Author: Charles Brockden Brown
Cites
- NULL (4)
- IN: Wieland and Memoirs of Carwin the Biloquist (1805) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: From Virtue's blissful paths away
The double-tongued are sure to stray;
Good is a forth-right journey still,
And mazy paths but lead to ill.
FROM: NULL, (None), NULL, NULL
- IN: Wieland (1811) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: From virtue’s blissful paths away:
The double-tongued are sure to stray;
Good is a forth-right journey still,
And mazy paths but lead to ill.
FROM: NULL, (None), [NA], NULL
- IN: Ormond; or the Secret witness (1800) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: Those who plot the destruction of others, very often fall themselves the vićtims.
FROM: NULL, (None), NULL, NULL
- Charles Brockden Brown (2)
- IN: Wieland (1798) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: From Virtue's blissful paths away The double-tongued are sure to stray; Good is a forth-right journey still, And mazy paths but lead to ill.
FROM: Wieland, (1798), Novel, US
- IN: Wieland: or, The Transformation: An American Tale, (1798) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: From virtue's blissful paths away
The double-tongued are sure to stray;
Good is a forth-right journey still,
but mazy paths but lead to ill.
FROM: NULL, (1798), Author, NULL
- Plato (1)
- IN: Ormond; Or, The Secret Witness (1799) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Sæpe intereunt allis meditantes necene.
"Those who plot the destruction of others, very often fall themselves the victims."
FROM: Phaedrus, (-370), NULL, Greece
Cited by
- Charles Brockden Brown (2)
- IN: Wieland (1798) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: From Virtue's blissful paths away The double-tongued are sure to stray; Good is a forth-right journey still, And mazy paths but lead to ill.
FROM: Wieland, (1798), Novel, US
- IN: Wieland: or, The Transformation: An American Tale, (1798) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: From virtue's blissful paths away
The double-tongued are sure to stray;
Good is a forth-right journey still,
but mazy paths but lead to ill.
FROM: NULL, (1798), Author, NULL