ARGUMENT QUOTES V

quotations about arguments & arguing

Altogether they puzzle me quite,
They all seem wrong and they all seem right.

ROBERT BUCHANAN

Fine Weather on the Digentia


Bombs to settle arguments, the order of the boot
Can you hear them crying in the rubble of Beirut?

THE SPECIALS

"War Crimes"


Be calm in arguing: for fierceness makes
Error a fault and truth discourtesy....
Calmness is a great advantage: he that lets
Another chafe, may warm him at his fire.

GEORGE HERBERT

The Church-Porch


Testimony is like the shot of a long-bow, which owes its efficacy to the force of the shooter; argument is like the shot of the cross-bow, equally forcible whether discharged by a giant or a dwarf.

ROBERT BOYLE

attributed, A Treatise on Facts as Subjects of Inquiry by a Jury


It doesn't matter if I know of what I speak
The arguer's strong if the argument's weak
It's persistance, insistence, and a nice healthy winning streak
I got the last word in, I'm happy to announce
I got the last word in and that's all that counts

SICKO

Last Word


We arg'ed the thing at breakfast, we arg'ed the thing at tea,
And the more we arg'ed the question, the more we didn't agree.

WILL CARLETON

Betsy and I Are Out


Though we cannot out-vote them, we will out-argue them.

SAMUEL JOHNSON

Life of Samuel Johnson


Who over-refines his argument brings himself to grief.

PETRARCH

To Laura in Life


Data levels all arguments.

ANTHONY W. RICHARDSON

Full-Scale


It were endless to dispute upon everything that is disputable.

WILLIAM PENN

Fruits of Solitude


So high at last the contest rose,
From words they almost came to blows.

JAMES MERRICK

The Chameleon


Argument, of course, is the whole point of history. Disagreement; my word against yours; this evidence against that. If there were such a thing as absolute truth the debate would lose its lustre. I, for one, would no longer be interested.

PENELOPE LIVELY

Moon Tiger


He'd undertake to prove, by force
Of argument, a man's no horse;
He'd prove a buzzard is no fowl,
And that a Lord may be an owl,
A calf an Alderman, a goose a Justice,
And rooks, Committee-men or Trustees.

SAMUEL BUTLER

Hudibras


A keen wit stabs harder than a finely honed argument.

RACHEL HARTMAN

Tess of the Road


Much may be said on both sides.

HENRY FIELDING

Covent Garden Tragedy


The tree of knowledge blasted by dispute,
Produces saples leaves instead of fruit.

JOHN DENHAM

Progress of Learning