Old Master Quotes
Collection of top 17 famous quotes about Old Master
Old Master Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Old Master quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Shall I crack any of those old jokes, master, At which the audience never fail to laugh?
— Aristophanes
A young mistress is better than an old master.
— H.G.Wells
The old proverb, applied to fire and water, may with equal truth be applied to the imagination - it is a good servant, but a bad master.
— Letitia Elizabeth Landon
seemed constant, even as to old opinions. Shelly now held a master's degree from Notre
— Joseph Wambaugh
passacaglia by the old master Buxtehude.
— Hermann Hesse
The thing is to become a master and in your old age to acquire the courage to do what children did when they knew nothing.
— Ernest Hemingway,
John considered a young master as the natural enemy of an old servant, and young people in general as a poor contrivance for carrying on the world.
— George Eliot
Paradise endangered: garden snakes and mice are appearing in the shadowy corners of Dutch Old Master paintings.
— Mason Cooley
Conversion is a change of masters. Will we not do as much for our new master, the Lord Jesus, as we did once for our old tyrant lusts?
— Charles Spurgeon
The Master said, 'If a man keeps cherishing his old knowledge, so as continually to be acquiring new, he may be a teacher of others.
— Anonymous
To know how to grow old is the master work of wisdom, and one of the most difficult chapters in the great art of living.
— Herman Melville
It was heartbreaking to see old Ossis trying to ape the thinking of Wessis, trying to master the lingo of capitalist self-promotion.
— Jonathan Franzen
You have to follow the old rule for a while. In fact, once you master the old rule, you are then the master-and masters get to change things.
— Peter McWilliams
October sunshine bathed the park with such a melting light that it had the dimmed impressive look of a landscape by an old master.
— Elizabeth Enright
'Think simple' as my old master used to say - meaning reduce the whole of its parts into the simplest terms, getting back to first principles.
— Frank Lloyd Wright
Don't I what?' said Peg. 'Love your old master too much - ' 'No, not a bit too much,' said Peg.
— Charles Dickens