What though wit tickles, tickling is unsafe, If still tis painful while it makes us laugh; Who, for the poor renown of being smart, Would leave a sting within a brothers heart? Dr. Young.Sat. II. Line 111.
It is meat and drink to me to see a clown: By my troth, we that have good wits have much to answer for. Shakespeare.As You Like It, Act V. Scene 1. (Touchstone.)
We grant, altho he had much wit, He was very shy of using it, As being loath to wear it out, And therefore bore it not about, Unless on holidays or so, As men their best apparel do. Butler.Hudibras, Part I. Canto I. Line 45.
Wit and genius pass often amidst us without being unpacked, as Montesquieu says. Chateaubriand. [See Ramages Beautiful Thoughts from the French, page 66.]
One wit like a knuckle of ham in soup, gives a zest and flavour to the dish, but more than one serves only to spoil the pottage. Smollett.Melford to Sir Watkin Phillips, June 5, Humphrey Clinker.
We six now were all at supper, all in good-humour. Champaign was the word, and wit flew about the room like a pack of losing cards. Colley Cibber.Love Makes a Man, Act I.
[A happy phrase (says Sir James Mackintosh) lost to the language except on familiar occasions, or by a master in the art of combining words. See his Life of More, 437.]
Ive searchd records and cannot find that Magna Charta does allow a subject to live by his wits; there is no statute for it. Sir Wm. DAvenant.The Wits, Act IV. Scene 1.