Page:Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations (1922).djvu/500

 462 LIVERY LIVERY

LOSS

{{Hoyt quote | num = | text = The lungs of London. (Parks) Windham. Debate in House of Commons. June 30, 1808, attributes it to Lord Chatham. | seealso = (See also {{sc|Dickens) LOSS Losers must have leave to speak. Colley Cibber—The Rival Fools. Act I. L. 17. | author = | work = | place = | note = | topic = | page = 462 }}

{{Hoyt quote | num = | text = Our wasted oil unprofitably burns, Like hidden lamps in/old sepulchral urns. | author = Cowper | work = Conversation. L. 357. Referring to the story told by Pancirollus and others, of the lamp which burned for fifteen hundred years in the tomb of Tollia, daughter of Cicero. | seealso = (See also {{sc|Butler}} under {{sc|Love}}) | place = | note = | topic = | page = 462 }}

{{Hoyt quote | num = | text = For 'tis a truth well known to most, That whatsoever thing is lost. We seek it, ere it comes to light, In every cranny but the right. | author = Cowper | work = The Retired Cat. L 95. | place = | note = | topic = | page = 462 }}