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| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 02:31:12 -0700 |
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| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 02:31:12 -0700 |
| commit | 4e5b5d7b3cfd64caa1674bc49b849a880c1d07ac (patch) | |
| tree | 728f5b5c649e5bbcca4ababd2e50e7a0762a9479 | |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/26604-8.txt b/26604-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..75d1929 --- /dev/null +++ b/26604-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11227 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearls of Thought, by Maturin M. Ballou + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Pearls of Thought + +Author: Maturin M. Ballou + +Release Date: September 13, 2008 [EBook #26604] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEARLS OF THOUGHT *** + + + + +Produced by Julia Miller and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + +---------------------------------+ + |Transcriber's note: In this etext| + | | + |~ represents bold and | + |_ represents italic. | + +---------------------------------+ + + + + + PEARLS OF THOUGHT. + + BY + + MATURIN M. BALLOU, + + AUTHOR OF THE "TREASURY OF THOUGHT," "HISTORY OF CUBA," "BIOGRAPHY OF + HOSEA BALLOU," ETC., ETC. + + _Infinite riches in a little room._--MARLOWE. + + BOSTON: HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY. The Riverside Press, Cambridge. + 1881. + + COPYRIGHT, 1880, + + By MATURIN M. BALLOU. + + _All rights reserved._ + + _The Riverside Press, Cambridge:_ Electrotyped and Printed by H. O. + Houghton & Co. + + * * * * * + + To + + MY WIFE, + + THE PATIENT AND CHEERFUL ASSOCIATE OF MY STUDIES, + + AFTER MORE THAN FORTY YEARS OF + + HAPPY COMPANIONSHIP, + + This Volume + + IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED + + BY + + THE COMPILER. + + Writers of an abler sort, + Whose wit well managed, and whose classic style, + Give Truth a lustre, and make Wisdom smile. + + COWPER. + + General observations drawn from particulars are the jewels of + knowledge, comprehending great store in a little room. + + LOCKE. + + Out of monuments, names, wordes, proverbs, traditions, private + recordes, and evidences, fragments of stories, passages of bookes, + and the like, we doe save and recover somewhat from the deluge of + time. + + BACON. + + I would fain coin wisdom,--mould it, I mean, into maxims, proverbs, + sentences, that can easily be retained and transmitted. + + JOUBERT. + + + + +PREFACE. + + A verse may find him whom a sermon flies. + + GEORGE HERBERT. + + +The volume herewith presented is the natural result of the compiler's +habit of transferring and classifying significant passages from known +authors. No special course of reading has been pursued, the thoughts +being culled from foreign and native tongues--from the moss-grown tomes +of ancient literature and the verdant fields of to-day. The terse +periods of others, appropriately quoted, become in a degree our own; and +a just estimation is very nearly allied to originality, or, as the +author of _Vanity Fair_ tells us, "Next to excellence is the +appreciation of it." Without indorsing the idea of a modern authority +that the multiplicity of facts and writings is becoming so great that +every available book must soon be composed of extracts only, still it is +believed that such a volume as "Pearls of Thought" will serve the +interest of general literature, and especially stimulate the mind of the +thoughtful reader to further research. The pleasant duty of the +compiler has been to follow the expressive idea of Colton, and he has +made the same use of books as a bee does of flowers,--she steals the +sweets from them, but does not injure them. + +To the observant reader many familiar quotations will naturally occur, +the absence of which may seem a singular omission in such a connection +and classification, but doubtless such excerpts will be found in the +"Treasury of Thought," a much more extended work by the same author, to +which this volume is properly a supplement. Of course care has been +taken not to repeat any portion of the previous collection. + + M. M. B. + + + + +PEARLS OF THOUGHT. + + +A. + +~Ability.~--Natural abilities can almost compensate for the want of every +kind of cultivation, but no cultivation of the mind can make up for the +want of natural abilities.--_Schopenhaufer._ + +Words must be fitted to a man's mouth,--'twas well said of the fellow +that was to make a speech for my Lord Mayor, when he desired to take +measure of his lordship's mouth.--_Selden._ + +~Absence.~--Absence in love is like water upon fire; a little quickens, +but much extinguishes it.--_Hannah More._ + +Absence from those we love is self from self! A deadly +banishment.--_Shakespeare._ + +Short retirement urges sweet return.--_Milton._ + +Whatever is genuine in social relations endures despite of time, error, +absence, and destiny; and that which has no inherent vitality had better +die at once. A great poet has truly declared that constancy is no +virtue, but a fact.--_Tuckerman._ + +Frozen by distance.--_Wordsworth._ + +Short absence quickens love, long absence kills it.--_Mirabeau._ + +We often wish most for our friends when they are absent. Even in married +life love is not diminished by distance. A man, like a burning-glass, +should be placed at a certain distance from the object he wishes to +dissolve, in order that the proper focus may be obtained.--_Richter._ + +~Abstinence.~--Refrain to-night, and that shall lend a hand of easiness to +the next abstinence; the next more easy; for use almost can change the +stamp of nature, and either curb the devil, or throw him out with +wondrous potency.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Abuse.~--Abuse is not so dangerous when there is no vehicle of wit or +delicacy, no subtle conveyance. The difference between coarse and +refined abuse is as the difference between being bruised by a club and +wounded by a poisoned arrow.--_Johnson._ + +~Accident.~--What reason, like the careful ant, draws laboriously +together, the wind of accident collects in one brief +moment.--_Schiller._ + +What men call accident is God's own part.--_P. J. Bailey._ + +~Acquirements.~--Every noble acquisition is attended with its risks: he +who fears to encounter the one must not expect to obtain the +other.--_Metastasio._ + +~Action.~--Action can have no effect upon reasonable minds. It may augment +noise, but it never can enforce argument. If you speak to a dog, you use +action; you hold up your hand thus, because he is a brute; and in +proportion as men are removed from brutes, action will have the less +influence upon them.--_Johnson._ + +Heaven ne'er helps the man who will not act.--_Sophocles._ + +When Demosthenes was asked what was the first part of an orator, what +the second, and what the third? he answered, "Action." The same may I +say. If any should ask me what is the first, the second, the third part +of a Christian, I must answer, "Action."--_T. Brooks._ + +Our best conjectures, as to the true spring of actions, are very +uncertain; the actions themselves are all we must pretend to know from +history. That Cæsar was murdered by twenty-four conspirators, I doubt +not; but I very much doubt whether their love of liberty was the sole +cause.--_Chesterfield._ + +Action is generally defective, and proves an abortion without previous +contemplation. Contemplation generates, action propagates.--_Owen +Feltham._ + +Remember you have not a sinew whose law of strength is not action; you +have not a faculty of body, mind, or soul, whose law of improvement is +not energy.--_E. B. Hall._ + +Our actions must clothe us with an immortality loathsome or +glorious.--_Colton._ + +Outward actions can never give a just estimate of us, since there are +many perfections of a man which are not capable of appearing in +actions.--_Addison._ + +Mark this well, ye proud men of action! Ye are, after all, nothing but +unconscious instruments of the men of thought.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +~Actors.~--Players, sir! I look upon them as no better than creatures set +upon tables and joint stools to make faces and produce laughter, like +dancing dogs. But, sir, you will allow that some players are better than +others? Yes, sir; as some dogs dance better than others.--_Johnson._ + +Each under his borrowed guise the actor belongs to himself. He has put +on a mask, beneath it his real face still exists; he has thrown himself +into a foreign individuality, which in some sense forms a shelter to the +integrity of his own character; he may indeed wear festive attire, but +his mourning is beneath it; he may smile, divert, act, his soul is still +his own; his inner life is undisturbed; no indiscreet question will lift +the veil, no coarse hand will burst open the gates of the +sanctuary.--_Countess de Gasparin._ + +Oh, there be players that I have seen play, and heard others praise, and +that highly, not to speak it profanely, that, neither having the accent +of Christians, nor the gait of Christian, pagan, or man, have so +strutted and bellowed, that I have thought some of Nature's journeymen +had made men, and not made them well, they imitated humanity so +abominably!--_Shakespeare._ + +An actor should take lessons from a painter and a sculptor. For an actor +to represent a Greek hero it is imperative he should have thoroughly +studied those antique statues which have lasted to our day, and mastered +the particular grace they exhibited in their postures, whether sitting, +standing, or walking. Nor should he make attitude his only study. He +should highly develop his mind by an assiduous study of the best +writers, ancient and modern, which will enable him not only to +understand his parts, but to communicate a nobler coloring to his +manners and mien.--_Goethe._ + +~Admiration.~--Admiration and love are like being intoxicated with +champagne; judgment and friendship like being enlivened.--_Johnson._ + +Season your admiration for awhile.--_Shakespeare._ + +I wonder whether the subtle measuring of forces will ever come to +measuring the force there would be in one beautiful woman whose mind was +as noble as her face was beautiful--who made a man's passion for her +rush in one current with all the great aims of his life.--_George +Eliot._ + +Admiration is the base of ignorance.--_Balthasar Gracian._ + +It is better in some respects to be admired by those with whom you live, +than to be loved by them. And this not on account of any gratification +of vanity, but because admiration is so much more tolerant than +love.--_Arthur Helps._ + +Admiration is a forced tribute, and to extort it from mankind (envious +and ignorant as they are) they must be taken unawares.--_James +Northcote._ + +~Adversity.~--If adversity hath killed his thousands, prosperity hath +killed his ten thousands; therefore adversity is to be preferred. The +one deceives, the other instructs; the one miserably happy, the other +happily miserable; and therefore many philosophers have voluntarily +sought adversity and so much commend it in their precepts.--_Burton._ + +Adversity borrows its sharpest sting from our impatience.--_Bishop +Horne._ + +Adversity is like the period of the former and of the latter +rain,--cold, comfortless, unfriendly to man and to animal; yet from that +season have their birth the flower and the fruit, the date, the rose, +and the pomegranate.--_Walter Scott._ + +Two powerful destroyers: Time and Adversity.--_A. de Musset._ + +Our dependence upon God ought to be so entire and absolute that we +should never think it necessary, in any kind of distress, to have +recourse to human consolation.--_Thomas à Kempis._ + +Adversity, like winter weather, is of use to kill those vermin which the +summer of prosperity is apt to produce and nourish.--_Arrowsmith._ + +Adversity, how blunt are all the arrows of thy quiver in comparison with +those of Guilt!--_Blair._ + +~Advice.~--People are sooner reclaimed by the side wind of a surprise than +by downright admonition.--_L'Estrange._ + +Agreeable advice is seldom useful advice.--_Massillon._ + +~Affectation.~--All affectation proceeds from the supposition of +possessing something better than the rest of the world possesses. Nobody +is vain of possessing two legs and two arms, because that is the +precise quantity of either sort of limb which everybody +possesses.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Affectation is certain deformity.--_Blair._ + +~Affection.~--None of the affections have been noted to fascinate and +bewitch, but love and envy.--_Bacon._ + +None are so desolate but something dear, dearer than self, possesses or +possess'd.--_Byron._ + +Those childlike caresses which are the bent of every sweet woman, who +has begun by showering kisses on the hard pate of her bald doll, +creating a happy soul within that woodenness from the wealth of her own +love.--_George Eliot._ + +God give us leisure for these rights of love.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Afflictions.~--Before an affliction is digested, consolation comes too +soon; and after it is digested, it comes too late; but there is a mark +between these two, as fine, almost, as a hair, for a comforter to take +aim at.--_Sterne._ + +Stars shine brightest in the darkest night; torches are better for +beating; grapes come not to the proof till they come to the press; +spices smell best when bruised; young trees root the faster for shaking; +gold looks brighter for scouring; juniper smells sweetest in the fire; +the palm-tree proves the better for pressing; chamomile, the more you +tread it, the more you spread it. Such is the condition of all God's +children: they are then most triumphant when most tempted; most glorious +when most afflicted.--_Bogatzky._ + +That which thou dost not understand when thou readest, thou shalt +understand in the day of thy visitation. For many secrets of religion +are not perceived till they be felt, and are not felt but in the day of +a great calamity.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Nothing so much increases one's reverence for others as a great sorrow +to one's self. It teaches one the depths of human nature. In happiness +we are shallow, and deem others so.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Affliction, like the iron-smith, shapes as it smites.--_Bovée._ + +Afflictions sent by Providence melt the constancy of the noble-minded +but confirm the obduracy of the vile. The same furnace that hardens clay +liquefies gold; and in the strong manifestations of divine power Pharoah +found his punishment, but David his pardon.--_Colton._ + +Though all afflictions are evils in themselves, yet they are good for +us, because they discover to us our disease and tend to our +cure.--_Tillotson._ + +To love all mankind, from the greatest to the lowest (or meanest), a +cheerful state of being is required; but in order to see into mankind, +into life, and, still more, into ourselves, suffering is +requisite.--_Richter._ + +Count up man's calamities and who would seem happy? But in truth, +calamity leaves fully half of your life untouched.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Age.~--Wrinkles are the tomb of love.--_Sarros in._ + +It cuts one sadly to see the grief of old people; they've no way o' +working it off; and the new spring brings no new shoots out on the +withered tree.--_George Eliot._ + +Autumnal green.--_Dryden._ + +Ye old men, brief is the space of life allotted to you; pass it as +pleasantly as ye can, not grieving from morning till eve. Since time +knows not how to preserve our hopes, but, attentive to its own concerns, +flies away.--_Euripides._ + +The Grecian ladies counted their age from their marriage, not their +birth.--_Homer._ + +The vices of old age have the stiffness of it too; and as it is the +unfittest time to learn in, so the unfitness of it to unlearn will be +found much greater.--_South._ + +Old men's eyes are like old men's memories; they are strongest for +things a long way off.--_George Eliot._ + +Serene, and safe from passion's stormy rage, how calm they glide into +the port of age!--_Shenstone._ + +Providence gives us notice by sensible declensions, that we may +disengage from the world by degrees.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +Age oppresses by the same degrees that it instructs us, and permits not +that our mortal members, which are frozen with our years, should retain +the vigor of our youth.--_Dryden._ + +Old age adds to the respect due to virtue, but it takes nothing from the +contempt inspired by vice, for age whitens only the hair.--_J. Petit +Senn._ + +Up to forty a woman has only forty springs in her heart. After that age +she has only forty winters.--_Arsène Houssaye._ + +I love everything that's old. Old friends, old times, old manners, old +books, old wine.--_Goldsmith._ + +Let us respect gray hairs, especially our own.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +There are two things which grow stronger in the breast of man, in +proportion as he advances in years: the love of country and religion. +Let them be never so much forgotten in youth, they sooner or later +present themselves to us arrayed in all their charms, and excite in the +recesses of our hearts an attachment justly due to their +beauty.--_Chateaubriand._ + +~Agitation.~--Agitation is the marshaling of the conscience of a nation to +mould its laws.--_Sir R. Peel._ + +Agitation is the method that plants the school by the side of the +ballot-box.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +Agitation prevents rebellion, keeps the peace, and secures progress. +Every step she gains is gained forever. Muskets are the weapons of +animals. Agitation is the atmosphere of the brains.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +~Agriculture.~--Agriculture is the foundation of manufactures, since the +productions of nature are the materials of art.--_Gibbon._ + +Agriculture not only gives riches to a nation but the only riches she +can call her own.--_Johnson._ + +Let the farmer for evermore be honored in his calling, for they who +labor in the earth are the chosen people of God.--_Thomas Jefferson._ + +~Allegory.~--Allegories and spiritual significations, when applied to +faith, and that seldom, are laudable; but when they are drawn from the +life and conversation, they are dangerous, and, when men make too many +of them, pervert the doctrine of faith. Allegories are fine ornaments, +but not of proof.--_Luther._ + +The allegory of a sophist is always screwed; it crouches and bows like a +snake, which is never straight, whether she go, creep, or lie still; +only when she is dead, she is straight enough.--_Luther._ + +~Ambition.~--It was not till after the terrible passage of the bridge of +Lodi that the idea entered my mind that I might become a decisive actor +in the political arena. Then arose for the first time the spark of great +ambition.--_Napoleon._ + +Well is it known that ambition can creep as well as soar. The pride of +no person in a flourishing condition is more justly to be dreaded than +that of him who is mean and cringing under a doubtful and unprosperous +fortune.--_Burke._ + +If there is ever a time to be ambitious, it is not when ambition is +easy, but when it is hard. Fight in darkness; fight when you are down; +die hard, and you won't die at all.--_Beecher._ + +By that sin angels fell.--_Shakespeare._ + +Where ambition can be so happy as to cover its enterprises, even to the +person himself, under the appearance of principle, it is the most +incurable and inflexible of all human passions.--_Hume._ + +An ardent thirst of honor; a soul unsatisfied with all it has done, and +an unextinguished desire of doing more.--_Dryden._ + +Ambition is but the evil shadow of aspiration.--_George MacDonald._ + +Think not ambition wise, because 'tis brave.--_Sir W. Davenant._ + +Soar not too high to fall, but stoop to rise.--_Massinger._ + +~America.~--Child of the earth's old age.--_L. E. Langdon._ + +The name--American, must always exalt the pride of +patriotism.--_Washington._ + +In America we see a country of which it has been truly said that in no +other are there so few men of great learning and so few men of great +ignorance.--_Buckle._ + +America is as yet in the youth and gristle of her strength.--_Burke._ + +If all Europe were to become a prison, America would still present a +loop-hole of escape; and, God be praised! that loop-hole is larger than +the dungeon itself.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Ere long, thine every stream shall find a tongue, land of the many +waters.--_Hoffman._ + +America is rising with a giant's strength. Its bones are yet but +cartilages.--_Fisher Ames._ + +~Amusement.~--Amusement is the waking sleep of labor. When it absorbs +thought, patience, and strength that might have been seriously employed, +it loses its distinctive character, and becomes the task-master of +idleness.--_Willmott._ + +~Analogy.~--Analogy, although it is not infallible, is yet that telescope +of the mind by which it is marvelously assisted in the discovery of both +physical and moral truth.--_Colton._ + +~Anarchy.~--The choking, sweltering, deadly, and killing rule of no rule; +the consecration of cupidity and braying of folly, and dim stupidity and +baseness, in most of the affairs of men. Slop-shirts attainable +three-half-pence cheaper by the ruin of living bodies and immortal +souls.--_Carlyle._ + +~Ancestry.~--We take rank by descent. Such of us as have the longest +pedigree, and are therefore the furthest removed from the first who made +the fortune and founded the family, we are the noblest. The nearer to +the fountain the fouler the stream: and that first ancestor who has +soiled his fingers by labor is no better than a parvenu.--_Froude._ + +Breed is stronger than pasture.--_George Eliot._ + +The glory of ancestors sheds a light around posterity; it allows neither +their good nor bad qualities to remain in obscurity.--_Sallust._ + +Nobility of birth does not always insure a corresponding nobility of +mind; if it did, it would always act as a stimulus to noble actions; but +it sometimes acts as a clog rather than a spur.--_Colton._ + +Honorable descent is in all nations greatly esteemed; besides, it is to +be expected that the children of men of worth will be like their +fathers, for nobility is the virtue of a family.--_Aristotle._ + +A long series of ancestors shows the native lustre with advantage; but +if he any way degenerate from his line, the least spot is visible on +ermine.--_Dryden._ + +The happiest lot for a man, as far as birth is concerned, is that it +should be such as to give him but little occasion to think much about +it.--_Whately._ + +~Ancients.~--In tragedy and satire I maintain, against some critics, that +this age and the last have excelled the ancients; and I would instance +in Shakespeare of the former, in Dorset of the latter.--_Dryden._ + +Though the knowledge they have left us be worth our study, yet they +exhausted not all its treasures; they left a great deal for the industry +and sagacity of after-ages.--_Locke._ + +~Angels.~--In old days there were angels who came and took men by the hand +and led them away from the city of destruction. We see no white-winged +angels now. But yet men are led away from threatening destruction: a +hand is put in theirs, which leads them forth gently towards a calm and +bright land, so that they look no more backward; and the hand may be a +little child's.--_George Eliot._ + +Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth unseen, both when we wake +and when we sleep.--_Milton._ + +~Anger.~--If a man meets with injustice, it is not required that he shall +not be roused to meet it; but if he is angry after he has had time to +think upon it, that is sinful. The flame is not wrong, but the coals +are.--_Beecher._ + +Temperate anger well becomes the wise.--_Philemon._ + +When anger rushes, unrestrained, to action, like a hot steed, it +stumbles in its way.--_Savage._ + +Bad temper is its own scourge. Few things are bitterer than to feel +bitter. A man's venom poisons himself more than his victim.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +Above all, gentlemen, no heat.--_Talleyrand._ + +Anger ventilated often hurries towards forgiveness; anger concealed +often hardens into revenge.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Keep cool and you command everybody.--_St. Just._ + +I never work better than when I am inspired by anger; when I am angry I +can write, pray, and preach well; for then my whole temperament is +quickened, my understanding sharpened, and all mundane vexations and +temptations depart.--_Luther._ + +When one is in a good sound rage, it is astonishing how calm one can +be.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Angling.~--I give up fly-fishing; it is a light, volatile, dissipated +pursuit. But ground-bait with a good steady float that never bobs +without a bite is an occupation for a bishop, and in no way interferes +with sermon-making.--_Sydney Smith._ + +He that reads Plutarch shall find that angling was not contemptible in +the days of Mark Antony and Cleopatra.--_Izaak Walton._ + +Idle time not idly spent.--_Sir Henry Wotton._ + +To see the fish cut with her golden oars the silver stream and greedily +devour the treacherous bait.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Anticipation.~--It has been well said that no man ever sank under the +burden of the day. It is when to-morrow's burden is added to the burden +of to-day that the weight is more than a man can bear.--_George +MacDonald._ + +The craving for a delicate fruit is pleasanter than the fruit +itself.--_Herder._ + +The hours we pass with happy prospects in view are more pleasing than +those crowned with fruition. In the first instance, we cook the dish to +our own appetite; in the latter, nature cooks it for us.--_Goldsmith._ + +We are apt to rely upon future prospects, and become really expensive +while we are only rich in possibility. We live up to our expectations, +not to our possessions, and make a figure proportionable to what we may +be, not what we are. We outrun our present income, as not doubting to +disburse ourselves out of the profits of some future place, project, or +reversion that we have in view.--_Addison._ + +Nothing is so good as it seems beforehand.--_George Eliot._ + +~Antiquarian.~--A thorough-paced antiquarian not only remembers what all +other people have thought proper to forget, but he also forgets what all +other people think it proper to remember.--_Colton._ + +The earliest and the longest has still the mastery over us.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Antithesis.~--Young people are dazzled by the brilliancy of antithesis, +and employ it.--_Bruyère._ + +Antithesis may be the blossom of wit, but it will never arrive at +maturity unless sound sense be the trunk, and truth the root.--_Colton._ + +~Apology.~--An apology in the original sense was a pleading off from some +charge or imputation, by explaining or defending principles or conduct. +It therefore amounted to a vindication.--_Crabbe._ + +Brother, brother, we are both in the wrong.--_Gay._ + +~Apothegms.~--Nor do apothegms only serve for ornament and delight, but +also for action and civil use, as being the edge tools of speech, which +cut and penetrate the knots of business and affairs.--_Bacon._ + +Exclusively of the abstract sciences, the largest and worthiest portion +of our knowledge consists of aphorisms, and the greatest and best of men +is but an aphorism.--_Coleridge._ + +Proverbs are potted wisdom.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Appeal.~--Seeing all men are not [OE]dipuses to read the riddle of +another man's inside, and most men judge by appearances, it behooves a +man to barter for a good esteem, even from his clothes and outside. We +guess the goodness of the pasture by the mantle we see it +wears.--_Feltham._ + +~Appearances.~--It is the appearances that fill the scene; and we pause +not to ask of what realities they are the proxies. When the actor of +Athens moved all hearts as he clasped the burial urn, and burst into +broken sobs, how few then knew that it held the ashes of his +son!--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +What waste, what misery, what bankruptcy, come from all this ambition to +dazzle others with the glare of apparent worldly success, we need not +describe. The mischievous results show themselves in a thousand ways--in +the rank frauds committed by men who dare to be dishonest, but do not +dare to seem poor; and in the desperate dashes at fortune, in which the +pity is not so much for those who fail, as for the hundreds of innocent +families who are so often involved in their ruin.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Foolish men mistake transitory semblances for eternal fact, and go +astray more and more.--_Carlyle._ + +What is a good appearance? It is not being pompous and starchy; for +proud looks lose hearts, and gentle words win them. It is not wearing +fine clothes; for such dressing tells the world that the outside is the +better part of the man. You cannot judge a horse by his harness; but a +modest, gentlemanly appearance, in which the dress is such as no one +could comment upon, is the right and most desirable thing.--_Spurgeon._ + +He was a man who stole the livery of the court of heaven to serve the +devil in.--_Pollok._ + +I more and more see this, that we judge men's abilities less from what +they say or do, than from what they look. 'T is the man's face that +gives him weight. His doings help, but not more than his brow.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +~Appetite.~--Some people have a foolish way of not minding, or pretending +not to mind, what they eat. For my part, I mind very studiously; for I +look upon it, that he who does not mind this, will hardly mind anything +else.--_Johnson._ + +Here's neither want of appetite nor mouths; pray Heaven we be not scant +of meat or mirth.--_Shakespeare._ + +This dish of meat is too good for any but anglers, or very honest +men.--_Izaak Walton._ + +And do as adversaries do in law,--strive mightily, but eat and drink as +friends.--_Shakespeare._ + +The table is the only place where we do not get weary during the first +hour.--_Brillat Savarin._ + +~Appreciation.~--Contemporaries appreciate the man rather than the merit; +but posterity will regard the merit rather than the man.--_Colton._ + +It so falls out that what we have we prize not to the worth while we +enjoy it; but being lacked and lost, why, then we rack the +value.--_Shakespeare._ + +A man is known to his dog by the smell--to the tailor by the coat--to +his friend by the smile; each of these know him, but how little or how +much depends on the dignity of the intelligence. That which is truly and +indeed characteristic of man is known only to God.--_Ruskin._ + +He who seems not to himself more than he is, is more than he +seems.--_Goethe._ + +Light is above us, and color surrounds us; but if we have not light and +color in our eyes, we shall not perceive them outside us.--_Goethe._ + +When a nation gives birth to a man who is able to produce a great +thought, another is born who is able to understand and admire +it.--_Joubert._ + +No story is the same to us after a lapse of time; or rather we who read +it are no longer the same interpreters.--_George Eliot._ + +Next to invention is the power of interpreting invention; next to beauty +the power of appreciating beauty.--_Margaret Fuller._ + +You will find poetry nowhere unless you bring some with you.--_Joubert._ + +~Architecture.~--Architecture is the art which so disposes and adorns the +edifices raised by man, for whatsoever uses, that the sight of them may +contribute to his mental health, power, and pleasure.--_Ruskin._ + +~Argument.~--There is no arguing with Johnson; for if his pistol misses +fire he knocks you down with the butt end of it.--_Goldsmith._ + +Weak arguments are often thrust before my path; but although they are +most unsubstantial, it is not easy to destroy them. There is not a more +difficult feat known than to cut through a cushion with a +sword.--_Bishop Whately._ + +Treating your adversary with respect is giving him an advantage to which +he is not entitled. The greatest part of men cannot judge of reasoning, +and are impressed by character; so that if you allow your adversary a +respectable character, they will think that, though you differ from him, +you may be in the wrong. Treating your adversary with respect is +striking soft in a battle.--_Johnson._ + +The soundest argument will produce no more conviction in an empty head +than the most superficial declamation; as a feather and a guinea fall +with equal velocity in a vacuum.--_Colton._ + +An ill argument introduced with deference will procure more credit than +the profoundest science with a rough, insolent, and noisy +management.--_Locke._ + +One may say, generally, that no deeply rooted tendency was ever +extirpated by adverse argument. Not having originally been founded on +argument, it cannot be destroyed by logic.