The road to resolution lies by doubt;
The next way home's the farthest way about."
We find it in this couplet in Butler:
"For discords make the sweetest airs,
And curses are a kind of prayers."
Rochester has it in the line—
"An eminent fool must be a man of parts."
It occurs in Junius's remark—
"Your Majesty may learn hereafter how nearly the slave and the tyrant are allied."
and in the following well-known passage in the same writer: