| Author |
Quotes |
| Charles Dickens | With affection beaming in one eye and calculation shining out of the other. |
| Dante Alighieri | Not in mine eyes alone in Paradise. |
| Dante Alighieri | Their eyes seem'd rings from whence the gems were gone. |
| Dorothy Dix | It is only the women whose eyes have been washed clear with tears who get the broad vision that makes them little sisters to all the world. |
| Elizabeth Barrett Browning | Eyes of gentianellas azure, Staring, winking at the skies. |
| Francis William Bourdillon | The night has a thousand eyes, And the day but one; Yet the light of the bright world dies With the dying sun. The mind has a thousand eyes, And the heart but one: Yet the light of a whole life dies When love is done. |
| H Powers | An animal will always look for a person's intentions by looking them right in the eyes. |
| Hartley Coleridge | The love light in her eye. |
| Horace | What we learn only through the ears makes less impression upon our minds than what is presented to the trustworthy eye. |
| Jean Toomer | No eyes that have seen beauty ever lose their sight. |
| Jewish Proverb | What you don't see with your eyes, don't witness with your mouth. |
| Philip James Bailey | There are whole veins of diamonds in thine eyes, Might furnish crowns for all the Queens of earth. |
| Phoebe Cary | There are eyes half defiant, Half meek and compliant; Black eyes, with a wondrous, witching charm To bring us good or to work with harm. |
| Publilius Syrus | The eyes are not responsible when the mind does the seeing. |
| Richard Crashaw | Eyes, that displaces The neighbor diamond, and out-faces That sun-shine by their own sweet graces. |
| Robert Burton | The Chinese say that we Europeans have one eye, they themselves two, all the world else is blinde. |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge | My eyes make pictures, when they are shut. |
| Thomas Bailey Aldrich | In her eyes a thought Grew sweeter and sweeter, deepening like the dawn, A mystical forewarning. |
| Thomas Carlyle | In every object there is inexhaustible meaning; the eye sees in it what the eye brings means of seeing. |
| Thomas Carlyle | Weak eyes are fondest of glittering objects. |
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