--_G. H. Lewes._ + +A reason is often good, not because it is conclusive, but because it is +dramatic,--because it has the stamp of him who urges it, and is drawn +from his own resources. For there are arguments _ex homine_ as well as +_ad hominem_.--_Joubert._ + +If I were to deliver up my whole self to the arbitrament of special +pleaders, to-day I might be argued into an atheist, and to-morrow into a +pickpocket.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Aristocracy.~--And lords, whose parents were the Lord knows who.--_De +Foe._ + +What can they see in the longest kingly line in Europe, save that it +runs back to a successful soldier?--_Walter Scott._ + +If in an aristocracy the people be virtuous, they will enjoy very nearly +the same happiness as in a popular government, and the state will become +powerful.--_Montesquieu._ + +An aristocracy is the true, the only support of a monarchy. Without it +the State is a vessel without a rudder--a balloon in the air. A true +aristocracy, however, must be ancient. Therein consists its real +force,--its talismanic charm.--_Napoleon._ + +I never could believe that Providence had sent a few men into the world, +ready booted and spurred to ride, and millions ready saddled and bridled +to be ridden.--_Richard Rumbold._ + +~Armor.~--The best armor is to keep out of gunshot.--_Lord Bacon._ + +Our armor all is strong, our cause the best; then reason wills our +hearts should be as good.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Art.~--Rules may teach us not to raise the arms above the head; but if +passion carries them, it will be well done: passion knows more than +art.--_Baron._ + +It is a great mortification to the vanity of man that his utmost art and +industry can never equal the meanest of nature's productions, either for +beauty or value. Art is only the underworkman, and is employed to give a +few strokes of embellishment to those pieces which come from the hand of +the master.--_Hume._ + +The mission of art is to represent nature; not to imitate her.--_W. M. +Hunt._ + +True art is not the caprice of this or that individual, it is a solemn +page either of history or prophecy; and when, as always in Dante and +occasionally in Byron, it combines and harmonizes this double mission, +it reaches the highest summit of power.--_Mazzini._ + +Art is the right hand of Nature. The latter has only given us being, the +former has made us men.--_Schiller._ + +Art does not imitate nature, but it founds itself on the study of +nature--takes from nature the selections which best accord with its own +intention, and then bestows on them that which nature does not possess, +namely, the mind and the soul of man.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The mother of useful arts is necessity; that of the fine arts is +luxury.--_Schopenhaufer._ + +He who seeks popularity in art closes the door on his own genius, as he +must needs paint for other minds and not for his own.--_Washington +Allston._ + +In art, form is everything; matter, nothing.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Strange thing art, especially music. Out of an art a man may be so +trivial you would mistake him for an imbecile, at best a grown infant. +Put him into his art, and how high he soars above you! How quietly he +enters into a heaven of which he has become a denizen, and, unlocking +the gates with his golden key, admits you to follow, an humble, reverent +visitor.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Art does not imitate, but interpret.--_Mazzini._ + +The artist is the child in the popular fable, every one of whose tears +was a pearl. Ah! the world, that cruel step-mother, beats the poor child +the harder to make him shed more pearls.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +In art there is a point of perfection, as of goodness or maturity in +nature; he who is able to perceive it, and who loves it, has perfect +taste; he who does not feel it, or loves on this side or that, has an +imperfect taste.--_Bruyère._ + +Never judge a work of art by its defects.--_Washington Allston._ + +~Asceticism.~--I recommend no sour ascetic life. I believe not only in the +thorns on the rosebush, but in the roses which the thorns defend. +Asceticism is the child of sensuality and superstition. She is the +secret mother of many a secret sin. God, when he made man's body, did +not give us a fibre too much, nor a passion too many. I would steal no +violet from the young maiden's bosom; rather would I fill her arms with +more fragrant roses. But a life merely of pleasure, or chiefly of +pleasure, is always a poor and worthless life, not worth the living; +always unsatisfactory in its course, always miserable in its +end.--_Theodore Parker._ + +In hope to merit heaven by making earth a hell.--_Byron._ + +Three forms of asceticism have existed in this weak world. Religious +asceticism, being the refusal of pleasure and knowledge for the sake--as +supposed--of religion; seen chiefly in the Middle Ages. Military +asceticism, being the refusal of pleasure and knowledge for the sake of +power; seen chiefly in the early days of Sparta and Rome. And monetary +asceticism, consisting in the refusal of pleasure and knowledge for the +sake of money; seen in the present days of London and +Manchester.--_Ruskin._ + +~Aspiration.~--The negro king desired to be portrayed as white. But do not +laugh at the poor African; for every man is but another negro king, and +would like to appear in a color different from that with which Fate has +bedaubed him.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +There is no sorrow I have thought more about than that--to love what is +great, and try to reach it, and yet to fail.--_George Eliot._ + +The heart is a small thing, but desireth great matters. It is not +sufficient for a kite's dinner, yet the whole world is not sufficient +for it.--_Quarles._ + +There must be something beyond man in this world. Even on attaining to +his highest possibilities, he is like a bird beating against his cage. +There is something beyond, O deathless soul, like a sea-shell, moaning +for the bosom of the ocean to which you belong!--_Chapin._ + +Oh for a muse of fire, that would ascend the brightest heaven of +invention! A kingdom for a stage, princes to act, and monarchs to behold +the swelling scene.--_Shakespeare._ + +The heavens are as deep as our aspirations are high.--_Thoreau._ + +It seems to me we can never give up longing and wishing while we are +thoroughly alive. There are certain things we feel to be beautiful and +good, and we _must_ hunger after them.--_George Eliot._ + +~Associates.~--Costly followers are not to be liked; lest while a man +maketh his train longer, he makes his wings shorter.--_Bacon._ + +Be very circumspect in the choice of thy company. In the society of +thine equals thou shall enjoy more pleasure; in the society of thy +superiors thou shalt find more profit. To be the best in the company is +the way to grow worse; the best means to grow better is to be the worst +there.--_Quarles._ + +A man should live with his superiors as he does with his fire: not too +near, lest he burn; nor too far off, lest he freeze.--_Diogenes._ + +As there are some flowers which you should smell but slightly to extract +all that is pleasant in them, and which, if you do otherwise, emit what +is unpleasant and noxious, so there are some men with whom a slight +acquaintance is quite sufficient to draw out all that is agreeable; a +more intimate one would be unsatisfactory and unsafe.--_Landor._ + +Those who are unacquainted with the world take pleasure in the intimacy +of great men; those who are wiser dread the consequences.--_Horace._ + +~Atheism.~--By burning an atheist, you have lent importance to that which +was absurd, interest to that which was forbidding, light to that which +was the essence of darkness. For atheism is a system which can +communicate neither warmth nor illumination except from those fagots +which your mistaken zeal has lighted up for its destruction.--_Colton._ + +One of the most daring beings in creation, a contemner of God, who +explodes his laws by denying his existence.--_John Foster._ + +~Authority.~--Reasons of things are rather to be taken by weight than +tale.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +The world is ruled by the subordinates, not by their chiefs.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +~Authors.~--Authors may be divided into falling stars, planets, and fixed +stars: the first have a momentary effect. The second have a much longer +duration. But the third are unchangeable, possess their own light, and +work for all time.--_Schopenhaufer._ + +Satire lies about men of letters during their lives, and eulogy after +their death.--_Voltaire._ + +It is commonly the personal character of a writer which gives him his +public significance. It is not imparted by his genius. Napoleon said of +Corneille, "Were he living I would make him a king;" but he did not read +him. He read Racine, yet he said nothing of the kind of Racine. It is +for the same reason that La Fontaine is held in such high esteem among +the French. It is not for his worth as a poet, but for the greatness of +his character which obtrudes in his writings.--_Goethe._ + +Choose an author as you choose a friend.--_Roscommon._ + +Herder and Schiller both in their youth intended to study as surgeons, +but Destiny said: "No, there are deeper wounds than those of the +body,--heal the deeper!" and they wrote.--_Richter._ + +A woman who writes commits two sins: she increases the number of books, +and decreases the number of women.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +Thanks and honor to the glorious masters of the pen.--_Hood._ + +The society of dead authors has this advantage over that of the living: +they never flatter us to our faces, nor slander us behind our backs, nor +intrude upon our privacy, nor quit their shelves until we take them +down.--_Colton._ + +Clear writers, like clear fountains, do not seem so deep as they are, +the turbid looks most profound.--_Landor._ + +When we look back upon human records, how the eye settles upon writers +as the main landmarks of the past.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Autumn.~--Season of mist and mellow fruitfulness.--_Keats._ + +The Sabbath of the year.--_Logan._ + +~Avarice.~--Though avarice will preserve a man from being necessitously +poor, it generally makes him too timorous to be wealthy.--_Thomas +Paine._ + +Avarice is more unlovely than mischievous.--_Landor._ + +The German poet observes that the Cow of Isis is to some the divine +symbol of knowledge, to others but the milch cow, only regarded for the +pounds of butter she will yield. O tendency of our age, to look on Isis +as the milch cow!--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Worse poison to men's souls, doing more murders in this loathsome world +than any mortal drug.--_Shakespeare._ + +Avarice is generally the last passion of those lives of which the first +part has been squandered in pleasure, and the second devoted to +ambition. He that sinks under the fatigue of getting wealth, lulls his +age with the milder business of saving it.--_Johnson._ + + +B. + +~Babblers.~--Who think too little, and who talk too much.--_Dryden._ + +They always talk who never think.--_Prior._ + +Talkers are no good doers.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Babe.~--It is curious to see how a self-willed, haughty girl, who sets +her father and mother and all at defiance, and can't be managed by +anybody, at once finds her master in a baby. Her sister's child will +strike the rock and set all her affections flowing.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Bargain.~--What is the disposition which makes men rejoice in good +bargains? There are few people who will not be benefited by pondering +over the morals of shopping.--_Beecher._ + +A dear bargain is always disagreeable, particularly as it is a +reflection upon the buyer's judgment.--_Pliny._ + +~Bashfulness.~--Bashfulness may sometimes exclude pleasure, but seldom +opens any avenue to sorrow or remorse.--_Johnson._ + +Bashfulness is a great hindrance to a man, both in uttering his +sentiments and in understanding what is proposed to him; 'tis therefore +good to press forward with discretion, both in discourse and company of +the better sort.--_Bacon._ + +~Beauty.~--The beautiful is always severe.--_Ségur._ + +For converse among men, beautiful persons have less need of the mind's +commending qualities. Beauty in itself is such a silent orator, that it +is ever pleading for respect and liking, and, by the eyes of others is +ever sending to their hearts for love. Yet even this hath this +inconvenience in it--that it makes its possessor neglect the furnishing +of the mind with nobleness. Nay, it oftentimes is a cause that the mind +is ill.--_Feltham._ + +Man has still more desire for beauty than knowledge of it; hence the +caprices of the world.--_X. Doudan._ + +No better cosmetics than a severe temperance and purity, modesty and +humility, a gracious temper and calmness of spirit; no true beauty +without the signature of these graces in the very countenance.--_John +Ray._ + +An appearance of delicacy, and even of fragility, is almost essential to +beauty.--_Burke._ + +I am of opinion that there is nothing so beautiful but that there is +something still more beautiful, of which this is the mere image and +expression,--a something which can neither be perceived by the eyes, the +ears, nor any of the senses; we comprehend it merely in the +imagination.--_Cicero._ + +A lovely girl is above all rank.--_Charles Buxton._ + +There is more or less of pathos in all true beauty. The delight it +awakens has an indefinable, and, as it were, luxurious sadness, which is +perhaps one element of its might.--_Tuckerman._ + +Beauty is the first present nature gives to women and the first it takes +away.--_Méré._ + +In ourselves, rather than in material nature, lie the true source and +life of the beautiful. The human soul is the sun which diffuses light on +every side, investing creation with its lovely hues, and calling forth +the poetic element that lies hidden in every existing thing.--_Mazzini._ + +Beauty is God's handwriting, a wayside sacrament.--_Milton._ + +Beauty deceives women in making them establish on an ephemeral power the +pretensions of a whole life.--_Bignicout._ + +If there is a fruit that can be eaten raw, it is beauty.--_Alphonse +Karr._ + +Those critics who, in modern times, have the most thoughtfully analyzed +the laws of æsthetic beauty, concur in maintaining that the real +truthfulness of all works of imagination--sculpture, painting, written +fiction--is so purely in the imagination, that the artist never seeks to +represent the positive truth, but the idealized image of a +truth.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +An outward gift which is seldom despised, except by those to whom it has +been refused.--_Gibbon._ + +It is impossible that beauty should ever distinctly apprehend +itself.--_Goethe._ + +~Bed.~--The bed is a bundle of paradoxes: we go to it with reluctance, yet +we quit it with regret; we make up our minds every night to leave it +early, but we make up our bodies every morning to keep it +late.--_Colton._ + +What a delightful thing rest is! The bed has become a place of luxury to +me! I would not exchange it for all the thrones in the +world.--_Napoleon._ + +~Beggars.~--He is never out of the fashion, or limpeth awkwardly behind +it. He is not required to put on court mourning. He weareth all colors, +fearing none. His costume hath undergone less change than the Quaker's. +He is the only man in the universe who is not obliged to study +appearances.--_Lamb._ + +Aspiring beggary is wretchedness itself.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Benevolence.~--There cannot be a more glorious object in creation than a +human being, replete with benevolence, meditating in what manner he +might render himself most acceptable to his Creator by doing most good +to his creatures.--_Fielding._ + +Genuine benevolence is not stationary but peripatetic. It _goeth_ about +doing good.--_Nevins._ + +It is an argument of a candid, ingenuous mind to delight in the good +name and commendations of others; to pass by their defects and take +notice of their virtues; and to speak or hear willingly of the latter; +for in this indeed you may be little less guilty than the evil speaker, +in taking pleasure in evil, though you speak it not.--_Leighton._ + +The root of all benevolent actions is filial piety and fraternal +love.--_Confucius._ + +True benevolence is to love all men. Recompense injury with justice, and +kindness with kindness.--_Confucius._ + +It is in contemplating man at a distance that we become +benevolent.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Bible.~--As those wines which flow from the first treading of the grapes +are sweeter and better than those forced out by the press, which gives +them the roughness of the husk and the stone, so are those doctrines +best and sweetest which flow from a gentle crush of the Scriptures and +are not wrung into controversies and commonplaces.--_Bacon._ + +They who are not induced to believe and live as they ought by those +discoveries which God hath made in Scripture, would stand out against +any evidence whatever; even that of a messenger sent express from the +other world.--_Atterbury._ + +But what is meant, after all, by _uneducated_, in a time when books have +come into the world--come to be household furniture in every habitation +of the civilized world? In the poorest cottage are books--is one book, +wherein for several thousands of years the spirit of man has found light +and nourishment and an interpreting response to whatever is deepest in +him.--_Carlyle._ + +A stream where alike the elephant may swim and the lamb may +wade.--_Gregory the Great._ + +All human discoveries seem to be made only for the purpose of confirming +more strongly the truths come from on high, and contained in the sacred +writings.--_Herschel._ + +I am heartily glad to witness your veneration for a book which, to say +nothing of its holiness or authority, contains more specimens of genius +and taste than any other volume in existence.--_Landor._ + +~Bigotry.~--A proud bigot, who is vain enough to think that he can deceive +even God by affected zeal, and throwing the veil of holiness over vices, +damns all mankind by the word of his power.--_Boileau._ + +Persecuting bigots may be compared to those burning lenses which +Lenhenhoeck and others composed from ice; by their chilling apathy they +freeze the suppliant; by their fiery zeal they burn the +sufferer.--_Colton._ + +A man must be excessively stupid, as well as uncharitable, who believes +there is no virtue but on his own side.--_Addison._ + +The worst of mad men is a saint run mad.--_Pope._ + +~Biography.~--As in the case of painters, who have undertaken to give us a +beautiful and graceful figure, which may have some slight blemishes, we +do not wish them to pass over such blemishes altogether, nor yet to mark +them too prominently. The one would spoil the beauty, and the other +destroy the likeness of the picture.--_Plutarch._ + +Biographies of great, but especially of good men, are most instructive +and useful as helps, guides, and incentives to others. Some of the best +are almost equivalent to gospels--teaching high living, high thinking, +and energetic action for their own and the world's good.--_Samuel +Smiles._ + +It is rarely well executed. They only who live with a man can write his +life with any genuine exactness and discrimination; and few people, who +have lived with a man, know what to remark about him.--_Johnson._ + +History can be formed from permanent monuments and records; but lives +can only be written from personal knowledge, which is growing every day +less, and in a short time is lost forever.--_Johnson._ + +Occasionally a single anecdote opens a character; biography has its +comparative anatomy, and a saying or a sentiment enables the skillful +hand to construct the skeleton.--_Willmott._ + +To be ignorant of the lives of the most celebrated men of antiquity is +to continue in a state of childhood all our days.--_Plutarch._ + +~Birth.~--Noble in appearance, but this is mere outside; many noble born +are base.--_Euripides._ + +~Blessings.~--The good things of life are not to be had singly, but come +to us with a mixture; like a schoolboy's holiday, with a task affixed to +the tail of it.--_Charles Lamb._ + +Blessedness consists in the accomplishment of our desires, and in our +having only regular desires.--_St. Augustine._ + +We mistake the gratuitous blessings of Heaven for the fruits of our own +industry.--_L'Estrange._ + +Health, beauty, vigor, riches, and all the other things called goods, +operate equally as evils to the vicious and unjust as they do as +benefits to the just.--_Plato._ + +How blessings brighten as they take their flight!--_Young._ + +Reflect upon your present blessings, of which every man has many: not on +your past misfortunes, of which all men have some.--_Charles Dickens._ + +~Blush.~--The ambiguous livery worn alike by modesty and shame.--_Mrs. +Balfour._ + +I have mark'd a thousand blushing apparitions to start into her face; a +thousand innocent shames, in angel whiteness, bear away those +blushes.--_Shakespeare._ + +The glow of the angel in woman.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Such blushes as adorn the ruddy welkin or the purple morn.--_Ovid._ + +Luminous escapes of thought.--_Moore._ + +~Blustering.~--Because half a dozen grasshoppers under a fern make the +field ring with their importunate chink, whilst thousands of great +cattle, reposing beneath the shadow of the British oak, chew the cud and +are silent, pray do not imagine that those who make the noise are the +only inhabitants of the field--that, of course, they are many in +number,--or, that, after all, they are other than the little, shriveled, +meagre, hopping, though loud and troublesome, insects of the +hour.--_Burke._ + +There are braying men in the world as well as braying asses; for what is +loud and senseless talking any other than a way of +braying.--_L'Estrange._ + +Wine and the sun will make vinegar without any shouting to help +them.--_George Eliot._ + +~Boasting.~--Usually the greatest boasters are the smallest workers. The +deep rivers pay a larger tribute to the sea than shallow brooks, and yet +empty themselves with less noise.--_W. Secker._ + +With all his tumid boasts, he's like the sword-fish, who only wears his +weapon in his mouth.--_Madden._ + +Every braggart shall be found an ass.--_Shakespeare._ + +Self-laudation abounds among the unpolished, but nothing can stamp a man +more sharply as ill-bred.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Boldness.~--Who bravely dares must sometimes risk a fall.--_Smollett._ + +Women like brave men exceedingly, but audacious men still +more.--_Lemesles._ + +~Bondage.~--The iron chain and the silken cord, both equally are +bonds.--_Schiller._ + +~Books.~--If a secret history of books could be written, and the author's +private thoughts and meanings noted down alongside of his story, how +many insipid volumes would become interesting, and dull tales excite the +reader!--_Thackeray._ + +When a new book comes out I read an old one.--_Rogers._ + +Be as careful of the books you read as of the company you keep; for your +habits and character will be as much influenced by the former as the +latter.--_Paxton Hood._ + +Homeliness is almost as great a merit in a book as in a house, if the +reader would abide there. It is next to beauty, and a very high +art.--_Thoreau._ + +A book _is_ good company. It is full of conversation without loquacity. +It comes to your longing with full instruction, but pursues you never. +It is not offended at your absent-mindedness, nor jealous if you turn to +other pleasures. It silently serves the soul without recompense, not +even for the hire of love. And yet more noble,--it seems to pass from +itself, and to enter the memory, and to hover in a silvery +transfiguration there, until the outward book is but a body, and its +soul and spirit are flown to you, and possess your memory like a +spirit.--_Beecher._ + +If the crowns of all the kingdoms of Europe were laid down at my feet in +exchange for my books and my love of reading, I would spurn them +all.--_Fénelon._ + +We ought to regard books as we do sweetmeats, not wholly to aim at the +pleasantest, but chiefly to respect the wholesomest; not forbidding +either, but approving the latter most.--_Plutarch._ + +To buy books only because they were published by an eminent printer, is +much as if a man should buy clothes that did not fit him, only because +made by some famous tailor.--_Pope._ + +The medicine of the mind.--_Diodorus._ + +Let every man, if possible, gather some good books under his +roof.--_Channing._ + +Wise books for half the truths they hold are honored tombs.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Bores.~--I am constitutionally susceptible of noises. A carpenter's +hammer, in a warm summer's noon, will fret me into more than midsummer +madness. But those unconnected, unset sounds are nothing to the measured +malice of music.--_Lamb._ + +These, wanting wit, affect gravity, and go by the name of solid +men.--_Dryden._ + +If we engage into a large acquaintance and various familiarities, we set +open our gates to the invaders of most of our time; we expose our life +to a quotidian ague of frigid impertinences which would make a wise man +tremble to think of.--_Cowley._ + +The symptoms of compassion and benevolence, in some people, are like +those minute guns which warn you that you are in deadly peril!--_Madame +Swetchine._ + +~Borrowing.~--You should only attempt to borrow from those who have but +few of this world's goods, as their chests are not of iron, and they +are, besides, anxious to appear wealthier than they really +are.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +According to the security you offer to her, Fortune makes her loans easy +or ruinous.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Bravery.~--True bravery is shown by performing without witnesses what one +might be capable of doing before all the world.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +'Tis late before the brave despair.--_Thompson._ + +The bravest men are subject most to chance.--_Dryden._ + +The truly brave are soft of heart and eyes.--_Byron._ + +People glorify all sorts of bravery except the bravery they might show +on behalf of their nearest neighbors.--_George Eliot._ + +~Brevity.~--To make pleasures pleasant shorten them.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Was there ever anything written by mere man that was wished longer by +its readers, excepting Don Quixote, Robinson Crusoe, and the Pilgrim's +Progress?--_Johnson._ + +A sentence well couched takes both the sense and understanding. I love +not those cart-rope speeches that are longer than the memory of man can +fathom.--_Feltham._ + +I saw one excellency was within my reach--it was brevity, and I +determined to obtain it.--_Jay._ + +Be brief; for it is with words as with sunbeams--the more they are +condensed, the deeper they burn.--_Southey._ + +Concentration alone conquers.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The more an idea is developed, the more concise becomes its expression: +the more a tree is pruned, the better is the fruit.--_Alfred Bougeart._ + +Oratory, like the Drama, abhors lengthiness; like the Drama, it must be +kept doing. It avoids, as frigid, prolonged metaphysical soliloquy. +Beauties themselves, if they delay or distract the effect which should +be produced on the audience, become blemishes.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The fewer words the better prayer.--_Luther._ + +~Business.~--Not because of any extraordinary talents did he succeed, but +because he had a capacity on a level for business and not above +it.--_Tacitus._ + + +C. + +~Calumny.~--Neglected calumny soon expires; show that you are hurt, and +you give it the appearance of truth.--_Tacitus._ + +Calumny crosses oceans, scales mountains, and traverses deserts with +greater ease than the Scythian Abaris, and, like him, rides upon a +poisoned arrow.--_Colton._ + +~Cant.~--The affectation of some late authors to introduce and multiply +cant words is the most ruinous corruption in any language.--_Swift._ + +There is such a thing as a peculiar word or phrase cleaving, as it were, +to the memory of the writer or speaker, and presenting itself to his +utterance at every turn. When we observe this, we call it a cant word or +a cant phrase.--_Paley._ + +~Caution.~--Whenever our neighbor's house is on fire, it cannot be amiss +for the engines to play a little on our own. Better to be despised for +too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a +security.--_Burke._ + +~Censure.~--Censure pardons the ravens, but rebukes the doves.--_Juvenal._ + +We do not like our friends the worse because they sometimes give us an +opportunity to rail at them heartily. Their faults reconcile us to their +virtues.--_Hazlitt._ + +Censure is like the lightning which strikes the highest +mountains.--_Balthasar Gracian._ + +~Chance.~--There must be chance in the midst of design; by which we mean +that events which are not designed necessarily arise from the pursuit of +events which are designed.--_Paley._ + +Chance generally favors the prudent.--_Joubert._ + +It is strictly and philosophically true in nature and reason that there +is no such thing as chance or accident; it being evident that these +words do not signify anything really existing, anything that is truly an +agent or the cause of any event; but they signify merely men's ignorance +of the real and immediate cause.--_Adam Clarke._ + +What can be more foolish than to think that all this rare fabric of +heaven and earth could come by chance, when all the skill of art is not +able to make an oyster!--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +He who distrusts the security of chance takes more pains to effect the +safety which results from labor. To find what you seek in the road of +life, the best proverb of all is that which says: "Leave no stone +unturned."--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Change.~--The great world spins forever down the ringing grooves of +change.--_Tennyson._ + +A change came o'er the spirit of my dream.--_Byron._ + +In this world of change, naught which comes stays, and naught which goes +is lost.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Character.~--As there is much beast and some devil in man, so is there +some angel and some God in him. The beast and the devil may be +conquered, but in this life never destroyed.--_Coleridge._ + +Character is not cut in marble--it is not something solid and +unalterable. It is something living and changing, and may become +diseased as our bodies do.--_George Eliot._ + +Grit is the grain of character. It may generally be described as heroism +materialized,--spirit and will thrust into heart, brain, and backbone, +so as to form part of the physical substance of the man.--_Whipple._ + +Depend upon it, you would gain unspeakably if you would learn with me to +see some of the poetry and the pathos, the tragedy and the comedy, lying +in the experience of a human soul that looks out through dull gray eyes, +and that speaks in a voice of quite ordinary tones.--_George Eliot._ + +Character is the diamond that scratches every other stone--_Bartol._ + +Character is human nature in its best form. It is moral order embodied +in the individual. Men of character are not only the conscience of +society, but in every well-governed state they are its best motive +power; for it is moral qualities in the main which rule the +world.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +He whose life seems fair, if all his errors and follies were articled +against him would seem vicious and miserable.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +In common discourse we denominate persons and things according to the +major part of their character: he is to be called a wise man who has but +few follies.--_Watts._ + +Never does a man portray his own character more vividly than in his +manner of portraying another.--_Richter._ + +We are not that we are, nor do we treat or esteem each other for such, +but for that we are capable of being.--_Thoreau._ + +~Charity.~--Charity is a principle of prevailing love to God and good-will +to men, which effectually inclines one endued with it to glorify God, +and to do good to others.--_Cruden._ + +The highest exercise of charity is charity towards the +uncharitable.--_Buckminster._ + +The charities that soothe, and heat, and bless, lie scattered at the +feet of men like flowers.--_Wordsworth._ + +Prayer carries us half way to God, fasting brings us to the door of his +palace, and alms-giving procures us admission.