Author: SO GOOD QUOTES

  • Let all persons of all conditions avoid all delicacy and niceness in their clothing or diet, because such softness engages them upon great misspendings of their time, while they dress and comb out all their opportunities of their morning devotion, and half the day’s severity, and sleep out the care and provision for their souls.

    —Rev. Jeremy Taylor, CARE OF OUR TIME. -Rules for employing our time…,The Whole Works of the Right Rev. Jeremy Taylor, Volume 3. THE RULE AND EXERCISES OF HOLY LIVING AND DYING….: The Rule and Exercises of Holy Living and Dying

  • Secondly, eat not hastily and impatiently, but with such decent and timely action that your eating be a human act, subject to deliberation and choice; and that you may consider in the eating, whereas he that eats hastily cannot consider particularly of the circumstances, degrees, and little accidents and chances that happen in his meal, but may contract many little indecencies, and be suddenly surprised.

    —Rev. Jeremy Taylor, On Christian Sobriety -Measures of temperance in eating..,The Whole Works of the Right Rev. Jeremy Taylor, Volume 3. THE RULE AND EXERCISES OF HOLY LIVING AND DYING….: The Rule and Exercises of Holy Living and Dying

  • make nature to be your limit.

    —Rev. Jeremy Taylor, The House of Feasting The Whole Works of the Rt. Rev. Jeremy Taylor, Volume 1

  • But go to the crib, thou glutton, and there it will be found that when the charger is clean, yet nature’s rules were not prevaricated; the beast eats up all his provisions because they are natural and simple ; or if he leaves any, it is because he desires no more than till his needs be served ; and neither can a man (unless he be diseased in body or in spirit, in affection or in habit) eat more of natural and simple food than to the satisfaction of his natural necessities. He that drinks a draught or two of water and cools his thirst, drinks no more till his thirst returns; but he that drinks wine, drinks again longer than it is needful, even so long as it is pleasant. Nature best provides for herself when she spreads her own table ; but when men have gotten superinduced habits, and new necessities, art that brought them in must maintain them, but “wantonness and folly wait at the table, and sickness and death take away.”

    —Rev. Jeremy Taylor, The House of Feasting The Whole Works of the Rt. Rev. Jeremy Taylor, Volume 1

  • ” This hunger must be natural,” not artificial and provoked ; for many men make necessities to themselves, and then think they are bound to provide for them. 

    —Rev. Jeremy Taylor, The House of Feasting The Whole Works of the Rt. Rev. Jeremy Taylor, Volume 1

  • by faring deliciously every day, men become senseless of the evils of mankind, inapprehensive of the troubles of their brethren, unconcerned in the changes of the world, and the cries of the poor, the hunger of the fatherless, and the thirst of widows

    —Rev. Jeremy Taylor, The House of Feasting The Whole Works of the Rt. Rev. Jeremy Taylor, Volume 1

  • It cannot be constantly pleasant : for necessity and want makes the appetite, and the appetite makes the pleasure; and men are infinitely mistaken when they despise the poor man’s table, and wonder how he can endure that life, that is maintained without the exercise of pleasure, and that he can suffer his day’s labour, and recompense it with unsavoury herbs, and potent garlic, with water-cresses, and bread coloured like the ashes that gave it hardness : he hath a hunger that gives it deliciousness.


    —Rev. Jeremy Taylor, The House of Feasting .The Whole Works of the Rt. Rev. Jeremy Taylor, Volume 1

  • He that feasts every day, feasts no day. And however you treat yourselves, sometimes you will need to be refreshed beyond it; but what will you have for a festival, if you wear crowns every day even a perpetual fulness will make you glad to beg pleasure from emptiness, and variety from poverty or a humble table. 

    —Rev. Jeremy Taylor, The House of Feasting .The Whole Works of the Rt. Rev. Jeremy Taylor, Volume 1

  • “I feed sweetly upon bread and water, those sweet and easy provisions of the body, and I defy the pleasures of costly provisions;” —Epicurus  and the man was so confident that he had the advantage over wealthy tables, that he thought himself happy as the immortal gods, for these provisions are easy, they are to be gotten without amazing cares ; no man needs to flatter if he can live as nature did intend.

    —Rev. Jeremy Taylor, The House of Feasting .The Whole Works of the Rt. Rev. Jeremy Taylor, Volume 1

  • If you haven’t said ‘no’ in time, you are in for a fight.

    —Met. Anthony Bloom, Beginning To Pray