk positively.
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Talk that does not end in any kind of action is better suppressed altogether
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Talk to him of Jacob’s ladder, and he would ask the number of the steps.
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Talk with a man out at a window!–a proper saying!
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Talk without truth is the hollow brass; talk without love is like the tinkling cymbal, and when it does not tinkle it jingles, and when it does not jingle, it jars.
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Talkers and futile persons are commonly vain and credulous withal, for he that talketh what he knoweth will also talk what he knoweth not; therefore set it down that a habit of secrecy is both politic and moral: and in this part it is good, that a man’s face gives his tongue leave to speak; for the discovery of a man’s self by the tracts of his countenance is a great weakness, and betraying by how much it is many times more marked and believed than a man’s words.
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Talking is one of the fine arts–the noblest, the most important, the most difficult–and its fluent harmonies may be spoiled by the intrusion of a single harsh note.
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Talking over the things which you have read with your companions fixes them on the mind.
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Talking, is a digestive process which is absolutely essential to the mental constitution of the man who devours many books.
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The common fluency of speech in many men, and most women, is owing to a scarcity of matter and a scarcity of words; for whosoever is a master of language, and hath a mind full of ideas, will be apt, in speaking, to hesitate upon the choice of both.
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The ear and the eye are the mind’s receivers; but the tongue is only busy in expending the treasures received. It, therefore, the revenues of the mind be uttered as fast or faster than they are received, it must needs be bare, and can never lay up for purchase.
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The greatest talkers in the days of peace have been the most pusillanimous in the day of temptation.
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The honorablest part of talk is to give the occasion, and again to moderate and pass to somewhat else; for then a man leads the dance.
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The inexhaustible talk that was the flow of a golden sea of eloquence and wisdom.
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