--_Koran._ + +Shall we repine at a little misplaced charity, we who could no way +foresee the effect,--when an all-knowing, all-wise Being showers down +every day his benefits on the unthankful and undeserving?--_Atterbury._ + +As the purse is emptied the heart is filled.--_Victor Hugo._ + +What we employ in charitable uses during our lives is given away from +ourselves: what we bequeath at our death is given from others only, as +our nearest relations.--_Atterbury._ + +Goodness answers to the theological virtue of charity, and admits no +excess but error; the desire of power in excess caused the angels to +fall; the desire of knowledge in excess caused man to fall; but in +charity there is no excess: neither can angel or man come into danger by +it.--_Bacon._ + +Poplicola's doors were opened on the outside, to save the people even +the common civility of asking entrance; where misfortune was a powerful +recommendation, and where want itself was a powerful +mediator.--_Dryden._ + +When thy brother has lost all that he ever had, and lies languishing, +and even gasping under the utmost extremities of poverty and distress, +dost thou think to lick him whole again only with thy tongue?--_South._ + +What we frankly give, forever is our own.--_Granville._ + +Faith and hope themselves shall die, while deathless charity +remains.--_Prior._ + +The place of charity, like that of God, is everywhere.--_Professor +Vinet._ + +People do not care to give alms without some security for their money; +and a wooden leg or a withered arm is a sort of draftment upon heaven +for those who choose to have their money placed to account +there.--_Mackenzie._ + +~Chastity.~--Chastity enables the soul to breathe a pure air in the +foulest places; continence makes her strong, no matter in what condition +the body may be; her sway over the senses makes her queenly; her light +and peace render her beautiful.--_Joubert._ + +~Cheerfulness.~--Cheerfulness is also an excellent wearing quality. It has +been called the bright weather of the heart.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +There is no Christian duty that is not to be seasoned and set off with +cheerishness,--which in a thousand outward and intermitting crosses may +yet be done well, as in this vale of tears.--_Milton._ + +Such a man, truly wise, creams of nature, leaving the sour and the dregs +for philosophy and reason to lap up.--_Swift._ + +Be thou like the bird perched upon some frail thing, although he feels +the branch bending beneath him, yet loudly sings, knowing full well that +he has wings.--_Mme. de Gasparin._ + +~Children.~--With children we must mix gentleness with firmness; they must +not always have their own way, but they must not always be thwarted. If +we never have headaches through rebuking them, we shall have plenty of +heartaches when they grow up. Be obeyed at all costs. If you yield up +your authority once, you will hardly ever get it again.--_Spurgeon._ + +The smallest children are nearest to God, as the smallest planets are +nearest the sun.--_Richter._ + +The death of a child occasions a passion of grief and frantic tears, +such as your end, brother reader, will never inspire.--_Thackeray._ + +Childhood has no forebodings; but then, it is soothed by no memories of +outlived sorrow.--_George Eliot._ + +Children are excellent physiognomists and soon discover their real +friends. Luttrell calls them all lunatics, and so in fact they are. What +is childhood but a series of happy delusions?--_Sydney Smith._ + +The clew of our destiny, wander where we will, lies at the cradle +foot.--_Richter._ + +A house is never perfectly furnished for enjoyment unless there is a +child in it rising three years old, and a kitten rising three +weeks.--_Southey._ + +Children have more need of models than of critics.--_Joubert._ + +The bearing and training of a child is woman's wisdom.--_Tennyson._ + +One of the greatest pleasures of childhood is found in the mysteries +which it hides from the skepticism of the elders, and works up into +small mythologies of its own.--_Holmes._ + +Do not shorten the beautiful veil of mist covering childhood's futurity, +by too hastily drawing away; but permit that joy to be of early +commencement and of long duration, which lights up life so beautifully. +The longer the morning dew remains hanging in the blossoms of flowers, +the more beautiful the day.--_Richter._ + +Where children are there is the golden age.--_Novalis._ + +In the man whose childhood has known caresses there is always a fibre of +memory that can be touched to gentle issues.--_George Eliot._ + +The first duty towards children is to make them happy. If you have not +made them happy, you have wronged them; no other good they may get can +make up for that.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Christ.~--Our religion sets before us, not the example of a stupid stoic +who had by obstinate principles hardened himself against all sense of +pain beyond the common measures of humanity, but an example of a man +like ourselves, that had a tender sense of the least suffering, and yet +patiently endured the greatest.--_Tillotson._ + +However consonant to reason his precepts appeared, nothing could have +tempted men to acknowledge him as their God and Saviour but their being +firmly persuaded of the miracles he wrought.--_Addison._ + +Imitate Jesus Christ.--_Franklin._ + +The history of Christ is as surely poetry as it is history, and in +general, only that history is history which might also be +fable.--_Novalis._ + +~Christianity.~--Christianity is within a man, even as he is gifted with +reason; it is associated with your mother's chair, and with the first +remembered tones of her blessed voice.--_Coleridge._ + +There was never law, or sect, or opinion, did so much magnify goodness +as the Christian religion doth.--_Bacon._ + +No religion ever appeared in the world whose natural tendency was so +much directed to promote the peace and happiness of mankind. It makes +right reason a law in every possible definition of the word. And +therefore, even supposing it to have been purely a human invention, it +had been the most amiable and the most useful invention that was ever +imposed on mankind for their good.--_Lord Bolingbroke._ + +Far beyond all other political powers of Christianity is the demiurgic +power of this religion over the kingdoms of human opinion.--_De +Quincey._ + +Christianity is the companion of liberty in all its conflicts,--the +cradle of its infancy and the divine source of its claims.--_De +Tocqueville._ + +Nature never gives to a living thing capacities not particularly meant +for its benefit and use. If nature gives to us capacities to believe +that we have a Creator whom we never saw, of whom we have no direct +proof, who is kind and good and tender beyond all that we know of +kindness and goodness and tenderness on earth, it is because the +endowment of capacities to conceive a Being must be for our benefit and +use; it would not be for our benefit and use if it were a +lie.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +A man can no more be a Christian without facing evil and conquering it +than he can be a soldier without going to battle, facing the cannon's +mouth, and encountering the enemy in the field.--_Chapin._ + +There was never found in any age of the world, either philosophy, or +sect or religion, or law or discipline, which did so highly exalt the +good of communion, and depress good private and particular, as the holy +Christian faith: hence it clearly appears that it was one and the same +God that gave the Christian law to men who gave those laws of nature to +the creatures.--_Bacon._ + +Christianity is intensely practical. She has no trait more striking than +her common sense.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Christianity ruined emperors, but saved peoples. It opened the palaces +of Constantinople to the barbarians, but it opened the doors of cottages +to the consoling angels of the Saviour.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +Always put the best interpretation on a tenet. Why not on Christianity, +wholesome, sweet, and poetic? It is the record of a pure and holy soul, +humble, absolutely disinterested, a truth-speaker, and bent on serving, +teaching, and uplifting men. Christianity taught the capacity, the +element, to love the All-perfect without a stingy bargain for personal +happiness. It taught that to love him was happiness,--to love him in +others' virtues.--_Emerson._ + +Christian faith is a grand cathedral with divinely pictured windows. +Standing without, you see no glory nor can possibly imagine any; +standing within, every ray of light reveals a harmony of unspeakable +splendors.--_Hawthorne._ + +Christians are like the several flowers in a garden, that have each of +them the dew of heaven, which, being shaken with the wind, they let fall +at each other's roots, whereby they are jointly nourished, and become +nourishers of each other.--_Bunyan._ + +~Church.~--The Church is a union of men arising from the fellowship of +religious life; a union essentially independent of, and differing from, +all other forms of human association.--_Rev. Dr. Neander._ + +A place where misdevotion frames a thousand prayers to saints.--_Donne._ + +She may still exist in undiminished vigor, when some traveler from New +Zealand shall, in the midst of a vast solitude, take his stand on a +broken arch of London bridge, to sketch the ruins of St. +Paul's.--_Macaulay._ + +Surely the church is a place where one day's truce ought to be allowed +to the dissensions and animosities of mankind.--_Burke._ + +God never had a house of prayer but Satan had a chapel there.--_De Foe._ + +The church is a sort of hospital for men's souls, and as full of +quackery as the hospital for their bodies. Those who are taken into it +live like pensioners in their Retreat or Sailors' Snug Harbor, where you +may see a row of religious cripples sitting outside in sunny +weather.--_Thoreau._ + +~Circumstances.~--Circumstances are the rulers of the weak; they are but +the instruments of the wise.--_Samuel Lover._ + +What saves the virtue of many a woman is that protecting god, the +impossible.--_Balzac._ + +~Civilization.~--Mankind's struggle upwards, in which millions are +trampled to death, that thousands may mount on their bodies.--_Mrs. +Balfour._ + +The old Hindoo saw, in his dream, the human race led out to its various +fortunes. First men were in chains which went back to an iron hand. Then +he saw them led by threads from the brain, which went upward to an +unseen hand. The first was despotism, iron and ruling by force. The last +was civilization, ruling by ideas.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +Nations, like individuals, live and die; but civilization cannot +die.--_Mazzini._ + +~Clergymen.~--The life of a conscientious clergyman is not easy. I have +always considered a clergyman as the father of a larger family than he +is able to maintain. I would rather have Chancery suits upon my hands +than the cure of souls. I do not envy a clergyman's life as an easy +life, nor do I envy the clergyman who makes it an easy life.--_Johnson._ + +Clergymen consider this world only as a diligence in which they can +travel to another.--_Napoleon._ + +The clergy are as like as peas.--_Emerson._ + +~Commander.~--The right of commanding is no longer an advantage +transmitted by nature like an inheritance; it is the fruit of labors, +the price of courage.--_Voltaire._ + +The trident of Neptune is the sceptre of the world.--_Antoine Lemierre._ + +He who rules must humor full as much as he commands.--_George Eliot._ + +~Commerce.~--She may well be termed the younger sister, for, in all +emergencies, she looks to agriculture both for defense and for +supply.--_Colton._ + +Commerce defies every wind, outrides every tempest, and invades every +zone.--_Bancroft._ + +~Common Sense.~--If common sense has not the brilliancy of the sun it has +the fixity of the stars.--_Fernan Caballero._ + +~Communists.~--One who has yearnings for equal division of unequal +earnings. Idler or bungler, he is willing to fork out his penny and +pocket your shilling.--_Ebenezer Elliott._ + +Your leaders wish to level down as far as themselves; but they cannot +bear leveling up to themselves. They would all have some people under +them; why not then have some people above them.--_Johnson._ + +Communism possesses a language which every people can understand. Its +elements are hunger, envy, death.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +~Comparison.~--All comparisons are odious.--_Cervantes._ + +If we rightly estimate what we call good and evil, we shall find it lies +much in comparison.--_Locke._ + +~Compassion.~--The dew of compassion is a tear.--_Byron._ + +~Compensation.~--Cloud and rainbow appear together. There is wisdom in the +saying of Feltham, that the whole creation is kept in order by discord, +and that vicissitude maintains the world. Many evils bring many +blessings. Manna drops in the wilderness--corn grows in +Canaan.--_Willmott._ + +It is some compensation for great evils that they enforce great +lessons.--_Bovée._ + +~Complaining.~--We do not wisely when we vent complaint and censure. Human +nature is more sensible of smart in suffering than of pleasure in +rejoicing, and the present endurances easily take up our thoughts. We +cry out for a little pain, when we do but smile for a great deal of +contentment.--_Feltham._ + +Our condition never satisfies us; the present is always the worst. +Though Jupiter should grant his request to each, we should continue to +importune him.--_Fontaine._ + +~Conceit.~--Wind puffs up empty bladders; opinion, fools.--_Socrates._ + +Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? there is more hope of a fool +than of him.--_Bible._ + +Nature has sometimes made a fool, but a coxcomb is always of a man's own +making.--_Addison._ + +Everything without tells the individual that he is nothing; everything +within persuades him that he is everything.--_X. Doudan._ + +Apes look down on men as degenerate specimens of their own race, just as +Hollanders regard the German language as a corruption of the +Dutch.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +If its colors were but fast colors, self-conceit would be a most +comfortable quality. But life is so humbling, mortifying, disappointing +to vanity, that a man's great idea of himself gets washed out of him by +the time he is forty.--_Charles Buxton._ + +One's self-satisfaction is an untaxed kind of property which it is very +unpleasant to find depreciated.--_George Eliot._ + +The pious vanity of man makes him adore his own qualities under the +pretense of worshiping those of God.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Confidence.~--Confidence imparts a wondrous inspiration to its possessor. +It bears him on in security, either to meet no danger, or to find matter +of glorious trial.--_Milton._ + +Society is built upon trust, and trust upon confidence of one another's +integrity.--_South._ + +~Conscience.~--Conscience is not law; no, God and reason made the law, and +have placed conscience within you to determine.--_Sterne._ + +There are moments when the pale and modest star, kindled by God in +simple hearts, which men call conscience, illumines our path with truer +light than the flaming comet of genius on its magnificent +course.--_Mazzini._ + +No thralls like them that inward bondage have.--_Sir P. Sidney._ + +Some people have no perspective in their conscience. Their moral +convictions are the same on all subjects. They are like a reader who +speaks every word with equal emphasis.--_Beecher._ + +Conscience enables us not merely to learn the right by experiment and +induction, but intuitively and in advance of experiment; so, in addition +to the experimental way whereby we learn justice from the facts of human +history, we have a transcendental way, and learn it from the facts of +human nature, and from immediate consciousness.--_Theodore Parker._ + +A man's own conscience is his sole tribunal; and he should care no more +for that phantom "opinion" than he should fear meeting a ghost if he +cross the churchyard at dark.--_Lytton._ + +Conscience is a coward, and those faults it has not strength enough to +prevent it seldom has justice enough to accuse.--_Goldsmith._ + +To say that we have a clear conscience is to utter a solecism: had we +never sinned we should have had no conscience.--_Carlyle._ + +The most miserable pettifogging in the world is that of a man in the +court of his own conscience.--_Beecher._ + +Conscience serves us especially to judge of the actions of others.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +It is astonishing how soon the whole conscience begins to unravel if a +single stitch drops; one single sin indulged in makes a hole you could +put your head through.--_Charles Buxton._ + +A still small voice.--_Bible._ + +~Constancy.~--A good man it is not mine to see; could I see a man +possessed of constancy, that would satisfy me.--_Confucius._ + +Constancy is the chimera of love.--_Vauvenargues._ + +Constancy is the complement of all the other human virtues.--_Mazzini._ + +~Contempt.~--No sacred fane requires us to submit to contempt.--_Goethe._ + +There is not in human nature a more odious disposition than a proneness +to contempt, which is a mixture of pride and ill-nature. Nor is there +any which more certainly denotes a bad mind; for in a good and benign +temper there can be no room for this sensation.--_Fielding._ + +~Contentment.~--That happy state of mind, so rarely possessed, in which we +can say, "I have enough," is the highest attainment of philosophy. +Happiness consists, not in possessing much, but in being content with +what we possess. He who wants little always has enough.--_Zimmermann._ + +It is both the curse and blessing of our American life that we are never +quite content. We all expect to go somewhere before we die, and have a +better time when we get there than we can have at home. The bane of our +life is discontent. We say we will work so long, and then we will enjoy +ourselves. But we find it just as Thackeray has expressed it. "When I +was a boy," he said, "I wanted some taffy--it was a shilling--I hadn't +one. When I was a man, I had a shilling, but I didn't want any +taffy."--_Robert Collyer._ + +Submission is the only reasoning between a creature and its Maker; and +contentment in his will is the best remedy we can apply to +misfortunes.--_Sir W. Temple._ + +Where God hath put exquisite tinge upon the shell washed in the surf, +and planted a paradise of bloom in a child's cheek, let us leave it to +the owl to hoot, and the frog to croak, and the fault-finder to +complain.--_De Witt Talmage._ + +~Contrast.~--The lustre of diamonds is invigorated by the interposition of +darker bodies; the lights of a picture are created by the shades. The +highest pleasure which nature has indulged to sensitive perception is +that of rest after fatigue.--_Johnson._ + +~Controversy.~--He that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves and +sharpens our skill. Our antagonist is our helper.--_Burke._ + +What Tully says of war may be applied to disputing,--it should be always +so managed as to remember that the only true end of it is peace: but +generally true disputants are like true sportsmen,--their whole delight +is in the pursuit; and a disputant no more cares for the truth than the +sportsman for the hare.--_Pope._ + +I am yet apt to think that men find their simple ideas agree, though in +discourse they confound one another with different names.--_Locke._ + +A man takes contradiction much more easily than people think, only he +will not bear it when violently given, even though it be well-founded. +Hearts are flowers; they remain open to the softly-falling dew, but shut +up in the violent down-pour of rain.--_Richter._ + +~Conversation.~--They who have the true taste of conversation enjoy +themselves in a communication of each other's excellences, and not in a +triumph over their imperfections.--_Addison._ + +It is good to rub and polish our brain against that of +others.--_Montaigne._ + +Your reasons at dinner have been sharp and sententious; pleasant without +scurrility, witty without affectation, audacious without impudency, +learned without opinion, and strange without heresy.--_Shakespeare._ + +No one will ever shine in conversation who thinks of saying fine things; +to please one must say many things indifferent, and many very +bad.--_Francis Lockier._ + +Conversation warms the mind, enlivens the imagination, and is +continually starting fresh game that is immediately pursued and taken, +and which would never have occurred in the duller intercourse of +epistolary correspondence.--_Franklin._ + +~Coquetry.~--The most effective coquetry is innocence.--_Lamartine._ + +God created the coquette as soon as he had made the fool.--_Victor +Hugo._ + +Affecting to seem unaffected.--_Congreve._ + +Though 'tis pleasant weaving nets, 'tis wiser to make cages.--_Moore._ + +Beautiful tyrant! Fiend angelical!--_Shakespeare._ + +New vows to plight, and plighted vows to break.--_Dryden._ + +~Courage.~--God holds with the strong.--_Mazzini._ + +Courage is generosity of the highest order, for the brave are prodigal +of the most precious things.--_Colton._ + +Courage that grows from constitution often forsakes the man when he has +occasion for it; courage which arises from a sense of duty acts in a +uniform manner.--_Addison._ + +Courage from hearts, and not from numbers, grows.--_Dryden._ + +As to moral courage, I have very rarely met with _the two o'clock in the +morning courage_. I mean unprepared courage, that which is necessary on +an unexpected occasion, and which, in spite of the most unforeseen +events, leaves full freedom of judgment and decision.--_Napoleon._ + +Courage our greatest failings does supply.--_Waller._ + +To bear is to conquer our fate.--_Campbell._ + +Moral courage is more worth having than physical; not only because it is +a higher virtue, but because the demand for it is more constant. +Physical courage is a virtue which is almost always put away in the +lumber room. Moral courage is wanted day by day.--_Charles Buxton._ + +It is only in little matters that men are cowards.--_William Henry +Herbert._ + +Any coward can fight a battle when he's sure of winning; but give me the +man who has pluck to fight when he's sure of losing.--_George Eliot._ + +He who would arrive at fairy land must face the +phantoms.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Courtier.~--The court is like a palace built of marble; I mean that it is +made up of very hard and very polished people.--_La Bruyère._ + +With the people of court the tongue is the artery of their withered +life, the spiral-spring and flag-feather of their souls.--_Richter._ + +~Covetousness.~--Desire of having is the sin of +covetousness.--_Shakespeare._ + +The character of covetousness is what a man generally acquires more +through some niggardness or ill grace, in little and inconsiderable +things, than in expenses of any consequence.--_Pope._ + +The world itself is too small for the covetous.--_Seneca._ + +~Cowardice.~--At the bottom of a good deal of the bravery that appears in +the world there lurks a miserable cowardice. Men will face powder and +steel because they cannot face public opinion.--_Chapin._ + +~Credulity.~--Quick believers need broad shoulders.--_George Herbert._ + +Let us believe what we can and hope for the rest.--_De Finod._ + +When credulity comes from the heart it does no harm to the +intellect.--_Joubert._ + +What believer sees a disturbing omission or infelicity? The text, +whether of prophet or of poet, expands for whatever we can put into it, +and even his bad grammar is sublime.--_George Eliot._ + +Observe your enemies for they first find out your faults.--_Antishenes._ + +Action is generally defective, and proves an abortion without previous +contemplation. Contemplation generates, action propagates.--_Feltham._ + +~Crime.~--If poverty is the mother of crimes, want of sense is the father +of them.--_Bruyère._ + +Crimes lead into one another. They who are capable of being forgers are +capable of being incendiaries.--_Burke._ + +~Criticism.~--Solomon says rightly: "The wounds made by a friend are worth +more than the caresses of a flatterer." Nevertheless, it is better that +the friend wound not at all.--_Joseph de Maistre._ + +The rule in carving holds good as to criticism,--never cut with a knife +what you can cut with a spoon.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The critic eye, that microscope of wit.--_Pope._ + +Men have commonly more pleasure in the criticism which hurts, than in +that which is innocuous; and are more tolerant of the severity which +breaks hearts and ruins fortunes, than of that which falls impotently on +the grave.--_Ruskin._ + +Certain critics resemble closely those people who when they would laugh +show ugly teeth.--_Joubert._ + +Every one is eagle-eyed to see another's faults and his +deformity.--_Dryden._ + +For I am nothing if not critical.--_Shakespeare._ + +He who stabs you in the dark with a pen would do the same with a +penknife, were he equally safe from detection and the +law.--_Quintilian._ + +Silence is the severest criticism.--_Charles Buxton._ + +All the other powers of literature are coy and haughty, they must be +long courted, and at last are not always gained; but criticism is a +goddess easy of access and forward of advance, she will meet the slow +and encourage the timorous. The want of meaning she supplies with words, +and the want of spirit she recompenses with malignity.--_Johnson._ + +It is a barren kind of criticism which tells you what a thing is +not.--_Rufus Griswold._ + +The legitimate aim of criticism is to direct attention to the excellent. +The bad will dig its own grave, and the imperfect may be safely left to +that final neglect from which no amount of present undeserved popularity +can rescue it.--_Bovée._ + +There are some critics who change everything that comes under their +hands to gold, but to this privilege of Midas they join sometimes his +ears!--_J. Petit Senn._ + +~Cruelty.~--Cruelty, the sign of currish kind.--_Spenser._ + +One of the ill effects of cruelty is that it makes the by-standers +cruel. How hard the English people grew in the time of Henry VIII. and +Bloody Mary.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Man's inhumanity to man makes countless thousands mourn.--_Burns._ + +Cruelty, like every other vice, requires no motive outside of itself; it +only requires opportunity.--_George Eliot._ + +~Cultivation.~--Cultivation is the economy of force.--_Liebig._ + +The highest purpose of intellectual cultivation is to give a man a +perfect knowledge and mastery of his own inner self; to render our +consciousness its own light and its own mirror. Hence there is the less +reason to be surprised at our inability to enter fully into the feelings +and characters of others. No one who has not a complete knowledge of +himself will ever have a true understanding of another.--_Novalis._ + +Neither the naked hand, nor the understanding, left to itself, can do +much; the work is accomplished by instruments and helps of which the +need is not less for the understanding than the hand.--_Bacon._ + +... Without art, a nation is a soulless body; without science, a +straying wanderer. Without warmth and light, nature cannot thrive, nor +humanity increase: the light and warmth of humanity is "art and +science."--_Kozlay._ + +~Cunning.~--Cunning has effect from the credulity of others, rather than +from the abilities of those who are cunning. It requires no +extraordinary talents to lie and deceive.--_Johnson._ + +Cleverness and cunning are incompatible. I never saw them united. The +latter is the resource of the weak, and is only natural to them; +children and fools are always cunning, but clever people +never.--_Byron._ + +Discourage cunning in a child; cunning is the ape of wisdom.--_Locke._ + +Cunning signifies especially a habit or gift of overreaching, +accompanied with enjoyment and a sense of superiority. It is associated +with small and dull conceit, and with an absolute want of sympathy or +affection. It is the intensest rendering of vulgarity, absolute and +utter.--_Ruskin._ + +~Curiosity.~--A person who is too nice an observer of the business of the +crowd, like one who is too curious in observing the labor of the bees, +will often be stung for his curiosity.--_Pope._ + +The gratification of curiosity rather frees us from uneasiness than +confers pleasure; we are more pained by ignorance than delighted by +instruction. Curiosity is the thirst of the soul.--_Johnson._ + +~Custom.~--The despotism of custom is on the wane; we are not content to +know that things are; we ask whether they ought to be.--_John Stuart +Mill._ + +Immemorial custom is transcendent law.--_Menu._ + +In this great society wide lying around us, a critical analysis would +find very few spontaneous actions. It is almost all custom and gross +sense.--_Emerson._ + +Custom doth make dotards of us all.--_Carlyle._ + +~Cynics.~--It will be very generally found that those who sneer habitually +at human nature, and affect to despise it, are among its worst and least +pleasant samples.--_Dickens._ + +Cynicism is old at twenty.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + + +D. + +~Dandy.~--A dandy is a clothes-wearing man,--a man whose trade, office, +and existence consist in the wearing of clothes. Every faculty of his +soul, spirit, person, and purse is heroically consecrated to this one +object,--the wearing of clothes wisely and well; so that as others dress +to live, he lives to dress.--_Carlyle._ + +A fool may have his coat embroidered with gold, but it is a fool's coat +still.--_Rivarol._ + +~Danger.~--It is better to meet danger than to wait for it. He that is on +a lee shore, and foresees a hurricane, stands out to sea, and encounters +a storm to avoid a shipwreck.--_Colton._ + +~Death.~--It is not death, it is dying, that alarms me.--_Montaigne._ + +What is death? To go out like a light, and in a sweet trance to forget +ourselves and all the passing phenomena of the day, as we forget the +phantoms of a fleeting dream; to form, as in a dream, new connections +with God's world; to enter into a more exalted sphere, and to make a new +step up man's graduated ascent of creation.--_Zschokke._ + +Heaven gives its favorites early death.--_Byron._ + +Our respect for the dead, when they are _just_ dead, is something +wonderful, and the way we show it more wonderful still. We show it with +black feathers and black horses; we show it with black dresses and black +heraldries; we show it with costly obelisks and sculptures of sorrow, +which spoil half of our beautiful cathedrals. We show it with frightful +gratings and vaults, and lids of dismal stone, in the midst of the quiet +grass; and last, and not least, we show it by permitting ourselves to +tell any number of falsehoods we think amiable or credible in the +epitaph.--_Ruskin._ + +There are remedies for all things but death.--_Carlyle._ + +We understand death for the first time when he puts his hand upon one +whom we love.--_Mme. de Staël._ + +Too early fitted for a better state.--_Dryden._ + +Death, the dry pedant, spares neither the rose nor the thistle, nor does +he forget the solitary blade of grass in the distant waste. He destroys +thoroughly and unceasingly. Everywhere we may see how he crushes to dust +plants and beasts, men and their works. Even the Egyptian pyramids, that +would seem to defy him, are trophies of his power,--monuments of decay, +graves of primeval kings.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +There is no fireside, howsoe'er defended, but has one vacant +chair!--_Longfellow._ + +And though mine arm should conquer twenty worlds, there's a lean fellow +beats all conquerors.--_Thomas Dekker._ + +Death is a commingling of eternity with time.--_Goethe._ + +To the Christian, whose life has been dark with brooding cares that +would not lift themselves, and on whom chilling rains of sorrow have +fallen at intervals through all his years, death is but the clearing-up +shower; and just behind it are the songs of angels, and the serenity and +glory of heaven.--_Beecher._ + +That golden key that opes the palace of eternity.--_Milton._ + +When death gives us a long lease of life, it takes as hostages all those +whom we have loved.--_Madame Necker._ + +Man makes a death which nature never made.--_Young._ + +The golden ripple on the wall came back again, and nothing else stirred +in the room. The old, old fashion! The fashion that came in with our +first garments, and will last unchanged until our race has run its +course, and the wide firmament is rolled up like a scroll. The old, old +fashion--Death! Oh, thank God, all who see it, for that older fashion +yet--of Immortality!--_Dickens._ + +God's finger touched him, and he slept.--_Tennyson._ + +Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was, and the spirit shall +return unto God who gave it.--_Bible._ + +Nature intends that, at fixed periods, men should succeed each other by +the instrumentality of death. We shall never outwit Nature; we shall die +as usual.