| C.N. Douglas, comp. Forty Thousand Quotations: Prose and Poetical. 1917. | | | | Pen |
| | | The pen became a clarion. Longfellow. | 1 |
| Pens carry further than rifled cannon. Bayard Taylor. | 2 |
| The pen is the lever that moves the world. Talmage. | 3 |
| The pen is the tongue of the mind. Cervantes. | 4 |
| The chisel is the pen of the sculptor. Pius IX. | 5 |
| | Take away the sword; |
| States can be saved without it; bring the pen. |
Bulwer-Lytton. | 6 |
| | Ill make thee famous by my pen, |
| And glorious by my sword. |
Montrose. | 7 |
| I had rather stand the shock of a basilisk than the fury of a merciless pen. Sir T. Browne. | 8 |
| | In days of yore, the poets pen |
| From wing of bird was plunderd, |
| Perhaps of goose, but now and then, |
| From Joves own eagle sunderd. |
| But now, metallic pens disclose |
| Alone the poets numbers; |
| In iron inspiration glows, |
| Or with the poet slumbers. |
John Quincy Adams. | 9 |
| | Oh! natures noblest giftmy grey goose quill: |
| Slave of my thoughts, obedient to my will, |
| Torn from thy parent bird to form a pen, |
| That mighty instrument of little men! |
Byron. | 10 |
| | Beneath the rule of men entirely great, |
| The pen is mightier than the sword. Behold |
| The arch enchanters wand! itself a nothing! |
| But taking sorcery from the master hand, |
| To paralyze the Cæsars, and to strike |
| The loud earth breathless! |
Bulwer-Lytton. | 11 |
| No man was more foolish when he had not a pen in his hand (than Goldsmith), or more wise when he had. Dr. Johnson. | 12 |
| The strokes of the pen need deliberation as much as those of the sword need swiftness. Julia Ward Howe. | 13 |
| The pen has shaken nations. Tupper. | 14 |
| | The poets pen is the true divining rod |
| Which trembles towards the inner founts of feeling; |
| Bringing to light and use, else hid from all, |
| The many sweet clear sources which we have |
| Of good and beauty in our own deep bosoms; |
| And marks the variations of all mind |
| As does the needle. |
Bailey. | 15 |
| The pen is a formidable weapon; but a man can kill himself with it a great deal more easily than he can other people. G. D. Prentice. | 16 | | |
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