Choose language

Forgot your password?

Need a Spoofbox account? Create one for FREE!

No subscription or hidden extras

Login

Thomas Fuller

Read through the most famous quotes from Thomas Fuller




A good garden may have some weeds.


— Thomas Fuller


#garden #good #may #some #weeds

If it were not for hopes, the heart would break.


— Thomas Fuller


#break #heart #hopes #were #would

An ounce of cheerfulness is worth a pound of sadness to serve God with.


— Thomas Fuller


#god #ounce #pound #sadness #serve

There is nothing that so much gratifies an ill tongue as when it finds an angry heart.


— Thomas Fuller


#angry #finds #gratifies #heart #ill

Bad excuses are worse than none.


— Thomas Fuller


#excuses #none #than #worse

Travel makes a wise man better, and a fool worse.


— Thomas Fuller


#fool #makes #man #travel #wise

Vows made in storms are forgotten in calm.


— Thomas Fuller


#forgotten #made #storms #vows

Light, God's eldest daughter, is a principal beauty in a building.


— Thomas Fuller


#beauty #building #daughter #eldest #god

He's my friend that speaks well of me behind my back.


— Thomas Fuller


#behind #friend #me #my friend #speaks

A gift, with a kind countenance, is a double present.


— Thomas Fuller


#countenance #double #gift #kind #present






About Thomas Fuller

Thomas Fuller Quotes




Did you know about Thomas Fuller?

Their son John baptized at Broadwindsor by his father on 6 June 1641 was afterwards of Sidney Sussex College edited the Worthies of England 1662 and became rector of Great Wakering Essex where he died in 1687. For a short time he preached with success at the Inns of Court and then at the invitation of the master of the Savoy Walter Balcanqual and the brotherhood of that foundation became lecturer at their chapel of St Mary Savoy. His first publiThomas Fullerd volume of sermons appeared in 1640 under the title of Joseph's party-coloured Coat.

He is now remembered for his writings particularly his Worthies of England publiThomas Fullerd after his death. He was a prolific author and one of the first English writers able to live by his pen (and his many patrons).

back to top