--_Fontenelle._ + +After life's fitful fever he sleeps well.--_Shakespeare._ + +Flesh is but the glass which holds the dust that measures all our time, +which also shall be crumbled into dust.--_George Herbert._ + +Death expecteth thee everywhere; be wise, therefore, and expect death +everywhere.--_Quarles._ + +The world. Oh, the world is so sweet to the dying!--_Schiller._ + +The world is full of resurrections. Every night that folds us up in +darkness is a death; and those of you that have been out early, and have +seen the first of the dawn, will know it,--the day rises out of the +night like a being that has burst its tomb and escaped into +life.--_George MacDonald._ + +The dissolution of forms is no loss in the mass of matter.--_Pliny._ + +Faith builds a bridge across the gulf of death.--_Young._ + +~Debt.~--He that dies pays all debts.--_Shakespeare._ + +Poverty is hard, but debt is horrible; a man might as well have a smoky +house and a scolding wife, which are said to be the two worst evils of +our life.--_Spurgeon._ + +The first step in debt is like the first step in falsehood, almost +involving the necessity of proceeding in the same course, debt following +debt as lie follows lie. Haydon, the painter, dated his decline from the +day on which he first borrowed money.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Do not accustom yourself to consider debt only as an inconvenience; you +will find it a calamity.--_Johnson._ + +That swamp [of debt] which tempts men towards it with such a pretty +covering of flowers and verdure. It is wonderful how soon a man gets up +to his chin there,--in a condition in which, spite of himself, he is +forced to think chiefly of release, though he had a scheme of the +universe in his soul.--_George Eliot._ + +Youth is in danger until it learns to look upon debts as +furies.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Deceit.~--No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to +himself and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered +as to which may be true.--_Hawthorne._ + +Idiots only may be cozened twice.--_Dryden._ + +It is a double pleasure to deceive the deceiver.--_Fontaine._ + +There is less misery in being cheated than in that kind of wisdom which +perceives, or thinks it perceives, that all mankind are +cheats.--_Chapin._ + +Like unto golden hooks that from the foolish fish their baits do +hide.--_Spenser._ + +Libertines are hideous spiders that often catch pretty +butterflies.--_Diderot._ + +~Decency.~--As beauty of body, with an agreeable carriage, pleases the +eye, and that pleasure consists in that we observe all the parts with a +certain elegance are proportioned to each other; so does decency of +behavior which appears in our lives obtain the approbation of all with +whom we converse, from the order, consistency, and moderation of our +words and actions.--_Steele._ + +Virtue and decency are so nearly related that it is difficult to +separate them from each other but in our imagination.--_Tully._ + +~Declamation.~--Fine declamation does not consist in flowery periods, +delicate allusions, or musical cadences, but in a plain, open, loose +style, where the periods are long and obvious; where the same thought is +often exhibited in several points of view.--_Goldsmith._ + +The art of declamation has been sinking in value from the moment that +speakers were foolish enough to publish, and hearers wise enough to +read.--_Colton._ + +~Deeds.~--A word that has been said may be unsaid: it is but air. But when +a deed is done, it cannot be undone, nor can our thoughts reach out to +all the mischiefs that may follow.--_Longfellow._ + +How oft the sight of means to do ill deeds makes deeds ill +done!--_Shakespeare._ + +Legal deeds were invented to remind men of their promises, or to convict +them of having broken them,--a stigma on the human race.--_Bruyère._ + +Good actions ennoble us, and we are the sons of our own +deeds.--_Cervantes._ + +We should believe only in works; words are sold for nothing +everywhere.--_Rojas._ + +~Delay.~--We do not directly go about the execution of the purpose that +thrills us, but shut our doors behind us, and ramble with prepared +minds, as if the half were already done. Our resolution is taking root +or hold on the earth then, as seeds first send a shoot downward, which +is fed by their own albumen, ere they send one upwards to the +light.--_Thoreau._ + +Time drinketh up the essence of every great and noble action, which +ought to be performed! and is delayed in the execution.--_Veeshnoo +Sarma._ + +~Democracy.~--Democracy will itself accomplish the salutary universal +change from delusive to real, and make a new blessed world of us by and +by.--_Carlyle._ + +The love of democracy is that of equality.--_Montesquieu._ + +~Dependence.~--The beautiful must ever rest in the arms of the sublime. +The gentle needs the strong to sustain it, as much as the rock-flowers +need rocks to grow on, or the ivy the rugged wall which it +embraces.--_Mrs. Stowe._ + +Thou shalt know by experience how salt the savor is of other's bread, +and how sad a path it is to climb and descend another's +stairs.--_Dante._ + +How beautifully is it ordered, that as many thousands work for one, so +must every individual bring his labor to make the whole! The highest is +not to despise the lowest, nor the lowest to envy the highest; each must +live in all and by all. Who will not work, neither shall he eat. So God +has ordered that men, being in need of each other, should learn to love +each other and bear each other's burdens.--_G. A. Sala._ + +We are never without a pilot. When we know not how to steer, and dare +not hoist a sail, we can drift. The current knows the way, though we do +not. The ship of heaven guides itself, and will not accept a wooden +rudder.--_Emerson._ + +~Desire.~--It is easier to suppress the first desire than to satisfy all +that follow it.--_Franklin._ + +Lack of desire is the greatest riches.--_Seneca._ + +Where necessity ends, curiosity begins; and no sooner are we supplied +with everything that nature can demand, than we sit down to contrive +artificial appetites.--_Johnson._ + +The thirst of desire is never filled, nor fully satisfied.--_Cicero._ + +The man's desire is for the woman; but the woman's desire is rarely +other than for the desire of the man.--_Coleridge._ + +Desires are the pulse of the soul.--_Manton._ + +~Despair.~--Considering the unforeseen events of this world, we should be +taught that no human condition should inspire men with absolute +despair.--_Fielding._ + +Leaden-eyed despair.--_Keats._ + +In the lottery of life there are more prizes drawn than blanks, and to +one misfortune there are fifty advantages. Despondency is the most +unprofitable feeling a man can indulge in.--_De Witt Talmage._ + +He that despairs limits infinite power to finite +apprehensions.--_South._ + +It is impossible for that man to despair who remembers that his helper +is omnipotent.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +He that despairs measures Providence by his own little contracted +model.--_South._ + +Juliet was a fool to kill herself, for in three months she'd have +married again, and been glad to be quit of Romeo.--_Charles Buxton._ + +What we call our despair is often only the painful eagerness of unfed +hope.--_George Eliot._ + +~Despotism.~--It is difficult for power to avoid despotism. The possessors +of rude health; the individualities cut out by a few strokes, solid for +the very reason that they are all of a piece; the complete characters +whose fibres have never been strained by a doubt; the minds that no +questions disturb and no aspirations put out of breath,--these, the +strong, are also the tyrants.--_Countess de Gasparin._ + +There is something among men more capable of shaking despotic power than +lightning, whirlwind, or earthquake; that is, the threatened indignation +of the whole civilized world.--_Daniel Webster._ + +~Destiny.~--The scape-goat which we make responsible for all our crimes +and follies; a necessity which we set down for invincible, when we have +no wish to strive against it.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Our deeds determine us, as much as we determine our deeds.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Detention.~--Never hold any one by the button or the hand, in order to be +heard out; for if people are unwilling to hear you, you had better hold +your tongue than them.--_Chesterfield._ + +~Detraction.~--Happy are they that hear their detractions, and can put +them to mending.--_Shakespeare._ + +In some unlucky dispositions there is such an envious kind of pride that +they cannot endure that any but themselves should be set forth for +excellent; so that when they hear one justly praised they will either +seek to dismount his virtues, or, if they be like a clear light, they +will stab him with a _but_ of detraction; as if there were something yet +so foul as did obnubilate even his brightest glory. When their tongue +cannot justly condemn him, they will leave him suspected by their +silence.--_Feltham._ + +~Dew.~--That same dew, which sometimes withers buds, was wont to swell, +like round and orient pearls, stood now within the pretty flow'rets' +eyes, like tears, that did their own disgrace bewail.--_Shakespeare._ + +Earth's liquid jewelry, wrought of air.--_P. J. Bailey._ + +~Diet.~--Regimen is better than physic. Every one should be his own +physician. We ought to assist, and not to force nature: but more +especially we should learn to suffer, grow old, and die. Some things are +salutary, and others hurtful. Eat with moderation what you know by +experience agrees with your constitution. Nothing is good for the body +but what we can digest. What medicine can procure digestion? Exercise. +What will recruit strength? Sleep. What will alleviate incurable evils? +Patience.--_Voltaire._ + +Free-livers on a small scale, who are prodigal within the compass of a +guinea.--_Washington Irving._ + +~Difficulties.~--The greatest difficulties lie where we are not looking +for them.--_Goethe._ + +The weak sinews become strong by their conflict with difficulties. Hope +is born in the long night of watching and tears. Faith visits us in +defeat and disappointment, amid the consciousness of earthly frailty and +the crumbling tombstones of mortality.--_Chapin._ + +How strangely easy difficult things are!--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Diffidence.~--Nothing sinks a young man into low company, both of women +and men, so surely as timidity and diffidence of himself. If he thinks +that he shall not, he may depend upon it he will not, please. But with +proper endeavors to please, and a degree of persuasion that he shall, it +is almost certain that he will.--_Chesterfield._ + +No congress, nor mob, nor guillotine, nor fire, nor all together, can +avail, to cut out, burn, or destroy the offense of superiority in +persons. The superiority in him is inferiority in me.--_Emerson._ + +~Dignity.~--It is at once the thinnest and most effective of all the +coverings under which duncedom sneaks and skulks. Most of the men of +dignity, who awe or bore their more genial brethren, are simply men who +possess the art of passing off their insensibility for wisdom, their +dullness for depth, and of concealing imbecility of intellect under +haughtiness of manner.--_Whipple._ + +~Dirt.~--"Ignorance," says Ajax, "is a painless evil;" so, I should think, +is dirt, considering the merry faces that go along with it.--_George +Eliot._ + +Martin, if dirt was trumps, what hands you would hold.--_Lamb._ + +~Disappointment.~--Life often seems like a long shipwreck, of which the +débris are friendship, glory, and love: the shores of existence are +strewn with them.--_Mme. de Staël._ + +O world! how many hopes thou dost engulf!--_Alfred de Musset._ + +Thirsting for the golden fountain of the fable, from how many streams +have we turned away, weary and in disgust!--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +We mortals, men and women, devour many a disappointment between +breakfast and dinner-time; keep back the tears and look a little pale +about the lips, and in answer to inquiries say, "Oh, nothing!" Pride +helps us; and pride is not a bad thing when it only urges us to hide our +own hurts--not to hurt others.--_George Eliot._ + +Ah! what seeds for a paradise I bore in my heart, of which birds of prey +have robbed me.--_Richter._ + +~Discourtesy.~--Discourtesy does not spring merely from one bad quality, +but from several,--from foolish vanity, from ignorance of what is due to +others, from indolence, from stupidity, from distraction of thought, +from contempt of others, from jealousy.--_La Bruyère._ + +~Discovery.~--Through every rift of discovery some seeming anomaly drops +out of the darkness, and falls as a golden link in the great chain of +order.--_Chapin._ + +~Discretion.~--Be discreet in all things, and go render it unnecessary to +be mysterious about any.--_Wellington._ + +Though a man has all other perfections and wants discretion, he will be +of no great consequence in the world; but if he has this single talent +in perfection, and but a common share of others, he may do what he +pleases in his particular station of life.--_Addison._ + +~Dishonesty.~--So grasping is dishonesty that it is no respecter of +persons: it will cheat friends as well as foes; and, were it possible, +even God himself!--_Bancroft._ + +~Dispatch.~--Use dispatch. Remember that the world only took six days to +create. Ask me for whatever you please except _time_: that is the only +thing which is beyond my power.--_Napoleon._ + +True dispatch is a rich thing; for time is the measure of business, as +money is of wares, and business is bought at a dear hand where there is +small dispatch.--_Bacon._ + +~Disposition.~--A tender-hearted and compassionate disposition, which +inclines men to pity and feel the misfortunes of others, and which is +even for its own sake incapable of involving any man in ruin and misery, +is of all tempers of mind the most amiable; and, though it seldom +receives much honor, is worthy of the highest.--_Fielding._ + +A good disposition is more valuable than gold; for the latter is the +gift of fortune, but the former is the dower of nature.--_Addison._ + +~Distrust.~--As health lies in labor, and there is no royal road to it but +through toil, so there is no republican road to safety but in constant +distrust.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +What loneliness is more lonely than distrust?--_George Eliot._ + +When desperate ills demand a speedy cure, distrust is cowardice, and +prudence folly.--_Johnson._ + +~Doubt.~--Remember Talleyrand's advice, "If you are in doubt whether to +write a letter or not--don't!" The advice applies to many doubts in life +besides that of letter writing.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Doubt is hell in the human soul.--_Gasparin._ + +Doubt springs from the mind; faith is the daughter of the soul.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +Modest doubt is called the beacon of the wise.--_Shakespeare._ + +The doubts of an honest man contain more moral truth than the profession +of faith of people under a worldly yoke.--_X. Doudan._ + +There lives more faith in honest doubt, believe me, than in half the +creeds.--_Tennyson._ + +Every body drags its shadow, and every mind its doubt.--_Victor Hugo._ + +~Dreams.~--Children of night, of indigestion bred.--_Churchill._ + +A world of the dead in the hues of life.--_Mrs. Hemans._ + +The fickle pensioners of Morpheus' train.--_Milton._ + +Dreams always go by contraries, my dear.--_Samuel Lover._ + +We are somewhat more than ourselves in our sleeps, and the slumber of +the body seems to be but the waking of the soul. It is the litigation of +sense, but the liberty of reason; and our waking conceptions do not +match the fancies of our sleeps.--_Sir T. Browne._ + +The mockery of unquiet slumbers.--_Shakespeare._ + +Like a dog, he hunts in dreams.--_Tennyson._ + +~Dress.~--It is well known that a loose and easy dress contributes much to +give to both sexes those fine proportions of body that are observable in +the Grecian statues, and which serve as models to our present +artists.--_Rousseau._ + +~Duty.~--Stern daughter of the voice of God.--_Wordsworth._ + +Duty is a power which rises with us in the morning and goes to rest with +us at night. It is coextensive with the action of our intelligence. It +is the shadow which cleaves to us, go where we will, and which only +leaves us when we leave the light of life.--_Gladstone._ + +Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God and keep his +commandments; for this is the whole duty of man.--_Bible._ + +The idea of duty, that recognition of something to be lived for beyond +the mere satisfaction of self, is to the moral life what the addition of +a great central ganglion is to animal life.--_George Eliot._ + +Do the duty which lies nearest to thee.--_Goethe._ + +Those who do it always would as soon think of being conceited of eating +their dinner as of doing their duty. What honest boy would pride himself +on not picking a pocket? A thief who was trying to reform +would.--_George MacDonald._ + +To what gulfs a single deviation from the track of human duties +leads!--_Byron._ + +The duty of man is not a wilderness of turnpike gates, through which he +is to pass by tickets from one to the other. It is plain and simple, and +consists but of two points: his duty to God, which every man must feel; +and, with respect to his neighbor, to do as he would be done +by.--_Thomas Paine._ + +There is not a moment without some duty.--_Cicero._ + +If doing what ought to be done be made the first business, and success a +secondary consideration,--is not this the way to exalt +virtue?--_Confucius._ + +The path of duty lies in what is near, and men seek for it in what is +remote; the work of duty lies in what is easy, and men seek for it in +what is difficult.--_Mencius._ + +Duty does not consist in suffering everything, but in suffering +everything for duty. Sometimes, indeed, it is our duty not to +suffer.--_Dr. Vinet._ + +He who is false to present duty breaks a thread in the loom, and will +find the flaw when he may have forgotten its cause.--_Beecher._ + +The primal duties shine aloft, like stars; the charities that soothe, +and heal, and bless, are scattered at the feet of man, like +flowers.--_Wordsworth._ + +Can man or woman choose duties? No more than they can choose their +birthplace, or their father and mother.--_George Eliot._ + + +E. + +~Ear.~--A side intelligencer.--_Lamb._ + +Eyes and ears, two traded pilots 'twixt the dangerous shores of will and +judgment.--_Shakespeare._ + +The wicket of the soul.--_Sir J. Davies._ + +The road to the heart.--_Voltaire._ + +~Early-rising.~--Early-rising not only gives us more life in the same +number of our years, but adds likewise to their number; and not only +enables us to enjoy more of existence in the same measure of time, but +increases also the measure.--_Colton._ + +The famous Apollonius being very early at Vespasian's gate, and finding +him stirring, from thence conjectured that he was worthy to govern an +empire, and said to his companion, "This man surely will be emperor, he +is so early."--_Caussin._ + +When one begins to turn in bed, it is time to get up.--_Wellington._ + +The difference between rising at five and seven o'clock in the morning, +for the space of forty years, supposing a man to go to bed at the same +hour at night, is nearly equivalent to the addition of ten years to a +man's life.--_Doddridge._ + +Whoever has tasted the breath of morning knows that the most +invigorating and most delightful hours of the day are commonly spent in +bed; though it is the evident intention of nature that we should enjoy +and profit by them.--_Southey._ + +~Economy.~--Economy is half the battle of life; it is not so hard to earn +money as to spend it well.--_Spurgeon._ + +Ere fancy you consult, consult your purse.--_Franklin._ + +I can get no remedy against this consumption of the purse; borrowing +only lingers and lingers it out; but the disease is +incurable.--_Shakespeare._ + +The back-door robs the house.--_George Herbert._ + +The world abhors closeness, and all but admires extravagance. Yet a +slack hand shows weakness, a tight hand, strength.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Education.~--Education gives fecundity of thought, copiousness of +illustration, quickness, vigor, fancy, words, images, and illustrations; +it decorates every common thing, and gives the power of trifling without +being undignified and absurd.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Still I am learning.--_Motto of Michael Angelo._ + +If we work upon marble, it will perish; if we work upon brass, time will +efface it; if we rear temples, they will crumble into dust; but if we +work upon immortal minds, if we imbue them with principles, with the +just fear of God and love of our fellow-men, we engrave on those tablets +something which will brighten to all eternity.--_Daniel Webster._ + +The education of life perfects the thinking mind, but depraves the +frivolous.--_Mme. de Staël._ + +What sculpture is to a block of marble, education is to a human soul. +The philosopher, the saint, and the hero,--the wise, the good, and the +great man, very often lie hid and concealed in a plebeian, which a +proper education might have disinterred and brought to +light.--_Addison._ + +Very few men are wise by their own counsel, or learned by their own +teaching; for he that was only taught by himself had a fool to his +master.--_Ben Jonson._ + +I am always for getting a boy forward in his learning, for that is sure +good. I would let him at first read _any_ English book which happens to +engage his attention; because you have done a great deal when you have +brought him to have entertainment from a book. He'll get better books +afterwards.--_Johnson._ + +The essential difference between a good and a bad education is this, +that the former draws on the child to learn by making it sweet to him; +the latter drives the child to learn, by making it sour to him if he +does not.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Nothing so good as a university education, nor worse than a university +without its education.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Education is all paint: it does not alter the nature of the wood that is +under it, it only improves its appearance a little. Why I dislike +education so much is that it makes all people alike, until you have +examined into them; and it is sometimes so long before you get to see +under the varnish!--_Lady Hester Stanhope._ + +~Eloquence.~--The poetry of speech.--_Byron._ + +This is that eloquence the ancients represented as lightning, bearing +down every opposer; this the power which has turned whole assemblies +into astonishment, admiration, and awe; that is described by the +torrent, the flame, and every other instance of irresistible +impetuosity.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Eminence.~--I do not hesitate to say that the road to eminence and power +from an obscure condition ought not to be made too easy, nor a thing too +much of course. If rare merit be the rarest of all things, it ought to +pass through some sort of probation. The Temple of Honor ought to be +seated on an eminence. If it be open through virtue, let it be +remembered, too, that virtue is never tried but by some difficulty and +some struggle.--_Burke._ + +~Emotions.~--All loving emotions, like plants, shoot up most rapidly in +the tempestuous atmosphere of life.--_Richter._ + +Emotion has no value in the Christian system save as it stands connected +with right conduct as the cause of it. Emotion is the bud, not the +flower, and never is it of value until it expands into a flower. Every +religious sentiment; every act of devotion which does not produce a +corresponding elevation of life, is worse than useless; it is absolutely +pernicious, because it ministers to self-deception and tends to lower +the line of personal morals.--_W. H. H. Murray._ + +There are three orders of emotions: those of pleasure, which refer to +the senses; those of harmony, which refer to the mind; and those of +happiness, which are the natural result of a union between harmony and +pleasure.--_Chapone._ + +Emotion, whether of ridicule, anger, or sorrow; whether raised at a +puppet-show, a funeral, or a battle, is your grandest of levelers. The +man who would be always superior should be always +apathetic.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Employment.~--The wise prove, and the foolish confess, by their conduct, +that a life of employment is the only life worth leading.--_Paley._ + +Life will frequently languish, even in the hands of the busy, if they +have not some employment subsidiary to that which forms their main +pursuit.--_Blair._ + +~Emulation.~--Emulation embalms the dead; envy, the vampire, blasts the +living.--_Fuseli._ + +~Enemies.~--It is the enemy whom we do not suspect who is the most +dangerous.--_Rojas._ + +~Energy.~--The longer I live, the more deeply am I convinced that that +which makes the difference between one man and another--between the weak +and powerful, the great and insignificant--is energy, invincible +determination; a purpose once formed, and then death or victory. This +quality will do anything that is to be done in the world; and no +two-legged creature can become a man without it.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The truest wisdom is a resolute determination.--_Napoleon._ + +To think we are able is almost to be so; to determine upon attainment is +frequently attainment itself. Thus earnest resolution has often seemed +to have about it almost a savor of omnipotence.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Oh! for a forty parson power.--_Byron._ + +Daniel Webster struck me much like a steam-engine in trousers.--_Sydney +Smith._ + +This world belongs to the energetic.--_Emerson._ + +~Enjoyment.~--Whatever advantage we snatch beyond the certain portion +allotted us by nature is like money spent before it is due, which at the +time of regular payment will be missed and regretted.--_Johnson._ + +~Ennui.~--I have also seen the world, and after long experience have +discovered that ennui is our greatest enemy, and remunerative labor our +most lasting friend.--_Möser._ + +I am wrapped in dismal thinking.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Enthusiasm.~--Enthusiasts soon understand each other.--_Washington +Irving._ + +Enthusiasm is an evil much less to be dreaded than superstition. +Superstition is the disease of nations; enthusiasm, that of individuals: +the former grows inveterate by time, the latter is cured by it.--_Robert +Hall._ + +Enthusiasm is that temper of mind in which the imagination has got the +better of the judgment.--_Warburton._ + +Great designs are not accomplished without enthusiasm of some sort. It +is the inspiration of everything great. Without it, no man is to be +feared, and with it none despised.--_Bovée._ + +Enthusiasm is supernatural serenity.--_Thoreau._ + +A man conscious of enthusiasm for worthy aims is sustained under petty +hostilities by the memory of great workers who had to fight their way +not without wounds, and who hover in his mind as patron saints, +invisibly helping.--_George Eliot._ + +The insufficient passions of a soul expanding to celestial +limits.--_Sydney Dobell._ + +~Envy.~--A man who hath no virtue in himself ever envieth virtue in +others; for men's minds will either feed upon their own good, or upon +others' evil; and who wanteth the one will prey upon the other.--_Lord +Bacon._ + +Pining and sickening at another's joy.--_Ovid._ + +Many passions dispose us to depress and vilify the merit of one rising +in the esteem of mankind.--_Addison._ + +He who surpasses or subdues mankind must look down on the hate of those +below.--_Byron._ + +An envious fever of pale and bloodless emulation.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Equality.~--Whether I be the grandest genius on earth in a single thing, +and that single thing earthy, or the poor peasant who, behind his plow, +whistles for want of thought, I strongly suspect it will be all one when +I pass to the Competitive Examination yonder! On the other side of the +grave a Raffael's occupation may be gone as well as a +plowman's.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +All the religions known in the world are founded, so far as they relate +to man, or the unity of man, as being all of one degree. Whether in +heaven or in hell, or in whatever state man may be supposed to exist +hereafter, the good and the bad are the only distinctions.--_Thomas +Paine._ + +By the law of God, given by him to humanity, all men are free, are +brothers, and are equals.--_Mazzini._ + +The circle of life is cut up into segments. All lines are equal if they +are drawn from the centre and touch the circumference.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Liberty and equality, lovely and sacred words!--_Mazzini._ + +Society is a more level surface than we imagine. Wise men or absolute +fools are hard to be met with, as there are few giants or +dwarfs.--_Hazlitt._ + +~Equanimity.~--A thing often lost, but seldom found.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +~Error.~--If those alone who "sowed the wind did reap the whirlwind," it +would be well. But the mischief is that the blindness of bigotry, the +madness of ambition, and the miscalculations of diplomacy seek their +victims principally amongst the innocent and the unoffending. The +cottage is sure to suffer for every error of the court, the cabinet, or +the camp. When error sits in the seat of power and of authority, and is +generated in high places, it may be compared to that torrent which +originates indeed in the mountain, but commits its devastation in the +vale.--_Colton._ + +There is a brotherhood of error as close as the brotherhood of +truth.--_Argyll._ + +Errors look so very ugly in persons of small means, one feels they are +taking quite a liberty in going astray; whereas people of fortune may +naturally indulge in a few delinquencies.--_George Eliot._ + +Our follies and errors are the soiled steps to the Grecian temple of our +perfection.--_Richter._ + +But for my part, my lord, I then thought, and am still of the same +opinion, that error, and not truth of any kind, is dangerous; that ill +conclusions can only flow from false propositions; and that, to know +whether any proposition be true or false, it is a preposterous method to +examine it by its apparent consequences.--_Burke._ + +Error in itself is always invisible; its nature is the absence of +light.--_Jacobi._ + +There is no place where weeds do not grow, and there is no heart where +errors are not to be found.--_J. S. Knowles._ + +Our understandings are always liable to error; nature and certainty is +very hard to come at, and infallibility is mere vanity and +pretense.--_Marcus Antoninus._ + +Let error be an infirmity and not a crime.--_Castelar._ + +Errors such as are but acorns in our younger brows grow oaks in our +older heads, and become inflexible.--_Sir Thomas Browne._ + +~Erudition.~--'Tis of great importance to the honor of learning that men +of business should know erudition is not like a lark, which flies high, +and delights in nothing but singing; but that 't is rather like a hawk, +which soars aloft indeed, but can stoop when she finds it convenient, +and seize her prey.--_Bacon._ + +~Estimation.~--A life spent worthily should be measured by a nobler +line,--by deeds, not years.--_Sheridan._ + +To judge of the real importance of an individual, one should think of +the effect his death would produce.--_Léves._ + +~Eternity.~--Upon laying a weight in one of the scales, inscribed +eternity, though I threw in that of time, prosperity, affliction, +wealth, and poverty, which seemed very ponderous, they were not able to +stir the opposite balance.--_Addison._ + +Eternity is a negative idea clothed with a positive name. It supposes in +that to which it is applied a present existence; and is the negation of +a beginning or of an end of that existence.--_Paley._ + +~Etiquette.~--Whoever pays a visit that is not desired, or talks longer +than the listener is willing to attend, is guilty of an injury that he +cannot repair, and takes away that which he cannot give.--_Johnson._ + +The forms required by good breeding, or prescribed by authority, are to +be observed in social or official life.--_Prescott._ + +Good taste rejects excessive nicety; it treats little things as little +things, and is not hurt by them.--_Fénelon._ + +The law of the table is beauty, a respect to the common soul of the +guests. Everything is unreasonable which is private to two or three, or +any portion of the company. Tact never violates for a moment this law; +never intrudes the orders of the house, the vices of the absent, or a +tariff of expenses, or professional privacies; as we say, we never "talk +shop" before company. Lovers abstain from caresses, and haters from +insults, while they sit in one parlor with common friends.--_Emerson._ + +~Events.~--Man reconciles himself to almost any event however trying, if +it happens in the ordinary course of nature. It is the extraordinary +alone that he rebels against. There is a moral idea associated with this +feeling; for the extraordinary appears to be something like an injustice +of Heaven.--_Humboldt._ + +There can be no peace in human life without the contempt of all events. +He that troubles his head with drawing consequences from mere +contingencies shall never be at rest.--_L'Estrange._ + +~Evil.~--Evil is in antagonism with the entire creation.--_Zschokke._ + +Even in evil, that dark cloud which hangs over the creation, we discern +rays of light and hope; and gradually come to see in suffering and +temptation proofs and instruments of the sublimest purposes of wisdom +and love.--_Channing._ + +Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.--_Bible._ + +If we will rightly estimate what we call good and evil, we shall find it +lies much in comparison.--_Locke._ + +Not one false man but does uncountable evil.--_Carlyle._ + +This is the course of every evil deed, that, propagating still, it +brings forth evil.--_Coleridge._ + +The truly virtuous do not easily credit evil that is told them of their +neighbors; for if others may do amiss, then may these also speak amiss: +man is frail, and prone to evil, and therefore may soon fail in +words.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Physical evils destroy themselves, or they destroy us.--_Rousseau._ + +"One soweth, and another reapeth," is a verity that applies to evil as +well as good.--_George Eliot._ + +If you believe in evil, you have done evil.--_A. de Musset._ + +~Example.~--We are all of us more or less echoes, repeating involuntarily +the virtues, the defects, the movements, and the characters of those +among whom we live.--_Joubert._ + +How far that little candle throws its beams! So shines a good deed in a +naughty world.--_Shakespeare._ + +Every great example takes hold of us with the authority of a miracle, +and says to us: "If ye had but faith, ye could also be able to do the +things which I do."--_Jacobi._ + +~Excellence.~--Nothing is such an obstacle to the production of excellence +as the power of producing what is good with ease and rapidity.--_Aikin._ + +~Excelsior.~--Man's life is in the impulse of elevation to something +higher.--_Jacobi._ + +~Excess.~--Too much noise deafens us; too much light blinds us; too great +a distance or too much of proximity equally prevents us from being able +to see; too long and too short a discourse obscures our knowledge of a +subject; too much of truth stuns us.--_Pascal._ + +O fleeting joys of Paradise, dear bought with lasting woes.--_Milton._ + +Excess generally causes reaction, and produces a change in the opposite +direction, whether it be in the seasons, or in individuals, or in +governments.--_Plato._ + +~Excitement.~--There is always something interesting and beautiful about a +universal popular excitement of a generous character, let the object of +it be what it may. The great desiring heart of man, surging with one +strong, sympathetic swell, even though it be to break on the beach of +life and fall backwards, leaving the sands as barren as before, has yet +a meaning and a power in its restlessness with which I must deeply +sympathize.--_Mrs. Stowe._ + +Violent excitement exhausts the mind, and leaves it withered and +sterile.--_Fénelon._ + +The language of excitement is at best but picturesque merely. You must +be calm before you can utter oracles.--_Thoreau._ + +This is so engraven on our nature that it may be regarded as an +appetite. Like all other appetites, it is not sinful, unless indulged +unlawfully, or to excess.--_Dr. Guthrie._ + +~Excuse.~--Of vain things, excuses are the vainest.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Expectation.~--'Tis expectation makes a blessing dear; heaven were not +heaven, if we knew what it were.--_Suckling._ + +It may be proper for all to remember that they ought not to raise +expectations which it is not in their power to satisfy; and that it is +more pleasing to see smoke brightening into flame, than flame sinking +into smoke.--_Johnson._ + +~Expediency.~--When private virtue is hazarded upon the perilous cast of +expediency, the pillars of the republic, however apparent their +stability, are infected with decay at the very centre.--_Chapin._ + +Men in responsible situations cannot, like those in private life, be +governed solely by the dictates of their own inclinations, or by such +motives as can only affect themselves.--_Washington._ + +~Experience.~--Life consists in the alternate process of learning and +unlearning; but it is often wiser to unlearn than to +learn.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Experience, the shroud of illusions.--_De Finod._ + +To have a true idea of man, or of life, one must have stood himself on +the brink of suicide, or on the door-sill of insanity, at least +once.--_Taine._ + +What we learn with pleasure we never forget.--_Alfred Mercier._ + +Who would venture upon the journey of life, if compelled to begin it at +the end?--_Mme. de Maintenon._ + +Experience is the extract of suffering.--_Arthur Helps._ + +Every generous illusion adds a wrinkle in vanishing. Experience is the +successive disenchantment of the things of life. It is reason enriched +by the spoils of the heart.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +~Extravagance.~--Expenses are not rectilinear, but circular. Every inch +you add to the diameter adds three to the circumference.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +~Extremes.~--Extremes are dangerous; a middle estate is safest; as a +middle temper of the sea, between a still calm and a violent tempest, is +most helpful to convey the mariner to his haven.--_Swinnock._ + +Superlatives are diminutives, and weaken.--_Emerson._ + +Extremes are for us as if they were not, and as if we were not in regard +to them; they escape from us, or we from them.--_Pascal._ + +~Eye.~--Stabbed with a white wench's black eye.--_Shakespeare._ + +The eyes of a man are of no use without the observing power. Telescopes +and microscopes are cunning contrivances, but they cannot see of +themselves.--_Paxton Hood._ + +Ladies, whose bright eyes rain influence.--_Milton._ + +Where is any author in the world teaches such beauty as a woman's +eye?--_Shakespeare._ + +Let every eye negotiate for itself and trust no agent.--_Shakespeare._ + +Her eyes are homes of silent prayer.--_Tennyson._ + +The eyes have one language everywhere.--_George Herbert._ + +Glances are the first billets-doux of love.--_Ninon de L'Enclos._ + + +F. + +~Face.~--A February face, so full of frost, of storms, and +cloudiness.--_Shakespeare._ + +Demons in act, but gods at least in face.--_Byron._ + +A girl of eighteen imagines the feelings behind the face that has moved +her with its sympathetic youth, as easily as primitive people imagined +the humors of the gods in fair weather: what is she to believe in, if +not in this vision woven from within?--_George Eliot._ + +The worst of faces still is a human face.--_Lavater._ + +~Fact.~--There should always be some foundation of fact for the most airy +fabric, and pure invention is but the talent of a deceiver.--_Byron._ + +Every day of my life makes me feel more and more how seldom a fact is +accurately stated; how almost invariably when a story has passed through +the mind of a third person it becomes, so far as regards the impression +that it makes in further repetitions, little better than a falsehood; +and this, too, though the narrator be the most truth-seeking person in +existence.--_Hawthorne._ + +~Faction.~--A feeble government produces more factions than an oppressive +one.--_Fisher Ames._ + +It is the demon of discord armed with the power to do endless mischief, +and intent alone on destroying whatever opposes its progress.--_Crabbe._ + +~Failure.~--But screw your courage to the sticking-place, and we'll not +fail!--_Shakespeare._ + +Albeit failure in any cause produces a correspondent misery in the soul, +yet it is, in a sense, the highway to success, inasmuch as every +discovery of what is false leads us to seek earnestly after what is +true, and every fresh experience points out some form of error which we +shall afterward carefully eschew.--_Keats._ + +Every failure is a step to success; every detection of what is false +directs us toward what is true; every trial exhausts some tempting form +of error. Not only so, but scarcely any attempt is entirely a failure; +scarcely any theory, the result of steady thought, is altogether false; +no tempting form of error is without some latent charm derived from +truth.--_Whewell._ + +~Faith.~--In affairs of this world men are saved not by faith but by the +want of it.--_Fielding._ + +All the scholastic scaffolding falls, as a ruined edifice, before one +single word,--_faith_.--_Napoleon._ + +O welcome pure-eyed Faith, white-handed Hope, thou hovering angel, girt +with golden wings!--_Milton._ + +Life grows dark as we go on, till only one clear light is left shining +on it, and that is faith.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +When my reason is afloat, my faith cannot long remain in suspense, and I +believe in God as firmly as in any other truth whatever; in short, a +thousand motives draw me to the consolatory side, and add the weight of +hope to the equilibrium of reason.--_Rousseau._ + +Flatter not thyself in thy faith to God, if thou wantest charity for thy +neighbor; and think not thou hast charity for thy neighbor, if thou +wantest faith to God: where they are not both together, they are both +wanting; they are both dead if once divided.--_Quarles._ + +We cannot live on probabilities. The faith in which we can live bravely +and die in peace must be a certainty, so far as it professes to be a +faith at all, or it is nothing.--_Froude._ + +The great desire of this age is for a doctrine which may serve to +condense our knowledge, guide our researches, and shape our lives, so +that conduct may really be the consequence of belief.--_G. H. Lewes._ + +~Falsehood.~--Falsehood, like a drawing in perspective, will not bear to +be examined in every point of view, because it is a good imitation of +truth, as a perspective is of the reality.--_Colton._ + +Do not let us lie at all. Do not think of one falsity as harmless, and +another as slight, and another as unintended. Cast them all aside: they +may be light and accidental, but they are ugly soot from the smoke of +the pit, for all that: and it is better that our hearts should be swept +clean of them, without one care as to which is largest or +blackest.--_Ruskin._ + +It is more from carelessness about the truth, than from intentional +lying, that there is so much falsehood in the world.--_Johnson._ + +Falsehood and fraud shoot up in every soil, the product of all +climes.--_Addison._ + +Round dealing is the honor of man's nature; and a mixture of falsehood +is like alloy in gold and silver, which may make the metal work the +better, but it embaseth it.--_Lord Bacon._ + +To lapse in fullness is sorer than to lie for need: and falsehood is +worse in king than beggar.--_Shakespeare._ + +A liar would be brave toward God, while he is a coward toward men; for a +lie faces God, and shrinks from man.--_Montaigne._ + +The dull flat falsehood serves for policy, and in the cunning, truth's +itself a lie.--_Pope._ + +No falsehood can endure touch of celestial temper but returns of force +to its own likeness.--_Milton._ + +Figures themselves, in their symmetrical and inexorable order, have +their mistakes like words and speeches. An hour of pleasure and an hour +of pain are alike only on the dial in their numerical arrangement. +Outside the dial they lie sixty times.--_Méry._ + +~Fame.~--Fame, as a river, is narrowest where it is bred, and broadest +afar off; so exemplary writers depend not upon the gratitude of the +world.--_Davenant._ + +Grant me honest fame, or grant me none.--_Pope._ + +Much of reputation depends on the period in which it rises. The Italians +proverbially observe that one half of fame depends on that cause. In +dark periods, when talents appear they shine like the sun through a +small hole in the window-shutter. The strong beam dazzles amid the +surrounding gloom. Open the shutter, and the general diffusion of light +attracts no notice.--_Walpole._ + +Fame confers a rank above that of gentleman and of kings. As soon as she +issues her patent of nobility, it matters not a straw whether the +recipient be the son of a Bourbon or of a +tallow-chandler.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +One Cæsar lives,--a thousand are forgot!--_Young._ + +Few people make much noise after their deaths who did not do so while +they were living. Posterity could not be supposed to rake into the +records of past times for the illustrious obscure, and only ratify or +annul the lists of great names handed down to them by the voice of +common fame. Few people recover from the neglect or obloquy of their +contemporaries. The public will hardly be at the pains to try the same +cause twice over, or does not like to reverse its own sentence, at least +when on the unfavorable side.--_Hazlitt._ + +Celebrity sells dearly what we think she gives.--_Emile Souvestre._ + +Fame has no necessary conjunction with praise; it may exist without the +breath of a word: it is a recognition of excellence which must be felt, +but need not be spoken. Even the envious must feel it; feel it, and hate +in silence.--_Washington Allston._ + +Many have lived on a pedestal who will never have a statue when +dead.--_Béranger._ + +I hope the day will never arrive when I shall neither be the object of +calumny nor ridicule, for then I shall be neglected and +forgotten.--_Johnson._ + +A man who cannot win fame in his own age will have a very small chance +of winning it from posterity. True there are some half dozen exceptions +to this truth among millions of myriads that attest it; but what man of +common sense would invest any large amount of hope in so unpromising a +lottery.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Fame is the thirst of youth.--_Byron._ + +Our admiration of a famous man lessens upon our nearer acquaintance with +him; and we seldom hear of a celebrated person without a catalogue of +some notorious weaknesses and infirmities.--_Addison._ + +Even the best things are not equal to their fame.--_Thoreau._ + +~Fanaticism.~--Fanaticism, to which men are so much inclined, has always +served not only to render them more brutalized but more +wicked.--_Voltaire._ + +Painful and corporeal punishments should never be applied to fanaticism; +for, being founded on pride, it glories in persecution.--_Beccaria._ + +The false fire of an overheated mind.--_Cowper._ + +Fanaticism is the child of false zeal and of superstition, the father of +intolerance and of persecution.--_J. Fletcher._ + +~Fashion.~--Fashion is the great governor of this world. It presides not +only in matters of dress and amusement, but in law, physic, politics, +religion, and all other things of the gravest kind. Indeed, the wisest +of men would be puzzled to give any better reason why particular forms +in all these have been at certain times universally received, and at +other times universally rejected, than that they were in or out of +fashion.--_Fielding._ + +Fancy and pride seek things at vast expense.--_Young._ + +A beautiful envelope for mortality, presenting a glittering and polished +exterior, the appearance of which gives no certain indication of the +real value of what is contained therein.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Beauty too often sacrifices to fashion. The spirit of fashion is not the +beautiful, but the willful; not the graceful, but the fantastic; not the +superior in the abstract, but the superior in the worst of all +concretes,--the vulgar.--_Leigh Hunt._ + +~Faults.~--To acknowledge our faults when we are blamed is modesty; to +discover them to one's friends, in ingenuousness, is confidence; but to +preach them to all the world, if one does not take care, is +pride.--_Confucius._ + +The first fault is the child of simplicity, but every other the +offspring of guilt.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Fear.~--It is no ways congruous that God should be frightening men into +truth who were made to be wrought upon by calm evidence and gentle +methods of persuasion.--_Atterbury._ + +Fear is far more painful to cowardice than death to true courage.--_Sir +P. Sidney._ + +Fear is the tax that conscience pays to guilt.--_George Sewell._ + +Fear invites danger; concealed cowards insult known +ones.--_Chesterfield._ + +~Felicity.~--The world produces for every pint of honey a gallon of gall; +for every dram of pleasure a pound of pain; for every inch of mirth an +ell of moan; and as the ivy twines around the oak, so does misery and +misfortune encompass the happy man. Felicity, pure and unalloyed +felicity, is not a plant of earthly growth; her gardens are the +skies.--_Burton._ + +~Fickleness.~--Everything by starts, and nothing long.--_Dryden._ + +It will be found that they are the weakest-minded and the +hardest-hearted men that most love change.--_Ruskin._ + +~Fiction.~--Truth severe, by fairy fiction drest.--_Gray._ + +Every fiction since Homer has taught friendship, patriotism, generosity, +contempt of death. These are the highest virtues; and the fictions which +taught them were therefore of the highest, though not of unmixed, +utility.--_Sir J. Mackintosh._ + +I have often maintained that fiction may be much more instructive than +real history.--_Rev. John Foster._ + +Fiction is of the essence of poetry as well as of painting: there is a +resemblance in one of human bodies, things, and actions which are not +real, and in the other of a true story by fiction.--_Dryden._ + +Fiction is no longer a mere amusement; but transcendent genius, +accommodating itself to the character of the age, has seized upon this +province of literature, and turned fiction from a toy into a mighty +engine.--_Channing._ + +The best portraits are those in which there is a slight mixture of +caricature; and we are not aware that the best histories are not those +in which a little of the exaggeration of fictitious narrative is +judiciously employed. Something is lost in accuracy; but much is gained +in effect. The fainter lines are neglected; but the great characteristic +features are imprinted on the mind forever.--_Macaulay._ + +Those who delight in the study of human nature may improve in the +knowledge of it, and in the profitable application of that knowledge, by +the perusal of such fictions as those before us [Jane Austen's +Novels].--_Archbishop Whately._ + +~Firmness.~--The greatest firmness is the greatest mercy.--_Longfellow._ + +Stand firm and immovable as an anvil when it is beaten upon.--_St. +Ignatius._ + +~Flattery.~--The art of flatterers is to take advantage of the foibles of +the great, to foster their errors, and never to give advice which may +annoy.--_Molière._ + +He does me double wrong that wounds me with the flatteries of his +tongue.--_Shakespeare._ + +Flattery is often a traffic of mutual meanness, where, although both +parties intend deception, neither are deceived, since words that cost +little are exchanged for hopes that cost less.--_Colton._ + +The most dangerous of all flattery is the inferiority of those about +us.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Though flattery blossoms like friendship, yet there is a great +difference in the fruit.--_Socrates._ + +The coin that is most current among mankind is flattery; the only +benefit of which is that by hearing what we are not we may be instructed +what we ought to be.--_Swift._ + +Blinded as they are to their true character by self-love, every man is +his own first and chiefest flatterer, prepared, therefore, to welcome +the flatterer from the outside, who only comes confirming the verdict of +the flatterer within.--_Plutarch._ + +Flattery is an ensnaring quality, and leaves a very dangerous +impression. It swells a man's imagination, entertains his fancy, and +drives him to a doting upon his own person.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +Because all men are apt to flatter themselves, to entertain the addition +of other men's praises is most perilous.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +Out of the pulpit, I trust none can accuse me of too much plainness of +speech; but there, madame [Queen Mary], I am not my own master, but must +speak that which I am commanded by the King of kings, and dare not, on +my soul, flatter any one on the face of all the earth--_John Knox._ + +~Flowers.~--Luther always kept a flower in a glass on his writing-table; +and when he was waging his great public controversy with Eckius he kept +a flower in his hand. Lord Bacon has a beautiful passage about flowers. +As to Shakspeare, he is a perfect Alpine valley,--he is full of flowers; +they spring, and blossom, and wave in every cleft of his mind. Even +Milton, cold, serene, and stately as he is, breaks forth into exquisite +gushes of tenderness and fancy when he marshals the flowers.--_Mrs. +Stowe._ + +Flowers, leaves, fruit, are the air-woven children of +light.--_Moleschott._ + +Ye pretty daughters of the Earth and Sun.--_Sir Walter Raleigh._ + +I always think the flowers can see us and know what we are thinking +about.--_George Eliot._ + +What a desolate place would be a world without a flower! It would be a +face without a smile,--a feast without a welcome! Are not flowers the +stars of the earth? and are not our stars the flowers of heaven?--_Mrs. +Balfour._ + +What a pity flowers can utter no sound! A singing rose, a whispering +violet, a murmuring honeysuckle,--oh, what a rare and exquisite miracle +would these be!--_Beecher._ + +The bright mosaic, that with storied beauty, the floor of nature's +temple tessellate.--_Horace Smith._ + +~Fools.~--You pity a man who is lame or blind, but you never pity him for +being a fool, which is often a much greater misfortune.--_Sydney Smith._ + +A learned fool is more foolish than an ignorant fool.--_Molière._ + +Of all thieves fools are the worst; they rob you of time and +temper.--_Goethe._ + +Fortune makes folly her peculiar care.--_Churchill._ + +It would be easier to endow a fool with intellect than to persuade him +that he had none.--_Babinet._ + +There are many more fools in the world than there are knaves, otherwise +the knaves could not exist.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +There are more fools than sages, and among sages there is more folly +than wisdom.--_Chamfort._ + +~Foppery.~--Foppery is never cured; it is the bad stamina of the mind, +which, like those of the body, are never rectified; once a coxcomb and +always a coxcomb.--_Johnson._ + +Foppery is the egotism of clothes.--_Victor Hugo._ + +Nature has sometimes made a fool; but a coxcomb is always of a man's own +making.--_Addison._ + +~Forbearance.~--The little I have seen of the world teaches me to look +upon the errors of others in sorrow, not in anger. When I take the +history of one poor heart that has sinned and suffered, and represent to +myself the struggles and temptations it has passed through, the brief +pulsations of joy, the feverish inquietude of hope and fear, the +pressure of want, the desertion of friends, I would fain leave the +erring soul of my fellow-man with Him from whose hand it +came.--_Longfellow._ + +~Forethought.~--Human foresight often leaves its proudest possessor only a +choice of evils.--_Colton._ + +Whoever fails to turn aside the ills of life by prudent forethought, +must submit to fulfill the course of destiny.--_Schiller._ + +In life, as in chess, forethought wins.--_Charles Buxton._ + +If a man take no thought about what is distant, he will find sorrow near +at hand.--_Confucius._ + +Those old stories of visions and dreams guiding men have their truth: we +are saved by making the future present to ourselves.--_George Eliot._ + +~Forgetfulness.~--There is nothing, no, nothing, innocent or good that +dies and is forgotten: let us hold to that faith or none. An infant, a +prattling child, dying in the cradle, will live again in the better +thoughts of those that loved it, and play its part through them in the +redeeming actions of the world, though its body be burnt to ashes, or +drowned in the deep sea. Forgotten! Oh, if the deeds of human creatures +could be traced to their source, how beautiful would even death appear! +for how much charity, mercy, and purified affection would be seen to +have their growth in dusty graves!--_Dickens._ + +~Forgiveness.~--It is more easy to forgive the weak who have injured us, +than the powerful whom we have injured. That conduct will be continued +by our fears which commenced in our resentment. He that has gone so far +as to cut the claws of the lion will not feel himself quite secure until +he has also drawn his teeth.--_Colton._ + +They never pardon who commit the wrong.--_Dryden._ + +May I tell you why it seems to me a good thing for us to remember wrong +that has been done us? That we may forgive it.--_Dickens._ + +'Tis easier for the generous to forgive than for offense to ask +it.--_Thomson._ + +Life, that ever needs forgiveness, has, for its first duty, to +forgive.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +It is easy enough to forgive your enemies, if you have not the means to +harm them.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +More bounteous run rivers when the ice that locked their flow melts into +their waters. And when fine natures relent, their kindness is swelled by +the thaw.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Fortitude.~--White men should exhibit the same insensibility to moral +tortures that red men do to physical torments.--_Théophile Gautier._ + +There is a strength of quiet endurance as significant of courage as the +most daring feats of prowess.--_Tuckerman._ + +Fortitude is the guard and support of the other virtues.--_Locke._ + +~Fortune.~--Fortune loves only the young.--_Charles V._ + +Ill fortune never crushed that man whom good fortune deceived not.--_Ben +Jonson._ + +It is often the easiest move that completes the game. Fortune is like +the lady whom a lover carried off from all his rivals by putting an +additional lace upon his liveries.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The use we make of our fortune determines its sufficiency. A little is +enough if used wisely, and too much if expended foolishly.--_Bovée._ + +The fortunate circumstances of our lives are generally found at last to +be of our own producing.--_Goldsmith._ + +Fortune has been considered the guardian divinity of fools; and, on this +score, she has been accused of blindness; but it should rather be +adduced as a proof of her sagacity, when she helps those who certainly +cannot help themselves.--_Colton._ + +Fortunes made in no time are like shirts made in no time; it's ten to +one if they hang long together.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +There is some help for all the defects of fortune; for if a man cannot +attain to the length of his wishes, he may have his remedy by cutting of +them shorter.--_Cowley._ + +Fortune, to show us her power in all things, and to abate our +presumption, seeing she could not make fools wise, she has made them +fortunate.--_Montaigne._ + +See'st thou not what various fortunes the Divinity makes man to pass +through, changing and turning them from day to day?--_Euripides._ + +Fortune is but a synonymous word for nature and necessity.--_Bentley._ + +Foolish I deem him who, thinking that his state is blest, rejoices in +security; for Fortune, like a man distempered in his senses, leaps now +this way, now that, and no man is always fortunate.--_Euripides._ + +They say Fortune is a woman and capricious. But sometimes she is a good +woman, and gives to those who merit.--_George Eliot._ + +If Fortune has fairly sat on a man, he takes it for granted that life +consists in being sat upon. But to be coddled on Fortune's knee, and +then have his ears boxed, that is aggravating.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Fraud.~--The more gross the fraud the more glibly will it go down, and +the more greedily will it be swallowed; since folly will always find +faith wherever impostors will find impudence.--_Colton._ + +~Friendship.~--Friendship has steps which lead up to the throne of God, +though all spirits come to the Infinite; only Love is satiable, and like +Truth, admits of no three degrees of comparison; and a simple being +fills the heart.--_Richter._ + +Very pleasant hast thou been unto me: thy love to me was wonderful, +passing the love of women.--_Bible._ + +Fix yourself upon the wealthy. In a word, take this for a golden rule +through life: Never, never have a friend that is poorer than +yourself.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +Experience has taught me that the only friends we can call our own, who +can have no change, are those over whom the grave has closed; the seal +of death is the only seal of friendship.--_Byron._ + +What is commonly called friendship even is only a little more honor +among rogues.--_Thoreau._ + +So great a happiness do I esteem it to be loved, that I fancy every +blessing both from gods and men ready to descend spontaneously upon him +who is loved.--_Xenophon._ + +Nothing makes the earth seem so spacious as to have friends at a +distance; they make the latitudes and longitudes.--_Thoreau._ + +The friendship between great men is rarely intimate or permanent. It is +a Boswell that most appreciates a Johnson. Genius has no brother, no +co-mate; the love it inspires is that of a pupil or a +son.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The firmest friendships have been formed in mutual adversity; as iron is +most strongly united by the fiercest flame.--_Colton._ + +Never contract a friendship with a man that is not better than +thyself.--_Confucius._ + +There are three friendships which are advantageous, and three which are +injurious. Friendship with the upright, friendship with the sincere, and +friendship with the man of much information,--these are advantageous. +Friendship with the man of specious airs, friendship with the +insinuatingly soft, friendship with the glib-tongued,--these are +injurious.--_Confucius._ + +Friendship survives death better than absence.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +This communicating of a man's self to his friend works two contrary +effects, for it redoubleth joys and cutteth griefs in half: for there is +no man that imparteth his joys to his friend, but he joyeth the more; +and no man that imparteth his griefs to his friend, but he grieveth the +less.--_Bacon._ + +Sweet is the memory of distant friends! Like the mellow rays of the +declining sun, it falls tenderly, yet sadly, on the heart.--_Washington +Irving._ + +It may be worth noticing as a curious circumstance, when persons past +forty before they were at all acquainted form together a very close +intimacy of friendship. For grafts of _old_ wood to _take_, there must +be a wonderful congeniality between the trees.--_Whately._ + +An old friend is not always the person whom it is easiest to make a +confidant of.--_George Eliot._ + +~Fun.~--There is nothing like fun, is there? I haven't any myself, and I +do like it in others. Oh, we need it,--we need all the counter-weights +we can muster to balance the sad relations of life. God has made sunny +spots in the heart; why should we exclude the light from +them?--_Haliburton._ + +~Futurity.~--The best preparation for the future is the present well seen +to, the last duty done.--_George MacDonald._ + +We always live prospectively, never retrospectively, and there is no +abiding moment.--_Jacobi._ + +Another life, if it were not better than this, would be less a promise +than a threat.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +The spirit of man, which God inspired, cannot together perish with this +corporeal clod.--_Milton._ + + +G. + +~Gambling.~--Gaming is a kind of tacit confession that the company engaged +therein do, in general, exceed the bounds of their respective fortunes, +and therefore they cast lots to determine upon whom the ruin shall at +present fall, that the rest may be saved a little longer.--_Blackstone._ + +A mode of transferring property without producing any intermediate +good.--_Johnson._ + +~Gems.~--How very beautiful these gems are! It is strange how deeply +colors seem to penetrate one, like scent. I suppose that is the reason +why gems are used as spiritual emblems in the Revelation of St. John. +They look like fragments of heaven.--_George Eliot._ + +~Generosity.~--A friend to everybody is often a friend to nobody, or else +in his simplicity he robs his family to help strangers, and becomes +brother to a beggar. There is wisdom in generosity as in everything +else.--_Spurgeon._ + +Generosity is the accompaniment of high birth; pity and gratitude are +its attendants.--_Corneille._ + +It is good to be unselfish and generous; but don't carry that too far. +It will not do to give yourself to be melted down for the benefit of the +tallow-trade; you must know where to find yourself.--_George Eliot._ + +If cruelty has its expiations and its remorses, generosity has its +chances and its turns of good fortune; as if Providence reserved them +for fitting occasions, that noble hearts may not be +discouraged.--_Lamartine._ + +~Genius.~--Genius is rarely found without some mixture of eccentricity, as +the strength of spirit is proved by the bubbles on its surface.--_Mrs. +Balfour._ + +All great men are in some degree inspired.--_Cicero._ + +This is the highest miracle of genius: that things which are not should +be as though they were; that the imaginations of one mind should become +the personal recollections of another.--_Macaulay._ + +The path of genius is not less obstructed with disappointment than that +of ambition.--_Voltaire._ + +One misfortune of extraordinary geniuses is that their very friends are +more apt to admire than love them.--_Pope._ + +Genius speaks only to genius.--_Stanislaus._ + +A nation does wisely, if not well, in starving her men of genius. Fatten +them, and they are done for.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Genius has no brother.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Genius never grows old; young to-day, mature yesterday, vigorous +to-morrow: always immortal. It is peculiar to no sex or condition, and +is the divine gift to woman no less than to man.--_Juan Lewis._ + +~Gentleman.~--A gentleman's first characteristic is that fineness of +structure in the body which renders it capable of the most delicate +sensation; and of structure in the mind which renders it capable of the +most delicate sympathies; one may say, simply, "fineness of nature." +This is of course compatible with heroic bodily strength and mental +firmness; in fact, heroic strength is not conceivable without such +delicacy.--_Ruskin._ + +It is a grand old name, that of gentleman, and has been recognized as a +rank and power in all stages of society. To possess this character is a +dignity of itself, commanding the instinctive homage of every generous +mind, and those who will not bow to titular rank will yet do homage to +the gentleman. His qualities depend not upon fashion or manners, but +upon moral worth; not on personal possessions, but on personal +qualities. The Psalmist briefly describes him as one "that walketh +uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his +heart."--_Samuel Smiles._ + +There is no man that can teach us to be gentlemen better than Joseph +Addison.--_Thackeray._ + +~Gentleness.~--Fearless gentleness is the most beautiful of feminine +attractions, born of modesty and love.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Gentleness is far more successful in all its enterprises than violence; +indeed, violence generally frustrates its own purpose, while gentleness +scarcely ever fails.--_Locke._ + +Sweet speaking oft a currish heart reclaims.--_Sidney._ + +The golden beams of truth and the silken cords of love, twisted +together, will draw men on with a sweet violence, whether they will or +not.--_Cudworth._ + +~Gifts.~--One must be poor to know the luxury of giving!--_George Eliot._ + +Riches, understanding, beauty, are fair gifts of God.--_Luther._ + +And with them words of so sweet breath composed as made the things more +rich.--_Shakespeare._ + +How can that gift leave a trace which has left no void?--_Madame +Swetchine._ + +The best thing to give to your enemy is forgiveness; to an opponent, +tolerance; to a friend, your heart; to your child, a good example; to a +father, deference; to your mother, conduct that will make her proud of +you; to yourself, respect; to all men, charity.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Examples are few of men ruined by giving. Men are heroes in spending, +very cravens in what they give.--_Bovée._ + +When a friend asks, there is no to-morrow.--_George Herbert._ + +Strange designs lurk under a gift. "Give the horse to his Holiness," +said the cardinal. "I cannot serve you!"--_Zimmermann._ + +~Glory.~--To a father who loves his children victory has no charms. When +the heart speaks, glory itself is an illusion.--_Napoleon._ + +Those who start for human glory, like the mettled hounds of Actæon, must +pursue the game not only where there is a path, but where there is none. +They must be able to simulate and dissimulate, to leap and to creep; to +conquer the earth like Cæsar, or to fall down and kiss it like Brutus; +to throw their sword like Brennus into the trembling scale; or, like +Nelson, to snatch the laurels from the doubtful hand of Victory, while +she is hesitating where to bestow them.--_Colton._ + +Obloquy is a necessary ingredient in the composition of all true +glory.--_Burke._ + +The best kind of glory is that which is reflected from honesty,--such as +was the glory of Cato and Aristides; but it was harmful to them both, +and is seldom beneficial to any man whilst he lives; what it is to him +after his death I cannot say, because I love not philosophy merely +notional and conjectural, and no man who has made the experiment has +been so kind as to come back to inform us.--_Cowley._ + +Nothing is so expensive as glory.--_Sydney Smith._ + +The love of glory can only create a hero, the contempt of it creates a +wise man.--_Talleyrand._ + +~Gluttony.~--Whose god is their belly, and whose glory is in their +shame.--_Bible._ + +The kitchen is their shrine, the cook their priest, the table their +altar, and their belly their god.--_Buck._ + +~God.~--He that doth the ravens feed, yea, providentially caters for the +sparrow, be comfort to my age!--_Shakespeare._ + +To escape from evil, we must be made as far as possible like God; and +this resemblance consists in becoming just and holy and wise.--_Plato._ + +Whenever I think of God I can only conceive him as a Being infinitely +great and infinitely good. This last quality of the divine nature +inspires me with such confidence and joy that I could have written even +a _miserere_ in _tempo allegro_.--_Haydn._ + +All flows out from the Deity, and all must be absorbed in him +again.--_Zoroaster._ + +It were better to have no opinion of God at all than such an opinion as +is unworthy of him; for the one is unbelief, and the other is contumely; +and certainly superstition is the reproach of the Deity.--_Bacon._ + +I have seen two miracles lately. I looked up, and saw the clouds above +me in the noontide; and they looked like the sea that was hanging over +me, and I could see no cord on which they were suspended, and yet they +never fell. And then when the noontide had gone, and the midnight came, +I looked again, and there was the dome of heaven, and it was spangled +with stars, and I could see no pillars that held up the skies, and yet +they never fell. Now He that holds the stars up and moves the clouds in +their course can do all things, and I trust Him in the sight of these +miracles.--_Luther._ + +This avenging God, rancorous torturer who burns his creatures in a slow +fire! When they tell me that God made himself a man, I prefer to +recognize a man who made himself a god.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +This is one of the names which we give to that eternal, infinite, and +incomprehensible being, the Creator of all things, who preserves and +governs everything by his almighty power and wisdom, and is the only +object of our worship.--_Cruden._ + +~Gold.~--Midas longed for gold. He got gold so that whatever he touched +became gold, and he, with his long ears, was little the better for +it.--_Carlyle._ + +A mask of gold hides all deformities.--_Dekker._ + +There are two metals, one of which is omnipotent in the cabinet, and the +other in the camp,--gold and iron. He that knows how to apply them both +may indeed attain the highest station, but he must know something more +to keep it.--_Colton._ + +Thou true magnetic pole, to which all hearts point duly north, like +trembling needles!--_Byron._ + +Judges and senates have been bought for gold.--_Pope._ + +Gold is, in its last analysis, the sweat of the poor, and the blood of +the brave.--_Joseph Napoleon._ + +Gold all is not that doth golden seem.--_Spenser._ + +There is no place so high that an ass laden with gold cannot reach +it.--_Rojas._ + +~Good.~--When what is good comes of age and is likely to live, there is +reason for rejoicing.--_George Eliot._ + +How indestructibly the good grows, and propagates itself, even among the +weedy entanglements of evil!--_Carlyle._ + +Good, the more communicated, more abundant grows.--_Milton._ + +Whatever mitigates the woes or increases the happiness of others is a +just criterion of goodness; and whatever injures society at large, or +any individual in it, is a criterion of iniquity. One should not quarrel +with a dog without a reason sufficient to vindicate one through all the +courts of morality.--_Goldsmith._ + +The true and good resemble gold. Gold seldom appears obvious and solid, +but it pervades invisibly the bodies that contain it.--_Jacobi._ + +He is good that does good to others. If he suffers for the good he does, +he is better still; and if he suffers from them to whom he did good, he +is arrived to that height of goodness that nothing but an increase of +his sufferings can add to it; if it proves his death, his virtue is at +its summit,--it is heroism complete.--_Bruyère._ + +That is good which doth good.--_Venning._ + +The Pythagoreans make good to be certain and finite, and evil infinite +and uncertain. There are a thousand ways to miss the white; there is +only one to hit it.--_Montaigne._ + +~Good-humor.~--Honest good-humor is the oil and wine of a merry meeting, +and there is no jovial companionship equal to that where the jokes are +rather small and the laughter abundant.--_Washington Irving._ + +Affability, mildness, tenderness, and a word which I would fain bring +back to its original signification of virtue,--I mean good-nature,--are +of daily use: they are the bread of mankind and staff of +life.--_Dryden._ + +This portable quality of good-humor seasons all the parts and +occurrences we meet with, in such a manner that there are no moments +lost, but they all pass with so much satisfaction that the heaviest of +loads (when it is a load), that of time, is never felt by +us.--_Steele._ + +Gayety is to good-humor as perfumes to vegetable fragrance: the one +overpowers weak spirits, the other recreates and revives +them.--_Johnson._ + +That inexhaustible good-nature, which is the most precious gift of +Heaven, spreading itself like oil over the troubled sea of thought, and +keeping the mind smooth and equable in the roughest +weather.--_Washington Irving._ + +~Goodness.~--Nothing rarer than real goodness.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +True goodness is like the glow-worm in this, that it shines most when no +eyes except those of Heaven are upon it.--_Archdeacon Hare._ + +Do good by stealth, and blush to find it fame.--_Pope._ + +Goodness thinks no ill where no ill seems.--_Milton._ + +~Gossip.~--A long-tongued babbling gossip.--_Shakespeare._ + +He sits at home until he has accumulated an insupportable load of ennui, +and then he sallies forth to distribute it amongst his +acquaintance.--_Colton._ + +As to people saying a few idle words about us, we must not mind that, +any more than the old church-steeple minds the rooks cawing about +it.--_George Eliot._ + +~Government.~--The proper function of a government is to make it easy for +people to do good and difficult for them to do evil.--_Gladstone._ + +Society cannot exist unless a controlling power upon will and appetite +be placed somewhere; and the less of it there is within, the more there +must be without. It is ordained in the eternal constitution of things +that men of intemperate minds cannot be free. Their passions forge their +fetters.--_Burke._ + +Government is a contrivance of human wisdom to provide for human +wants.--_Burke._ + +Government owes its birth to the necessity of preventing and repressing +the injuries which the associated individuals had to fear from one +another. It is the sentinel who watches, in order that the common +laborer be not disturbed.--_Abbé Raynal._ + +But I say to you, and to our whole country, and to all the crowned heads +and aristocratic powers and feudal systems that exist, that it is to +self-government, the great principle of popular representation and +administration, the system that lets in all to participate in the +counsels that are to assign the good or evil to all, that we may owe +what we are and what we hope to be.--_Daniel Webster._ + +The culminating point of administration is to know well how much power, +great or small, we ought to use in all circumstances.--_Montesquieu._ + +Of governments, that of the mob is the most sanguinary, that of soldiers +the most expensive, and that of civilians the most vexatious.--_Colton._ + +Government, like dress, is the badge of lost innocence; the palaces of +kings are built on the ruins of the bowers of paradise. For were the +impulses of conscience clear, uniform, and irresistibly obeyed, man +would need no other lawgiver; but that not being the case, he finds it +necessary to surrender up a part of his property to furnish means for +the protection of the rest, and this he is induced to do by the same +prudence which in every other case advises him out of two evils to +choose the least.--_Thomas Paine._ + +~Grace.~--As amber attracts a straw, so does beauty admiration, which only +lasts while the warmth continues; but virtue, wisdom, goodness, and real +worth, like the loadstone, never lose their power. These are the true +graces, which, as Homer feigns, are linked and tied hand in hand, +because it is by their influence that human hearts are so firmly united +to each other.--_Burton._ + +The king-becoming graces--devotion, patience, courage, +fortitude.--_Shakespeare._ + +Know you not, master, to some kind of men their graces serve them but as +enemies? No more do yours; your virtues, gentle master, are sanctified +and holy traitors to you. Oh, what a world is this, when what is comely +envenoms him that bears it!--_Shakespeare._ + +How inimitably graceful children are before they learn to +dance!--_Coleridge._ + +That word, grace, in an ungracious mouth, is but +profane.--_Shakespeare._ + +Grace comes as oft clad in the dusky robe of desolation as in white +attire.--_Sir J. Beaumont._ + +~Gratitude.~--Gratitude is a fruit of great cultivation; you do not find +it among gross people.--_Johnson._ + +God is pleased with no music below so much as the thanksgiving songs of +relieved widows and supported orphans; of rejoicing, comforted, and +thankful persons.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +No metaphysician ever felt the deficiency of language so much as the +grateful.--_Colton._ + +Thus love is the most easy and agreeable, and gratitude the most +humiliating, affection of the mind: we never reflect on the man we love +without exulting in our choice, while he who has bound us to him by +benefits alone rises to our ideas as a person to whom we have in some +measure forfeited our freedom.--_Goldsmith._ + +Gratitude is the virtue most deified and most deserted. It is the +ornament of rhetoric and the libel of practical life.--_J. W. Forney._ + +~Grave.~--Since the silent shore awaits at last even those who longest +miss the old Archer's arrow, perhaps the early grave which men weep over +may be meant to save.--_Byron._ + +The grave is, I suspect, the sole commonwealth which attains that dead +flat of social equality that life in its every principle so heartily +abhors; and that equality the grave will perpetuate to the end of +time.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The reconciling grave.--_Southern._ + +The grave where even the great find rest.--_Pope._ + +Oh, how small a portion of earth will hold us when we are dead, who +ambitiously seek after the whole world while we are living!--_Philip, +King of Macedon._ + +The cradle of transformation.--_Mazzini._ + +The graves of those we have loved and lost distress and console +us.--_Arsène Houssaye._ + +~Gravity.~--The very essence of gravity is design, and consequently +deceit; a taught trick to gain credit with the world for more sense and +knowledge than a man is worth.--_Sterne._ + +Gravity is but the rind of wisdom; but it is a preservative +rind.--_Joubert._ + +Gravity must be natural and simple. There must be urbanity and +tenderness in it. A man must not formalize on everything. He who +formalizes on everything is a fool, and a grave fool is perhaps more +injurious than a light fool.--_Cecil._ + +~Greatness.~--There is but one method, and that is hard labor; and a man +who will not pay that price for greatness had better at once dedicate +himself to the pursuit of the fox, or sport with the tangles of Neæra's +hair, or talk of bullocks, and glory in the goad!--_Sidney Smith._ + +A really great man is known by three signs,--generosity in the design, +humanity in the execution, and moderation in success.--_Bismarck._ + +The great men of the earth are but the marking stones on the road of +humanity; they are the priests of its religion.--_Mazzini._ + +A multitude of eyes will narrowly inspect every part of an eminent man, +consider him nicely in all views, and not be a little pleased when they +have taken him in the worst and most disadvantageous lights.--_Addison._ + +What you can manufacture, or communicate, you can lower the price of, +but this mental supremacy is incommunicable; you will never multiply its +quantity, nor lower its price; and nearly the best thing that men can +generally do is--to set themselves, not to the attainment, but the +discovery of this; learning to know gold, when we see it, from +iron-glance, and diamond from flint-sand, being for most of us a more +profitable employment than trying to make diamonds out of our own +charcoal.--_Ruskin._ + +Men in great place are thrice servants: servants of the sovereign or +state, servants of fame, and servants of business; so as they have no +freedom, neither in their persons, nor in their actions, nor in their +times. It is a strange desire to seek power over others, and to lose +power over a man's self.--_Bacon._ + +The difference between one man and another is by no means so great as +the superstitious crowd supposes. But the same feelings which in ancient +Rome produced the apotheosis of a popular emperor, and in modern times +the canonization of a devout prelate, lead men to cherish an illusion +which furnishes them with something to adore.--_Macaulay._ + +Great men never make a bad use of their superiority; they see it, they +feel it, and are not less modest. The more they have, the more they know +their own deficiencies.--_Rousseau._ + +He who is great when he falls is great in his prostration, and is no +more an object of contempt than when men tread on the ruins of sacred +buildings, which men of piety venerate no less than if they +stood.--_Seneca._ + +Greatness lies not in being strong, but in the right using of +strength.--_Beecher._ + +Greatness seems in her [Madame de Maintenon] to take its noblest form, +that of simplicity.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Grief.~--Why destroy present happiness by a distant misery, which may +never come at all, or you may never live to see it? for every +substantial grief has twenty shadows, and most of them shadows of your +own making.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Some griefs are medicinable; and this is one.--_Shakespeare._ + +While grief is fresh, every attempt to divert only irritates. You must +wait till grief be _digested_. And then amusement will dissipate the +remains of it.--_Johnson._ + +Grief hallows hearts, even while it ages heads.--_P. J. Bailey._ + +All the joys of earth will not assuage our thirst for happiness, while a +single grief suffices to shroud life in a sombre veil, and smite it with +nothingness at all points.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Grief has been compared to a hydra, for every one that dies two are +born.--_Calderon._ + +Grief, like night, is salutary. It cools down the soul by putting out +its feverish fires; and if it oppresses her, it also compresses her +energies. The load once gone, she will go forth with greater buoyancy to +new pleasures.--_Dr. Pulsford._ + +What's gone, and what's past help, should be past grief.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Guilt.~--All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little +hand.--_Shakespeare._ + +Think not that guilt requires the burning torches of the Furies to +agitate and torment it. Frauds, crimes, remembrances of the past, +terrors of the future,--these are the domestic Furies that are ever +present to the mind of the impious.--_Cicero._ + +Guiltiness will speak though tongues were out of use.--_Shakespeare._ + +Despair alone makes guilty men be bold.--_Coleridge._ + +The sin lessens in human estimation only as the guilt +increases.--_Schiller._ + +There are no greater prudes than those women who have some secret to +hide.--_George Sand._ + +~Gunpowder.~--If we contrast the rapid progress of this mischievous +discovery with the slow and laborious advances of reason, science, and +the arts of peace, a philosopher, according to his temper, will laugh or +weep at the folly of mankind.--_Gibbon._ + +A coarse-grained powder, used by cross-grained people, playing at +cross-grained purposes.--_Marryatt._ + +Gunpowder is the emblem of politic revenge, for it biteth first, and +barketh afterwards; the bullet being at the mark before the report is +heard, so that it maketh a noise, not by way of warning, but of +triumph.--_Fuller._ + + +H. + +~Habits.~--Habits are soon assumed; but when we strive to strip them off, +'tis being flayed alive.--_Cowper._ + +Vicious habits are so odious and degrading that they transform the +individual who practices them into an incarnate demon.--_Cicero._ + +Unless the habit leads to happiness, the best habit is to contract +none.--_Zimmerman._ + +The law of the harvest is to reap more than you sow. Sow an act and you +reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a character; sow a character and +you reap a destiny.--_George D. Boardman._ + +Habit, if wisely and skillfully formed, becomes truly a second nature, +as the common saying is; but unskillfully and unmethodically directed, +it will be as it were the ape of nature, which imitates nothing to the +life, but only clumsily and awkwardly.--_Bacon._ + +That beneficent harness of routine which enables silly men to live +respectably and unhappy men to live calmly.--_George Eliot._ + +Habits are the daughters of action, but they nurse their mothers, and +give birth to daughters after her image, more lovely and +prosperous.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +~Hair.~--The hair is the finest ornament women have. Of old, virgins used +to wear it loose, except when they were in mourning.--_Luther._ + +Her head was bare, but for her native ornament of hair, which in a +simple knot was tied above; sweet negligence, unheeded bait of +love!--_Dryden._ + +The robe which curious nature weaves to hang upon the head.--_Dekker._ + +Robed in the long night of her deep hair.--_Tennyson._ + +~Hand.~--Other parts of the body assist the speaker, but these speak +themselves. By them we ask, we promise, we invoke, we dismiss, we +threaten, we entreat, we deprecate; we express fear, joy, grief, our +doubts, our assent, our penitence; we show moderation, profusion; we +mark number and time.--_Quintilian._ + +The Greeks adored their gods by the simple compliment of kissing their +hands; and the Romans were treated as atheists if they would not perform +the same act when they entered a temple. This custom, however, as a +religious ceremony, declined with Paganism; but was continued as a +salutation by inferiors to their superiors, or as a token of esteem +among friends. At present it is only practiced as a mark of obedience +from the subject to the sovereign, and by lovers, who are solicitous to +preserve this ancient usage in its full power.--_Disraeli._ + +~Handsome.~--They are as heaven made them, handsome enough if they be good +enough; for handsome is that handsome does.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Happiness.~--The foundation of domestic happiness is faith in the virtue +of woman; the foundation of political happiness is confidence in the +integrity of man; the foundation of all happiness, temporal and eternal, +is reliance on the goodness of God.--_Landor._ + +To remember happiness which cannot be restored is pain, but of a +softened kind. Our recollections are unfortunately mingled with much +that we deplore, and with many actions that we bitterly repent; still, +in the most checkered life, I firmly think there are so many little rays +of sunshine to look back upon that I do not believe any mortal would +deliberately drain a goblet of the waters of Lethe if he had it in his +power.--_Dickens._ + +That man is never happy for the present is so true that all his relief +from unhappiness is only forgetting himself for a little while. Life is +a progress from want to want, not from enjoyment to +enjoyment.--_Johnson._ + +It is a lucky eel that escapes skinning. The best happiness will be to +escape the worst misery.--_George Eliot._ + +That all who are happy are equally happy is not true. A peasant and a +philosopher may be equally _satisfied_, but not equally _happy_. +Happiness consists in the multiplicity of agreeable consciousness. A +peasant has not capacity for having equal happiness with a +philosopher.--_Johnson._ + +Happiness doats on her work, and is prodigal to her favorite. As one +drop of water hath an attraction for another, so do felicities run into +felicities.--_Landor._ + +Sensations sweet, felt in the blood, and felt along the +heart.--_Wordsworth._ + +Great happiness is the fire ordeal of mankind, great misfortune only the +trial by water; for the former opens a large extent of futurity, whereas +the latter circumscribes or closes it.--_Richter._ + +Prospective happiness is perhaps the only real happiness in the +world.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +Nature and individuals are generally best when they are happiest, and +deserve heaven most when they have learnt rightly to enjoy it. Tears of +sorrow are only pearls of inferior value, but tears of joy are pearls or +diamonds of the first water.--_Richter._ + +How many people I have seen who would have plucked cannon-balls out of +the muzzles of guns with their bare hands, and yet had not courage +enough to be happy.--_Théophile Gautier._ + +All mankind are happier for having been happy, so that, if you make them +happy now, you make them happy twenty years hence by the memory of +it.--_Sydney Smith._ + +We are no longer happy so soon as we wish to be happier.--_Lamotte._ + +I have now reigned above fifty years in victory or peace, beloved by my +subjects, dreaded by my enemies, and respected by my allies. Riches and +honors, power and pleasure, have waited on my call, nor does any earthly +blessing appear to have been wanting to my felicity. In this situation, +I have diligently numbered the days of pure and genuine happiness which +have fallen to my lot: they amount to _fourteen_. O man, place not thy +confidence in this present world!--_The Caliph Abdalrahman._ + +If I may speak of myself (the only person of whom I can speak with +certainty), _my_ happy hours have far exceeded, and far exceed, the +scanty numbers of the caliph of Spain; and I shall not scruple to add +that many of them are due to the pleasing labor of the present +composition.--_Gibbon._ + +For which we bear to live, or dare to die.--_Pope._ + +We buy wisdom with happiness, and who would purchase it at such a price? +To be happy we must forget the past, and think not of the future; and +who that has a soul or mind can do this? No one; and this proves that +those who have either know no happiness on this earth. Memory precludes +happiness, whatever Rogers may say or write to the contrary, for it +borrows from the past to embitter the present, bringing back to us all +the grief that has most wounded, or the happiness that has most charmed +us.--_Byron._ + +The happiness you wot of is not a hundredth part of what you +enjoy.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Every human soul has the germ of some flowers within; and they would +open if they could only find sunshine and free air to expand in. I +always told you that not having enough of sunshine was what ailed the +world. Make people happy, and there will not be half the quarreling, or +a tenth part of the wickedness there is.--_Mrs. L. M. Child._ + +Comparison, more than reality, makes men happy, and can make them +wretched.--_Feltham._ + +Happiness and misery are the names of two extremes, the utmost bounds +whereof we know not.--_Locke._ + +There comes forever something between us and what we deem our +happiness.--_Byron._ + +Philosophical happiness is to want little; civil or vulgar happiness is +to want much, and to enjoy much.--_Burke._ + +How sad a sight is human happiness to those whose thoughts can pierce +beyond an hour.--_Young._ + +Plenteous joys, wanton in fullness.--_Shakespeare._ + +Happiness is always the inaccessible castle which sinks in ruin when we +set foot on it.--_Arsène Houssaye._ + +For ages happiness has been represented as a huge precious stone, +impossible to find, which people seek for hopelessly. It is not so; +happiness is a mosaic, composed of a thousand little stones, which +separately and of themselves have little value, but which united with +art form a graceful design.--_Mme. de Girardin._ + +The happiest women, like the happiest nations, have no history.--_George +Eliot._ + +The way to bliss lies not on beds of down.--_Quarles._ + +The use we make of happiness gives us an eternal sentiment of +satisfaction or repentance.--_Rousseau._ + +Happiness is where we find it, but rarely where we seek it.--_J. Petit +Senn._ + +In regard to the affairs of mortals, there is nothing happy +throughout.--_Euripides._ + +~Hardship.~--The beginning of hardship is like the first taste of bitter +food,--it seems for a moment unbearable; yet, if there is nothing else +to satisfy our hunger, we take another bite and find it possible to go +on.--_George Eliot._ + +~Haste.~--Let your haste commend your duty.--_Shakespeare._ + +The more haste ever the worst speed.--_Churchill._ + +Hurry and cunning are the two apprentices of dispatch and skill; but +neither of them ever learn their master's trade.--_Colton._ + +All haste implies weakness.--_George MacDonald._ + +~Hatred.~--We hate some persons because we do not know them; and we will +not know them because we hate them.--_Colton._ + +Were one to ask me in which direction I think man strongest, I should +say, his capacity to hate.--_Beecher._ + +Love is rarely a hypocrite. But hate! how detect, and how guard against +it. It lurks where you least expect it; it is created by causes that you +can the least foresee; and civilization multiplies its varieties whilst +it favors its disguise; for civilization increases the number of +contending interests, and refinement renders more susceptible to the +least irritation the cuticle of self-love.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Hatred is like fire--it makes even light rubbish deadly.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Health.~--Be it remembered that man subsists upon the air more than upon +his meat and drink; but no one can exist for an hour without a copious +supply of air. The atmosphere which some breathe is contaminated and +adulterated, and with its vital principles so diminished, that it cannot +fully decarbonize the blood, nor fully excite the nervous +system.--_Thackeray._ + +Those hypochondriacs, who, like Herodius, give up their whole time and +thoughts to the care of their health, sacrifice unto life every noble +purpose of living; striving to support a frail and feverish being here, +they neglect an hereafter; they continue to patch up and repair their +mouldering tenement of clay, regardless of the immortal tenant that must +survive it; agitated by greater fears than the Apostle, and supported by +none of his hopes, they "die daily."--_Colton._ + +Refuse to be ill. Never tell people you are ill; never own it to +yourself. Illness is one of those things which a man should resist on +principle at the onset.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Health is so necessary to all the duties, as well as pleasures, of life, +that the crime of squandering it is equal to the folly.--_Johnson._ + +There are two things in life that a sage must preserve at every +sacrifice, the coats of his stomach and the enamel of his teeth. Some +evils admit of consolations: there are no comforters for dyspepsia and +the toothache.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Heart.~--The heart is like the tree that gives balm for the wounds of man +only when the iron has pierced it.--_Chauteaubriand._ + +The heart is an astrologer that always divines the truth.--_Calderon._ + +There are treasures laid up in the heart,--treasures of charity, piety, +temperance, and soberness. These treasures a man takes with him beyond +death when he leaves this world.--_Buddhist Scriptures._ + +In aught that tries the heart, how few withstand the proof!--_Byron._ + +The hearts of pretty women are like bonbons, wrapped up in enigmas.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +A loving heart is the truest wisdom.--_Dickens._ + +To judge human character rightly, a man may sometimes have very small +experience, provided he has a very large heart.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The heart has reasons that reason does not understand.--_Bossuet._ + +There are chords in the human heart, strange, varying strings, which are +only struck by accident; which will remain mute and senseless to appeals +the most passionate and earnest, and respond at last to the slightest +casual touch. In the most insensible or childish minds there is some +train of reflection which art can seldom lead, or skill assist, but +which will reveal itself, as great truths have done, by chance, and when +the discoverer has the plainest and simplest end in view.--_Dickens._ + +A willing heart adds feathers to the heel, and makes the clown a winged +Mercury.--_Joanna Baillie._ + +Some people's hearts are shrunk in them like dried nuts. You can hear +'em rattle as they walk.--_Douglas_ _Jerrold._ + +~Heaven.~--The love of heaven makes one heavenly.--_Shakespeare._ + +Where is heaven? I cannot tell. Even to the eye of faith, heaven looks +much like a star to the eye of flesh. Set there on the brow of night, it +shines most bright, most beautiful; but it is separated from us by so +great a distance as to be raised almost as high above our investigations +as above the storms and clouds of earth.--_Rev. Dr. Guthrie._ + +When at eve at the bounding of the landscape the heavens appear to +recline so slowly on the earth, imagination pictures beyond the horizon +an asylum of hope,--a native land of love; and nature seems silently to +repeat that man is immortal.--_Madame de Staël._ + +Few, without the hope of another life, would think it worth their while +to live above the allurements of sense.--_Atterbury._ + +Heaven is a place of restless activity, the abode of never-tiring +thought. David and Isaiah will sweep nobler and loftier strains in +eternity, and the minds of the saints, unclogged by cumbersome clay, +will forever feast on the banquet of rich and glorious +thought.--_Beecher._ + +~Heroes.~--A light supper, a good night's sleep, and a fine morning have +often made a hero of the same man who, by indigestion, a restless night, +and a rainy morning would have proved a coward.--_Chesterfield._ + +In analyzing the character of heroes it is hardly possible to separate +altogether the share of Fortune from their own.--_Hallam._ + +Mankind is not disposed to look narrowly into the conduct of great +victors when their victory is on the right side.--_George Eliot._ + +No one is a hero to his valet.--_Madame de Sévigné._ + +~History.~--The Grecian history is a poem, Latin history a picture, modern +history a chronicle.--_Chauteaubriand._ + +If men could learn from history, what lessons it might teach us! But +passion and party blind our eyes, and the light which experience gives +is a lantern on the stern, which shines only on the waves behind +us!--_Coleridge._ + +History, which is, indeed, little more than the register of the crimes, +follies, and misfortunes of mankind.--_Gibbon._ + +We must consider how very little history there is; I mean real, +authentic history. That certain kings reigned and certain battles were +fought we can depend upon as true; but all the coloring, all the +philosophy of history, is conjecture.--_Johnson._ + +History needs distance, perspective. Facts and events which are too well +attested cease, in some sort, to be malleable.--_Joubert._ + +To be entirely just in our estimate of other ages is not only +difficult,--it is impossible. Even what is passing in our presence we +see but through a glass darkly. The mind as well as the eye adds +something of its own before an image, even of the clearest object, can +be painted upon it; and in historical inquiries the most instructed +thinkers have but a limited advantage over the most illiterate. Those +who know the most approach least to agreement.--_Froude._ + +The impartiality of history is not that of the mirror which merely +reflects objects, but of the judge who sees, listens, and +decides.--_Lamartine._ + +In every human character and transaction there is a mixture of good and +evil: a little exaggeration, a little suppression, a judicious use of +epithets, a watchful and searching skepticism with respect to the +evidence on one side, a convenient credulity with respect to every +report or tradition on the other, may easily make a saint of Laud, or a +tyrant of Henry the Fourth.--_Macaulay._ + +History is but a kind of Newgate calendar, a register of the crimes and +miseries that man has inflicted on his fellow-man.--_Washington Irving._ + +History has its foreground and its background, and it is principally in +the management of its perspective that one artist differs from another. +Some events must be represented on a large scale, others diminished; the +great majority will be lost in the dimness of the horizon, and a general +idea of their joint effect will be given by a few slight +touches.--_Macaulay._ + +Violent natures make history. The instruments they use almost always +kill. Religion and philosophy have their vestments covered with innocent +blood.--_X. Doudan._ + +Each generation gathers together the imperishable children of the past, +and increases them by new sons of light, alike radiant with +immortality.--_Bancroft._ + +What history is not richer, does not contain far more, than they by whom +it is enacted, the present witnesses! What mortal understandeth his +way?--_Jacobi._ + +He alone reads history aright, who, observing how powerfully +circumstances influence the feelings and opinions of men, how often +vices pass into virtues, and paradoxes into axioms, learns to +distinguish what is accidental and transitory in human nature from what +is essential and immutable.--_Macaulay._ + +~Home.~--Home is the grandest of all institutions.--_Spurgeon._ + +The first sure symptom of a mind in health is rest of heart, and +pleasure felt at home.--_Young._ + +To most men their early home is no more than a memory of their early +years, and I'm not sure but they have the best of it. The image is never +marred. There's no disappointment in memory, and one's exaggerations are +always on the good side.--_George Eliot._ + +Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home.--_Payne._ + +Stint yourself, as you think good, in other things; but don't scruple +freedom in brightening home. Gay furniture and a brilliant garden are a +sight day by day, and make life blither.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Home is the seminary of all other institutions.--_Chapin._ + +~Honesty.~--If he does really think that there is no distinction between +virtue and vice, why, sir, when he leaves our houses let us count our +spoons.--_Johnson._ + +Persons lightly dipped, not grained, in generous honesty, are but pale +in goodness.--_Sir T. Browne._ + +Refined policy has ever been the parent of confusion, and ever will be +so, as long as the world endures. Plain good intention, which is as +easily discovered at the first view as fraud is surely detected at last, +is, let me say, of no mean force in the government of mankind. Genuine +simplicity of heart is a healing and cementing principle.--_Burke._ + +Money dishonestly acquired is never worth its cost, while a good +conscience never costs as much as it is worth.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +The honest man is a rare variety of the human species.--_Chamfort._ + +~Honor.~--Keep unscathed the good name, keep out of peril the honor, +without which even your battered old soldier, who is hobbling into his +grave on half pay and a wooden leg, would not change with +Achilles.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Hope.~--Hope warps judgment in council, but quickens energy in +action.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +"I have a fine lot of hopes here in my basket," remarked the New Year; +"they are a sweet-smelling flower--a species of roses."--_Hawthorne._ + +Hope is the most beneficial of all the affections, and doth much to the +prolongation of life, if it be not too often frustrated; but +entertaineth the fancy with an expectation of good.--_Bacon._ + +The mighty hopes that make us men.--_Tennyson._ + +Thou captive's freedom, and thou sick man's health.--_Cowley._ + +I have a knack of hoping, which is as good as an estate in reversion, if +one can keep from the temptation of turning it into certainty, which may +spoil all.--_George Eliot._ + +Hope, folding her wings, looked backward and became regret.--_George +Eliot._ + +Hope is always liberal, and they that trust her promises make little +scruple of reveling to-day on the profits of to-morrow.--_Johnson._ + +It is necessary to hope, though hope should be always deluded; for hope +itself is happiness and its frustrations, however frequent, are yet less +dreadful than its extinction.--_Johnson._ + +Hope is a delusion; no hand can grasp a wave or a shadow.--_Victor +Hugo._ + +~Humanity.~--A man's nature runs either to herbs or weeds: therefore let +him seasonably water the one and destroy the other.--_Bacon._ + +I own that there is a haughtiness and fierceness in human nature which +will cause innumerable broils, place men in what situation you +please.--_Burke._ + +Human nature is not so much depraved as to hinder us from respecting +goodness in others, though we ourselves want it. This is the reason why +we are so much charmed with the pretty prattle of children, and even the +expressions of pleasure or uneasiness in some parts of the brute +creation. They are without artifice or malice; and we love truth too +well to resist the charms of sincerity.--_Steele._ + +I do not know what comfort other people find in considering the weakness +of great men, but 'tis always a mortification to me to observe that +there is no perfection in humanity.--_Montagu._ + +The true proof of the inherent nobleness of our common nature is in the +sympathy it betrays with what is noble wherever crowds are collected. +Never believe the world is base; if it were so, no society could hold +together for a day.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Humility.~--It is from out the depths of our humility that the height of +our destiny looks grandest. Let me truly feel that in myself I am +nothing, and at once, through every inlet of my soul, God comes in, and +is everything in me.--_Mountford._ + +Should any ask me, What is the first thing in religion? I would reply, +The first, second, and third thing therein, nay all, is humility.--_St. +Augustine._ + +Epaminondas, that heathen captain, finding himself lifted up in the day +of his public triumph, the next day went drooping and hanging down his +head; but being asked what was the reason of his so great dejection, +made answer: "Yesterday I felt myself transported with vainglory, +therefore I chastise myself for it to-day."--_Plutarch._ + +In humility imitate Jesus and Socrates.--_Franklin._ + +Believe me, the much-praised lambs of humility would not bear themselves +so meekly if they but possessed tigers' claws.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Trees that, like the poplar, lift upwards all their boughs, give no +shade and no shelter, whatever their height. Trees the most lovingly +shelter and shade us when, like the willow, the higher soar their +summits, the lowlier droop their bows.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +If thou wouldst find much favor and peace with God and man, be very low +in thine own eyes. Forgive thyself little and others much.--_Archbishop +Leighton._ + +~Humor.~--The genius of the Spanish people is exquisitely subtile, without +being at all acute: hence there is so much humor and so little wit in +their literature. The genius of the Italians, on the contrary, is acute, +profound, and sensual, but not subtile; hence what they think to be +humorous is merely witty.--_Coleridge._ + +The oil and wine of merry meeting.--_Washington Irving._ + +These poor gentlemen endeavor to gain themselves the reputation of wits +and humorists, by such monstrous conceits as almost qualify them for +bedlam; not considering that humor should always lie under the check of +reason, and that it requires the direction of the nicest judgment, by so +much the more as it indulges itself in the most boundless +freedoms.--_Addison._ + +~Hyperbole.~--Sprightly natures, full of fire, and whom a boundless +imagination carries beyond all rules, and even what is reasonable, +cannot rest satisfied with hyperbole.--_Bruyère._ + +Let us have done with reproaching; for we may throw out so many +reproachful words on one another that a ship of a hundred oars would not +be able to carry the load.--_Homer._ + +~Hypocrisy.~--Whoever is a hypocrite in his religion mocks God, presenting +to him the outside, and reserving the inward for his enemy.--_Jeremy +Taylor._ + +Hypocrisy has become a fashionable vice, and all fashionable vices pass +for virtue.--_Molière._ + +Hypocrisy is much more eligible than open infidelity and vice: it wears +the livery of religion, and is cautious of giving scandal.--_Swift._ + +Sin is not so sinful as hypocrisy.--_Mme. de Maintenon._ + +As a man loves gold, in that proportion he hates to be imposed upon by +counterfeits; and in proportion as a man has regard for that which is +above price and better than gold, he abhors that hypocrisy which is but +its counterfeit.--_Cecil._ + +Hypocrisy, the only evil that walks invisible, except to God +alone.--_Milton._ + +Hypocrisy, detest her as we may, and no man's hatred ever wronged her +yet, may claim this merit still: that she admits the worth of what she +mimics with such care.--_Cowper._ + +I hate hypocrites, who put on their virtues with their white +gloves.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +Such a man will omit neither family worship, nor a sneer at his +neighbor. He will neither milk his cows on the first day of the week +without a Sabbath mask on his face, nor remove it while he waters the +milk for his customers.--_George Mac Donald._ + +The fatal fact in the case of a hypocrite is that he is a +hypocrite.--_Chapin._ + +'Tis a cowardly and servile humor to hide and disguise a man's self +under a vizor, and not to dare to show himself what he is. By that our +followers are train'd up to treachery. Being brought up to speak what is +not true, they make no conscience of a lie.--_Montaigne._ + + +I. + +~Ideas.~--After all has been said that can be said about the widening +influence of ideas, it remains true that they would hardly be such +strong agents unless they were taken in a solvent of feeling. The great +world-struggle of developing thought is continually foreshadowed in the +struggle of the affections, seeking a justification for love and +hope.--_George Eliot._ + +Our ideas are transformed sensations.--_Condillac._ + +In these days we fight for ideas, and newspapers are our +fortresses.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Many ideas grow better when transplanted into another mind than in the +one where they sprung up. That which was a weed in one intelligence +becomes a flower in the other, and a flower again dwindles down to a +mere weed by the same change. Healthy growths may become poisonous by +falling upon the wrong mental soil, and what seemed a night-shade in one +mind unfolds as a morning-glory in the other.--_Holmes._ + +A fixed idea is like the iron rod which sculptors put in their statues. +It impales and sustains.--_Taine._ + +Old ideas are prejudices, and new ones caprices.--_X. Doudan._ + +We live in an age in which superfluous ideas abound and essential ideas +are lacking.--_Joubert._ + +Ideas are like beards; men do not have them until they grow +up.--_Voltaire._ + +Our ideas, like orange-plants, spread out in proportion to the size of +the box which imprisons the roots.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Idleness.~--If idleness do not produce vice or malevolence, it commonly +produces melancholy.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Idleness is the key of beggary, and the root of all evil.--_Spurgeon._ + +In idleness there is perpetual despair.--_Carlyle._ + +Doing nothing with a deal of skill.--_Cowper._ + +From its very inaction, idleness ultimately becomes the most active +cause of evil; as a palsy is more to be dreaded than a fever. The Turks +have a proverb, which says, that the devil tempts all other men, but +that idle men tempt the devil.--_Colton._ + +The first external revelations of the dry-rot in men is a tendency to +lurk and lounge; to be at street corners without intelligible reason; to +be going anywhere when met; to be about many places rather than any; to +do nothing tangible but to have an intention of performing a number of +tangible duties to-morrow or the day after.--_Dickens._ + +Idleness is only the refuge of weak minds, and the holiday of +fools.--_Chesterfield._ + +So long as idleness is quite shut out from our lives, all the sins of +wantonness, softness, and effeminacy are prevented; and there is but +little room for temptation.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Let but the hours of idleness cease, and the bow of Cupid will become +broken and his torch extinguished.--_Ovid._ + +~Ignorance.~--Have the _courage_ to be ignorant of a great number of +things, in order to avoid the calamity of being ignorant of +everything.--_Sydney Smith._ + +There is no calamity like ignorance.--_Richter._ + +'Tis sad work to be at that pass, that the best trial of truth must be +the multitude of believers, in a crowd where the number of fools so much +exceeds that of the wise. As if anything were so common as +ignorance!--_Montaigne._ + +Ignorance, which in behavior mitigates a fault, is, in literature, a +capital offense.--_Joubert._ + +There is no slight danger from general ignorance; and the only choice +which Providence has graciously left to a vicious government is either +to fall _by_ the people, if they are suffered to become enlightened, or +_with_ them, if they are kept enslaved and ignorant.--_Coleridge._ + +To be ignorant of one's ignorance is the malady of ignorance.--_Alcott._ + +The true instrument of man's degradation is his ignorance.--_Lady +Morgan._ + +Ignorance is not so damnable as humbug, but when it prescribes pills it +may happen to do more harm.--_George Eliot._ + +The ignorant hath an eagle's wings and an owl's eyes.--_George Herbert._ + +Ignorance is mere privation, by which nothing can be produced; it is a +vacuity in which the soul sits motionless and torpid for want of +attraction.--_Johnson._ + +~Illusion.~--In youth we feel richer for every new illusion; in maturer +years, for every one we lose.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Illusion is the first of all pleasures.--_Voltaire._ + +~Imagination.~--We are all of us imaginative in some form or other, for +images are the brood of desire.--_George Eliot._ + +A vile imagination, once indulged, gets the key of our minds, and can +get in again very easily, whether we will or no, and can so return as to +bring seven other spirits with it more wicked than itself; and what may +follow no one knows.--_Spurgeon._ + +He who has imagination without learning has wings and no +feet.--_Joubert._ + +No man will be found in whose mind airy notions do not sometimes +tyrannize, and force him to hope or fear beyond the limits of sober +probability.--_Johnson._ + +~Imitation.~--Imitators are a servile race.--_Fontaine._ + +Imitation causes us to leave natural ways to enter into artificial ones; +it therefore makes slaves.--_Dr. Vinet._ + +"Name to me an animal, though never so skillful, that I cannot imitate!" +So bragged the ape to the fox. But the fox replied, "And do thou name to +me an animal so humble as to think of imitating thee."--_Lessing._ + +~Immortality.~--When I consider the wonderful activity of the mind, so +great a memory of what is past, and such a capacity of penetrating into +the future; when I behold such a number of arts and sciences, and such a +multitude of discoveries thence arising; I believe and am firmly +persuaded that a nature which contains so many things within itself +cannot be mortal.--_Cicero._ + +Whatsoever that be within us that feels, thinks, desires, and animates, +is something celestial, divine, and consequently +imperishable.--_Aristotle._ + +The spirit of man, which God inspired, cannot together perish with this +corporeal clod.--_Milton._ + +All men's souls are immortal, but the souls of the righteous are +immortal and divine.--_Socrates._ + +What springs from earth dissolves to earth again, and heaven-born things +fly to their native seat.--_Marcus Antoninus._ + +The seed dies into a new life, and so does man.--_George MacDonald._ + +~Impatience.~--Impatience turns an ague into a fever, a fever to the +plague, fear into despair, anger into rage, loss into madness, and +sorrow to amazement.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +~Impossibility.~--One great difference between a wise man and a fool is, +the former only wishes for what he may possibly obtain; the latter +desires impossibilities.--_Democritus._ + +~Improvement.~--Slumber not in the tents of your fathers. The world is +advancing. Advance with it.--_Mazzini._ + +People seldom improve when they have no other model but themselves to +copy after.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Improvidence.~--How full or how empty our lives, depends, we say, on +Providence. Suppose we say, more or less on improvidence.--_Bovée._ + +~Income.~--Our incomes are like our shoes; if too small, they gall and +pinch us; but if too large, they cause us to stumble and to +trip.--_Colton._ + +~Inconsistency.~--Men talk as if they believed in God, but they live as if +they thought there was none: their vows and promises are no more than +words of course.--_L'Estrange._ + +People are so ridiculous with their illusions, carrying their fool's +caps unawares, thinking their own lies opaque while everybody else's are +transparent, making themselves exceptions to everything, as if when all +the world looked yellow under a lamp they alone were rosy.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Inconstancy.~--The catching court disease.--_Otway._ + +Nothing that is not a real crime makes a man appear so contemptible and +little in the eyes of the world as inconstancy.--_Addison._ + +~Indifference.~--Nothing for preserving the body like having no +heart.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +Indifference is the invincible giant of the world.--_Ouida._ + +~Indigestion.~--Old friendships are destroyed by toasted cheese, and hard +salted meat has led to suicide. Unpleasant feelings of the body produce +correspondent sensations in the mind, and a great scene of wretchedness +is sketched out by a morsel of indigestible and misguided food.--_Sydney +Smith._ + +~Individuality.~--There are men of convictions whose very faces will light +up an era, and there are believing women in whose eyes you may almost +read the whole plan of salvation.--_T. Fields._ + +Individuality is everywhere to be spared and respected as the root of +everything good.--_Richter._ + +The epoch of individuality is concluded, and it is the duty of reformers +to initiate the epoch of association. Collective man is omnipotent upon +the earth he treads.--_Mazzini._ + +~Indolence.~--I look upon indolence as a sort of suicide; for the man is +effectually destroyed, though the appetite of the brute may +survive.--_Chesterfield._ + +Lives spent in indolence, and therefore sad.--_Cowper._ + +Days of respite are golden days.--_South._ + +So long as he must fight his way, the man of genius pushes forward, +conquering and to conquer. But how often is he at last overcome by a +Capua! Ease and fame bring sloth and slumber.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Nothing ages like laziness.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Indulgence.~--One wishes to be happy before becoming wise.--_Mme. +Necker._ + +~Industry.~--Mankind are more indebted to industry than ingenuity; the +gods set up their favors at a price, and industry is the +purchaser.--_Addison._ + +Application is the price to be paid for mental acquisition. To have the +harvest we must sow the seed.--_Bailey._ + +~Infidelity.~--There is but one thing without honor; smitten with eternal +barrenness, inability to do or to be,--insincerity, unbelief. He who +believes no _thing_, who believes only the shows of things, is not in +relation with nature and fact at all.--_Carlyle._ + +I would rather dwell in the dim fog of superstition than in air rarefied +to nothing by the air-pump of unbelief; in which the panting breast +expires, vainly and convulsively gasping for breath.--_Richter._ + +If on one side there are fair proofs, and no pretense of proof on the +other, and that the difficulties are more pressing on that side which is +destitute of proof, I desire to know whether this be not upon the matter +as satisfactory to a wise man as a demonstration.--_Tillotson._ + +The nurse of infidelity is sensuality.--_Cecil._ + +Men always grow vicious before they become unbelievers; but if you would +once convince profligates by topics drawn from the view of their own +quiet, reputation, and health, their infidelity would soon drop +off.--_Swift._ + +Infidelity gives nothing in return for what it takes away. What, then, +is it worth? Everything valuable has a compensating power. Not a blade +of grass that withers, or the ugliest weed that is flung away to rot and +die, but reproduces something.--_Dr. Chalmers._ + +~Infirmities.~--Never mind what a man's virtues are; waste no time in +learning them. Fasten at once on his infirmities.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Influence.~--He who wishes to exert a useful influence must be careful to +insult nothing. Let him not be troubled by what seems absurd, but let +him consecrate his energies to the creation of what is good. He must not +demolish, but build. He must raise temples where mankind may come and +partake of the purest pleasures.--_Goethe._ + +If I can put one touch of a rosy sunset into the life of any man or +woman, I shall feel that I have worked with God.--_George MacDonald._ + +The city reveals the moral ends of being, and sets the awful problem of +life. The country soothes us, refreshes us, lifts us up with religious +suggestion.--_Chapin._ + +It is the age that forms the man, not the man that forms the age. Great +minds do indeed react on the society which has made them what they are, +but they only pay with interest what they have received.--_Macaulay._ + +In families well ordered there is always one firm, sweet temper, which +controls without seeming to dictate. The Greeks represented Persuasion +as crowned.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Ingratitude.~--The great bulk of mankind resemble the swine, which in +harvest gather and fatten upon the acorns beneath the oak, but show to +the tree which bore them no other thanks than rubbing off its bark, and +tearing up the sod around it.--_Scriver._ + +One great cause of our insensibility to the goodness of our Creator is +the very extensiveness of his bounty.--_Paley._ + +~Injustice.~--The injustice of men subserves the justice of God, and often +his mercy.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Ink.~--A drop of ink may make a million think.--_Byron._ + +Let there be gall enough in thy ink; though thou write with a goose-pen, +no matter.--_Shakespeare._ + +The colored slave that waits upon thought.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Oh, she is fallen into a pit of ink, that the wide sea hath drops too +few to wash her clean again!--_Shakespeare._ + +My ways are as broad as the king's high road, and my means lie in an +inkstand.--_Southey._ + +~Innocence.~--He's armed without that's innocent within.--_Pope._ + +There is no courage but in innocence.--_Southern._ + +There is no man so good who, were he to submit all his thoughts and +actions to the law, would not deserve hanging ten times in his +life.--_Montaigne._ + +~Innovation.~--The ridiculous rage for innovation, which only increases +the weight of the chains it cannot break, shall never fire my +blood!--_Schiller._ + +Dislike of innovation proceeds sometimes from the disgust excited by +false humanity, canting hypocrisy, and silly enthusiasm.--_Sydney +Smith._ + +~Insanity.~--Insanity is not a distinct and separate empire; our ordinary +life borders upon it, and we cross the frontier in some part of our +nature.--_Taine._ + +~Inspiration.~--Do we not all agree to call rapid thought and noble +impulse by the name of inspiration? After our subtlest analysis of the +mental process, we must still say that our highest thoughts and our best +deeds are all given to us.--_George Eliot._ + +Contagious enthusiasm.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +~Instinct.~--The instinct of brutes and insects can be the effect of +nothing else than the wisdom and skill of a powerful ever-living +agent.--_Newton._ + +Instinct harmonizes the interior of animals as religion does the +interior of men.--_Jacobi._ + +All our first movements are good, generous, heroical; reflection weakens +and kills them.--_Aimé Martin._ + +An instinct is a propensity prior to experience, and independent of +instruction.--_Paley._ + +~Insult.~--It is only the vulgar who are always fancying themselves +insulted. If a man treads on another's toe in good society do you think +it is taken as an insult?--_Lady Hester Stanhope._ + +I once met a man who had forgiven an injury. I hope some day to meet the +man who has forgiven an insult.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Insurrection.~--Insurrection unusually gains little; usually wastes how +much! One of its worst kind of wastes, to say nothing of the rest, is +that of irritating and exasperating men against each other by violence +done; which is always sure to be injustice done, for violence does even +justice unjustly.--_Carlyle._ + +~Intellect.~--The commerce of intellect loves distant shores. The small +retail dealer trades only with his neighbor; when the great merchant +trades, he links the four quarters of the globe.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Intelligence.~--The higher feelings, when acting in harmonious +combination, and directed by enlightened intellect, have a boundless +scope for gratification; their least indulgence is delightful, and their +highest activity is bliss.--_Combe._ + +Some men of a secluded and studious life have sent forth from their +closet or their cloister, rays of intellectual light that have agitated +courts and revolutionized kingdoms; like the moon which, though far +removed from the ocean, and shining upon it with a serene and sober +light, is the chief cause of all those ebbings and flowings which +incessantly disturb that restless world of waters.--_Colton._ + +Light has spread, and even bayonets think.--_Kossuth._ + +Intelligence is a luxury, sometimes useless, sometimes fatal. It is a +torch or a fire-brand according to the use one makes of it.--_Fernan +Caballero._ + +~Intemperance.~--The body, overcharged with the excess of yesterday, +weighs down the mind together with itself, and fixes to the earth that +particle of the divine spirit.--_Horace._ + +Intemperance is a great decayer of beauty.--_Junius._ + +~Intolerance.~--Nothing dies so hard, and rallies so often, as +intolerance.--_Beecher._ + +Intolerance is the curse of every age and state.--_Dr. Davies._ + +~Invective.~--Invective may be a sharp weapon, but over-use blunts its +edge. Even when the denunciation is just and true, it is an error of art +to indulge in it too long.--_Tyndall._ + +~Invention.~--Invention is a kind of muse, which, being possessed of the +other advantages common to her sisters, and being warmed by the fire of +Apollo, is raised higher than the rest.--_Dryden._ + +Invention, strictly speaking, is little more than a new combination of +those images which have been previously gathered and deposited in the +memory. Nothing can be made of nothing: he who has laid up no materials +can produce no combinations.--_Sir J. Reynolds._ + +~Irony.~--Irony is to the high-bred what billingsgate is to the vulgar; +and when one gentleman thinks another gentleman an ass, he does not say +it point-blank, he implies it in the politest terms he can +invent.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Irresolution.~--Irresolution is a worse vice than rashness. He that +shoots best may sometimes miss the mark; but he that shoots not at all +can never hit it. Irresolution loosens all the joints of a state; like +an ague, it shakes not this nor that limb, but all the body is at once +in a fit. The irresolute man is lifted from one place to another; so +hatcheth nothing, but addles all his actions.--_Feltham._ + +Irresolution on the schemes of life which offer themselves to our +choice, and inconstancy in pursuing them, are the greatest causes of all +our unhappiness.--_Addison._ + +Irresolute people let their soup grow cold between the plate and the +mouth.--_Cervantes._ + +~Irritability.~--Irritability urges us to take a step as much too soon as +sloth does too late.--_Cecil._ + +An irritable man lies like a hedgehog rolled up the wrong way, +tormenting himself with his own prickles.--_Hood._ + +~Ivy.~--The stateliest building man can raise is the ivy's food at +last.--_Dickens._ + +The ivy, like the spider, takes hold with her hands in king's palaces, +as every twig is furnished with innumerable little fingers, by which it +draws itself close, as it were, to the very heart of the old rough +stone. Its clinging and beautiful tenacity has given rise to an +abundance of conceits about fidelity, friendship, and woman's love, +which have become commonplace simply from their appropriateness. It +might also symbolize the higher love, unconquerable and unconquered, +which has embraced this ruined world from age to age, silently spreading +its green over the rents and fissures of our fallen nature.--_Mrs. +Stowe._ + + +J. + +~Jealousy.~--What frenzy dictates, jealousy believes.--_Gay._ + +Jealousy sees things always with magnifying glasses which make little +things large, of dwarfs giants, suspicions truths.--_Cervantes._ + +'Tis a monster begot upon itself, born on itself.--_Shakespeare._ + +Women detest a jealous man whom they do not love, but it angers them +when a man they do love is not jealous.--_Ninon de L'Enclos._ + +A jealous man always finds more than he looks for.--_Mlle. de Scudéry._ + +Jealousy is the sister of love, as the devil is the brother of +angels.--_Boufflers._ + +~Jesting.~--Jests--Brain fleas that jump about among the slumbering +ideas.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +The jest loses its point when the wit is the first to +laugh.--_Schiller._ + +And generally, men ought to find the difference between saltness and +bitterness. Certainly, he that hath a satirical vein, as he maketh +others afraid of his wit, so he had need be afraid of other's +memory.--_Bacon._ + +~Jewelry.~--Jewels! It's my belief that when woman was made, jewels were +invented only to make her the more mischievous.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +~Jews.~--Talk what you will of the Jews; that they are cursed: they thrive +wherever they come; they are able to oblige the prince of their country +by lending him money; none of them beg; they keep together; and as for +their being hated, why Christians hate one another as much.--_Selden._ + +They are a piece of stubborn antiquity, compared with which Stonehenge +is in its nonage. They date beyond the Pyramids.--_Lamb._ + +~Joy.~--The soul's calm sunshine, and the heartfelt joy.--_Pope._ + +Worldly joy is like the songs which peasants sing, full of melodies and +sweet airs.--_Beecher._ + +Redundant joy, like a poor miser, beggar'd by his store.--_Young._ + +We lose the peace of years when we hunt after the rapture of +moments.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Joy is the best of wine.--_George Eliot._ + +Joy in this world is like a rainbow, which in the morning only appears +in the west, or towards the evening sky; but in the latter hours of day +casts its triumphal arch over the east, or morning sky.--_Richter._ + +~Judgment.~--The more one judges, the less one loves.--_Balzac._ + +I mistrust the judgment of every man in a case in which his own wishes +are concerned.--_Wellington._ + +Judgment and reason have been grand jurymen since before Noah was a +sailor.--_Shakespeare._ + +A flippant, frivolous man may ridicule others, may controvert them, +scorn them; but he who has any respect for himself seems to have +renounced the right of thinking meanly of others.--_Goethe._ + +In judging of others a man laboreth in vain, often erreth, and easily +sinneth; but in judging and examining himself, he always laboreth +fruitfully.--_Thomas à Kempis._ + +I have seen, when after execution judgment hath repented o'er his +doom.--_Shakespeare._ + +Foolish men imagine that because judgment for an evil thing is delayed, +there is no justice, but an accident alone, here below. Judgment for an +evil thing is many times delayed some day or two, some century or two, +but it is sure as life, it is sure as death!--_Carlyle._ + +Human judgment, like Luther's drunken peasant, when saved from falling +on one side, topples over on the other.--_Mazzini._ + +The contemporary mind may in rare cases be taken by storm; but posterity +never. The tribunal of the present is accessible to influence; that of +the future is incorrupt.--_Gladstone._ + +Upon any given point, contradictory evidence seldom puzzles the man who +has mastered the laws of evidence, but he knows little of the laws of +evidence who has not studied the unwritten law of the human heart; and +without this last knowledge a man of action will not attain to the +practical, nor will a poet achieve the ideal.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +How little do they see what is, who frame their hasty judgment upon that +which seems.--_Southey._ + +~Justice.~--It is the pleasure of the gods--that what is in conformity +with justice shall also be in conformity to the laws.--_Socrates._ + +Justice delayed is justice denied.--_Gladstone._ + +Justice advances with such languid steps that crime often escapes from +its slowness. Its tardy and doubtful course causes too many tears to be +shed.--_Corneille._ + +Justice is truth in action.--_Joubert._ + +At present we can only reason of the divine justice from what we know of +justice in man. When we are in other scenes we may have truer and nobler +ideas of it; but while we are in this life we can only speak from the +volume that is laid open before us.--_Pope._ + +Strike if you will, but hear.--_Themistocles._ + +When Infinite Wisdom established the rule of right and honesty, He saw +to it that justice should be always the highest expediency.--_Wendell +Phillips._ + +But Justice shines in smoky cottages, and honors the pious. Leaving with +averted eyes the gorgeous glare obtained by polluted hands, she is wont +to draw nigh to holiness, not reverencing wealth when falsely stamped +with praise, and assigning each deed its righteous doom.--_Æschylus._ + +God's mill grinds slow but sure.--_George Herbert._ + +Who shall put his finger on the work of justice, and say, "It is there?" +Justice is like the kingdom of God--it is not without us as a fact, it +is within us as a great yearning.--_George Eliot._ + +Justice claims what is due, polity what is seemly; justice weighs and +decides, polity surveys and orders; justice refers to the individual, +polity to the community.--_Goethe._ + + +K. + +~Kindness.~--Yes! you may find people ready enough to do the Samaritan +without the oil and twopence.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Paradise is open to all kind hearts.--_Béranger._ + +Kind words produce their own image in men's souls; and a beautiful image +it is. They soothe and quiet and comfort the hearer. They shame him out +of his sour, morose, unkind feelings. We have not yet begun to use kind +words in such abundance as they ought to be used.--_Pascal._ + +To cultivate kindness is a valuable part of the business of +life.--_Johnson._ + +To remind a man of a kindness conferred is little less than a +reproach.--_Demosthenes._ + +Kindness is the only charm permitted to the aged; it is the coquetry of +white hair.--_O. Feuillet._ + +Sow good services; sweet remembrances will grow from them.--_Mme. de +Staël._ + +~Kings.~--Kings wish to be absolute, and they are sometimes told that +their best way to become so is to make themselves beloved by the people. +This maxim is doubtless a very admirable one, and in some respects true; +but unhappily it is laughed at in court.--_Rousseau._ + +Implements of war and subjugation are the last arguments to which kings +resort.--_Patrick Henry._ + +A king ought not fall from the throne except with the throne itself; +under its lofty ruins he alone finds an honored death and an honored +tomb.--_Alfieri._ + +One of the strongest natural proofs of the folly of hereditary right in +kings is, that nature disapproves it; otherwise she would not so +frequently turn it into ridicule by giving mankind an ass in place of a +lion.--_Thomas Paine._ + +He on whom Heaven confers a sceptre knows not the weight till he bears +it.--_Corneille._ + +Kings' titles commonly begin by force which time wears off, and mellows +into right; and power which in one age is tyranny is ripened in the next +to true succession.--_Dryden._ + +~Kisses.~--It is as old as the creation, and yet as young and fresh as +ever. It preëxisted, still exists, and always will exist. Depend upon +it, Eve learned it in Paradise, and was taught its beauties, virtues, +and varieties by an angel, there is something so transcendent in +it.--_Haliburton._ + +Dear as remembered kisses after death.--_Tennyson._ + +Or leave a kiss but in the cup, and I'll not look for wine.--_Ben +Jonson._ + +He kissed her and promised. Such beautiful lips! Man's usual fate--he +was lost upon the coral reefs.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +Eden revives in the first kiss of love.--_Byron._ + +You would think that, if our lips were made of horn, and stuck out a +foot or two from our faces, kisses at any rate would be done for. Not +so. No creatures kiss each other so much as birds.--_Charles Buxton._ + +That farewell kiss which resembles greeting, that last glance of love +which becomes the sharpest pang of sorrow.--_George Eliot._ + +Stolen kisses are always sweetest.--_Leigh Hunt._ + +Sharp is the kiss of the falcon's beak.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Four sweet lips, two pure souls, and one undying affection,--these are +love's pretty ingredients for a kiss.--_Bovée._ + +~Knavery.~--Unluckily the credulity of dupes is as inexhaustible as the +invention of knaves. They never give people possession; but they always +keep them in hope.--_Burke._ + +After long experience in the world I affirm, before God, I never knew a +rogue who was not unhappy.--_Junius._ + +By fools knaves fatten; by bigots priests are well clothed; every knave +finds a gull.--_Zimmerman._ + +~Knowledge.~--The sure foundations of the state are laid in knowledge, not +in ignorance; and every sneer at education, at culture, at book +learning, which is the recorded wisdom of the experience of mankind, is +the demagogue's sneer at intelligent liberty, inviting national +degeneracy and ruin.--_G. W. Curtis._ + +Knowledge, like religion, must be "experienced," in order to be +known.--_Whipple._ + +The pleasure and delight of knowledge far surpasseth all other in +nature. We see in all other pleasures there is satiety; and after they +be used, their verdure departeth, which showeth well that they be but +deceits of pleasure, and not pleasures; and that it was the novelty +which pleased, not the quality; and therefore we see that voluptuous men +turn friars, and ambitious princes turn melancholy. But of knowledge +there is no satiety, but satisfaction and appetite are perpetually +interchangeable.--_Bacon._ + +What novelty is worth the sweet monotony where everything is known, and +loved because it is known?--_George Eliot._ + +The truth is, that most men want knowledge, not for itself, but for the +superiority which knowledge confers; and the means they employ to secure +this superiority are as wrong as the ultimate object, for no man can +ever end with being superior who will not begin with being +inferior.--_Sydney Smith._ + +He who knows much has much to care for.--_Lessing._ + +Properly, there is no other knowledge but that which is got by working: +the rest is yet all a hypothesis of knowledge; a thing to be argued of +in schools; a thing floating in the clouds, in endless logic-vortices, +till we try and fix it.--_Carlyle._ + +He that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.--_Bible._ + +To know by rote is no knowledge; it is only a retention of what is +intrusted to the memory. That which a man truly knows may be disposed of +without regard to the author, or reference to the book from whence he +had it.--_Montaigne._ + +He who cherishes his old knowledge, so as continually to acquire new, he +may be a teacher of others.--_Confucius._ + +A taste of every sort of knowledge is necessary to form the mind, and is +the only way to give the understanding its due improvement to the full +extent of its capacity.--_Locke._ + +Knowledge has, in our time, triumphed, and is triumphing, over +prejudice, and over bigotry. The civilized and Christian world is fast +learning the great lesson, that difference of nation does not imply +necessary hostility, and that all contact need not be war. The whole +world is becoming a common field for intellect to act in. Energy of +mind, genius, power, wheresoever it exists, may speak out in any tongue, +and the world will hear it.--_Daniel Webster._ + +Knowledge once gained casts a faint light beyond its own immediate +boundaries.--_Tyndall._ + +The shortest and the surest way of arriving at real knowledge is to +unlearn the lessons we have been taught, to remount to first principles, +and take nobody's word about them.--_Bolingbroke._ + +Sorrow is knowledge; they who know the most must mourn the deepest o'er +the fatal truth; the tree of knowledge is not that of life.--_Byron._ + +The seeds of knowledge maybe planted in solitude, but must be cultivated +in public.--_Johnson._ + +Knowledge dwells in heads replete with thoughts of other men; Wisdom, in +minds attentive to their own.--_Cowper._ + +It is the glorious prerogative of the empire of knowledge, that what it +gains it never loses. On the contrary, it increases by the multiple of +its own power; all its ends become means; all its attainments helps to +new conquests.--_Daniel Webster._ + +The love of knowledge in a young mind is almost a warrant against the +infirm excitement of passions and vices.--_Beecher._ + +There is nothing so minute, or inconsiderable, that I would not rather +know it than not.--_Johnson._ + +We always know everything when it serves no purpose, and when the seal +of the irreparable has been set upon events.--_Théophile Gautier._ + +All the knowledge that we mortals can acquire is not knowledge positive, +but knowledge comparative, and subject to the errors and passions of +humanity.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + + +L. + +~Labor.~--Labor is the divine law of our existence; repose is desertion +and suicide.--_Mazzini._ + +Labor is life: from the inmost heart of the worker rises his God-given +force, the sacred celestial life-essence breathed into him by Almighty +God!--_Carlyle._ + +The fact is nothing comes; at least nothing good. All has to be +fetched.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Genius begins great works, labor alone finishes them.--_Joubert._ + +As steady application to work is the healthiest training for every +individual, so is it the best discipline of a state. Honorable industry +always travels the same road with enjoyment and duty, and progress is +altogether impossible without it.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Nature is just towards men. It recompenses them for their sufferings; it +renders them laborious, because to the greatest toils it attaches the +greatest rewards.--_Montesquieu._ + +Virtue's guard is Labor, ease her sleep.--_Tasso._ + +Alexander the Great, reflecting on his friends degenerating into sloth +and luxury, told them that it was a most slavish thing to luxuriate, and +a most royal thing to labor.--_Barrow._ + +Many young painters would never have taken their pencils in hand if they +could have felt, known, and understood, early enough, what really +produced a master like Raphael.--_Goethe._ + +He that thinks that diversion may not lie in hard labor forgets the +early rising and hard riding of huntsmen.--_Locke._ + +The pain of life but sweetens death; the hardest labor brings the +soundest sleep.--_Albert Smith._ + +What men want is not talent, it is purpose; not the power to achieve, +but the will to labor.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The true epic of our times is not "arms and the man," but "tools and the +man," an infinitely wider kind of epic.--_Carlyle._ + +Labor is the curse of the world, and nobody can meddle with it without +becoming proportionably brutified!--_Hawthorne._ + +~Land.~--There is a distinct joy in owning land, unlike that which you +have in money, in houses, in books, pictures, or anything else which men +have devised. Personal property brings you into society with men. But +land is a part of God's estate in the globe; and when a parcel of +ground is deeded to you, and you walk over it, and call it your own, it +seems as if you had come into partnership with the original Proprietor +of the earth.--_Beecher._ + +~Language.~--The Creator has gifted the whole universe with language, but +few are the hearts that can interpret it. Happy those to whom it is no +foreign tongue, acquired imperfectly with care and pain, but rather a +native language, learned unconsciously from the lips of the great +mother.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The key to the sciences.--_Bruyère._ + +A countryman is as warm in fustian as a king in velvet, and a truth is +as comfortable in homely language as in fine speech. As to the way of +dishing up the meat, hungry men leave that to the cook, only let the +meat be sweet and substantial.--_Spurgeon._ + +The machine of the poet.--_Macaulay._ + +Poetry, indeed, cannot be translated; and, therefore, it is the poets +that preserve the languages; for we would not be at the trouble to learn +a language if we could have all that is written in it just as well in a +translation. But as the beauties of poetry cannot be preserved in any +language except that in which it was originally written, we learn the +language.--_Johnson._ + +Language most shows a man; speak that I may see thee: it springs out of +the most retired and inmost part of us.--_Ben Jonson._ + +If the way in which men express their thoughts is slipshod and mean, it +will be very difficult for their thoughts themselves to escape being the +same. If it is high flown and bombastic, a character for national +simplicity and thankfulness cannot long be maintained.--_Dean Alford._ + +~Laughter.~--Conversation never sits easier than when we now and then +discharge ourselves in a symphony of laughter; which may not improperly +be called the chorus of conversation.--_Steele._ + +The laughers are a majority.--_Pope._ + +Learn from the earliest days to inure your principles against the perils +of ridicule: you can no more exercise your reason, if you live in the +constant dread of laughter, than you can enjoy your life if you are in +the constant terror of death.--_Sydney Smith._ + +How much lies in laughter: the cipher key, wherewith we decipher the +whole man!--_Carlyle._ + +God made both tears and laughter, and both for kind purposes; for as +laughter enables mirth and surprise to breathe freely, so tears enable +sorrow to vent itself patiently. Tears hinder sorrow from becoming +despair and madness.--_Leigh Hunt._ + +How inevitably does an immoderate laughter end in a sigh!--_South._ + +Laughing, if loud, ends in a deep sigh; and all pleasures have a sting +in the tail, though they carry beauty on the face.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Laughter means sympathy.--_Carlyle._ + +One good, hearty laugh is a bombshell exploding in the right place, +while spleen and discontent are a gun that kicks over the man who shoots +it off.--_De Witt Talmage._ + +I am sure that since I had the use of my reason, no human being has ever +heard me laugh.--_Chesterfield._ + +I like the laughter that opens the lips and the heart, that shower at +the same time pearls and the soul.--_Victor Hugo._ + +Laughter is a most healthful exertion; it is one of the greatest helps +to digestion with which I am acquainted; and the custom prevalent among +our forefathers, of exciting it at table by jesters and buffoons, was +founded on true medical principles.--_Dr. Hufeland._ + +~Law.~--With us, law is nothing unless close behind it stands a warm, +living public opinion. Let that die or grow indifferent, and statutes +are waste paper, lacking all executive force.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +Of all the parts of a law, the most effectual is the _vindicatory_; for +it is but lost labor to say, "Do this, or avoid that," unless we also +declare, "This shall be the consequence of your non-compliance." The +main strength and force of a law consists in the penalty annexed to +it.--_Blackstone._ + +If there be any one principle more widely than another confessed by +every utterance, or more sternly than another imprinted on every atom of +the visible creation, that principle is not liberty, but law.--_Ruskin._ + +It would be very singular if this great shad-net of the law did not +enable men to catch at something, balking for the time the eternal +flood-tide of justice.--_Chapin._ + +True law is right reason conformably to nature, universal, unchangeable, +eternal, whose commands urge us to duty, and whose prohibitions restrain +us from evil.--_Cicero._ + +Aristotle himself has said, speaking of the laws of his own country, +that jurisprudence, or the knowledge of those laws, is the principal and +most perfect branch of ethics.--_Blackstone._ + +In effect, to follow, not to force, the public inclination, to give a +direction, a form, a technical dress, and a specific sanction, to the +general sense of the community, is the true end of +legislation.--_Burke._ + +In the habits of legal men every accusation appears insufficient if they +do not exaggerate it even to calumny. It is thus that justice itself +loses its sanctity and its respect amongst men.--_Lamartine._ + +Pity is the virtue of the law, and none but tyrants use it +cruelly.--_Shakespeare._ + +It is a very easy thing to devise good laws; the difficulty is to make +them effective. The great mistake is that of looking upon men as +virtuous, or thinking that they can be made so by laws; and consequently +the greatest art of a politician is to render vices serviceable to the +cause of virtue.--_Bolingbroke._ + +A mouse-trap; easy to enter but not easy to get out of.--_Mrs Balfour._ + +What can idle laws do with morals?--_Horace._ + +The law is a gun, which if it misses a pigeon always kills a crow; if it +does not strike the guilty it hits some one else. As every crime creates +a law, so in turn every law creates a crime.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Learning.~--It adds a precious seeing to the eye.--_Shakespeare._ + +You are to consider that learning is of great use to society; and though +it may not add to the stock, it is a necessary vehicle to transmit it to +others. Learned men are the cisterns of knowledge, not the +fountain-heads.--_James Northcote._ + +Learning makes a man fit company for himself.--_Young._ + +Learning maketh young men temperate, is the comfort of old age, standing +for wealth with poverty, and serving as an ornament to +riches.--_Cicero._ + +The chief art of learning, as Locke has observed, is to attempt but +little at a time. The widest excursions of the mind are made by short +flights frequently repeated; the most lofty fabrics of science are +formed by the continued accumulation of single propositions.--_Johnson._ + +No man can ever want this mortification of his vanity, that what he +knows is but a very little, in comparison of what he still continues +ignorant of. Consider this, and, instead of boasting thy knowledge of a +few things, confess and be out of countenance for the many more which +thou dost not understand.--_Thomas à Kempis._ + +Suppose we put a tax upon learning? Learning, it is true, is a useless +commodity, but I think we had better lay it on ignorance; for learning +being the property but of a very few, and those poor ones too, I am +afraid we can get little among them; whereas ignorance will take in most +of the great fortunes in the kingdom.--_Fielding._ + +For ignorance of all things is an evil neither terrible nor excessive, +nor yet the greatest of all; but great cleverness and much learning, if +they be accompanied by a bad training is a much greater +misfortune.--_Plato._ + +No power can exterminate the seeds of liberty when it has germinated in +the blood of brave men. Our religion of to-day is still that of +martyrdom; to-morrow it will be the religion of victory.--_Mazzini._ + +~Leisure.~--"Never less idle than when idle," was the motto which the +admirable Vittoria Colonna wrought upon her husband's dressing-gown. And +may we not justly regard our appreciation of leisure as a test of +improved character and growing resources?--_Tuckerman._ + +Leisure is gone; gone where the spinning-wheels are gone, and the +pack-horses, and the slow wagons, and the peddlers who brought bargains +to the door on sunny afternoons.--_George Eliot._ + +~Libels.~--Undoubtedly the good fame of every man ought to be under the +protection of the laws, as well as his life and liberty and property. +Good fame is an outwork that defends them all and renders them all +valuable. The law forbids you to revenge; when it ties up the hands of +some, it ought to restrain the tongues of others.--_Burke._ + +If it was a new thing, it may be I should not be displeased with the +suppression of the first libel that should abuse me; but, since there +are enough of them to make a small library, I am secretly pleased to see +the number increased, and take delight in raising a heap of stones that +envy has cast at me without doing me any harm.--_Balzac._ + +~Liberty.~--Liberty is the right to do what the laws allow; and if a +citizen could do what they forbid, it would be no longer liberty, +because others would have the same powers.--_Montesquieu._ + +If the true spark of religious and civil liberty be kindled, it will +burn. Human agency cannot extinguish it. Like the earth's central fire, +it may be smothered for a time; the ocean may overwhelm it; mountains +may press it down; but its inherent and unconquerable force will heave +both the ocean and the land, and at some time or another, in some place +or another, the volcano will break out and flame to heaven.--_Daniel +Webster._ + +Interwoven is the love of liberty with every ligament of the +heart.--_Washington._ + +~Library.~--A large library is apt to distract rather than to instruct the +learner; it is much better to be confined to a few authors than to +wander at random over many.--_Seneca._ + +He has his Rome, his Florence, his whole glowing Italy, within the four +walls of his library. He has in his books the ruins of an antique world, +and the glories of a modern one.--_Longfellow._ + +What a place to be in is an old library! It seems as though all the +souls of all the writers that have bequeathed their labors to these +Bodleians were reposing here, as in some dormitory, or middle state. I +do not want to handle, to profane the leaves, their winding-sheets. I +could as soon dislodge a shade. I seem to inhale learning, walking amid +their foliage; and the odor of their old moth-scented coverings is +fragrant as the first bloom of those sciential apples which grew amid +the happy orchard.--_Lamb._ + +~Life.~--Life is a quaint puzzle. Bits the most incongruous join into each +other, and the scheme thus gradually becomes symmetrical and clear; +when, lo! as the infant clasps his hands, and cries, "See, see! the +puzzle is made out," all the pieces are swept back into the box--black +box with the gilded nails!--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +We never live, but we ever hope to live.--_Pascal._ + +Life is like a beautiful and winding lane, on either side bright +flowers, and beautiful butterflies, and tempting fruits, which we +scarcely pause to admire and to taste, so eager are we to hasten to an +opening which we imagine will be more beautiful still. But by degrees as +we advance, the trees grow bleak; the flowers and butterflies fail, the +fruits disappear, and we find we have arrived--to reach a desert +waste.--_G. A. Sala._ + +How small a portion of our life it is that we really enjoy! In youth we +are looking forward to things that are to come; in old age we are +looking backwards to things that are gone past; in manhood, although we +appear indeed to be more occupied in things that are present, yet even +that is too often absorbed in vague determinations to be vastly happy on +some future day when we have time.--_Colton._ + +The days of our years are three-score years and ten; and if by reason of +strength they be four-score years, yet is their strength labor and +sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away.--_Bible._ + +When I reflect upon what I have seen, what I have heard, what I have +done, I can hardly persuade myself that all that frivolous hurry and +bustle and pleasure of the world had any reality; and I look on what has +passed as one of those wild dreams which opium occasions, and I by no +means wish to repeat the nauseous dose for the sake of the fugitive +illusion.--_Chesterfield._ + +Life is like a game of whist. I don't enjoy the game much, but I like to +play my cards well, and see what will be the end of it.--_George Eliot._ + +He most lives who thinks most, feels the noblest, acts the best; and he +whose heart beats the quickest lives the longest.--_James Martineau._ + +Life is so complicated a game that the devices of skill are liable to be +defeated at every turn by air-blown chances, incalculable as the descent +of thistledown.--_George Eliot._ + +When we embark in the dangerous ship called Life, we must not, like +Ulysses, be tied to the mast; we must know how to listen to the songs of +the sirens and to brave their blandishments.--_Arsène Houssaye._ + +Life is thick sown with thorns, and I know no other remedy than to pass +quickly through them. The longer we dwell on our misfortunes the greater +is their power to harm us.--_Voltaire._ + +The earnestness of life is the only passport to the satisfaction of +life.--_Theodore Parker._ + +I am convinced that there is no man that knows life well, and remembers +all the incidents of his past existence, who would accept it again; we +are certainly here to punish precedent sins.--_Campbell._ + +The childhood of immortality.--_Goethe._ + +So our lives glide on; the river ends we don't know where, and the sea +begins, and then there is no more jumping ashore.--_George Eliot._ + +We never think of the main business of life till a vain repentance minds +us of it at the wrong end.--_L'Estrange._ + +This tide of man's life after it once turneth and declineth ever runneth +with a perpetual ebb and falling stream, but never floweth again.--_Sir +W. Raleigh._ + +If the first death be the mistress of mortals, and the mistress of the +universe, reflect then on the brevity of life. "I have been, and that is +all," said Saladin the Great, who was conqueror of the East. The longest +liver had but a handful of days, and life itself is but a circle, always +beginning where it ends.--_Henry Mayhew._ + +Why all this toil for the triumphs of an hour?--_Young._ + +The cradle and the tomb, alas! so nigh.--_Prior._ + +Life's short summer--man is but a flower.--_Johnson._ + +Man lives only to shiver and perspire.--_Sydney Smith._ + +O frail estate of human things!--_Dryden._ + +Many think themselves to be truly God-fearing when they call this world +a valley of tears. But I believe they would be more so, if they called +it a happy valley. God is more pleased with those who think everything +right in the world, than with those who think nothing right. With so +many thousand joys, is it not black ingratitude to call the world a +place of sorrow and torment?--_Richter._ + +Life is a progress from want to want, not from enjoyment to +enjoyment.--_Johnson._ + +We never live: we are always in the expectation of living.--_Voltaire._ + +Life does not count by years. Some suffer a lifetime in a day, and so +grow old between the rising and the setting of the sun.--_Augusta +Evans._ + +~Light.~--Science and art may invent splendid modes of illuminating the +apartments of the opulent; but these are all poor and worthless compared +with the light which the sun sends into our windows, which he pours +freely, impartially, over hill and valley, which kindles daily the +eastern and western sky; and so the common lights of reason and +conscience and love are of more worth and dignity than the rare +endowments which give celebrity to a few.--_Dr. Channing._ + +More light!--_Goethe's last words._ + +Light! Nature's resplendent robe; without whose vesting beauty all were +wrapt in gloom.--_Thomson._ + +Hail! holy light, offspring of heaven, first born!--_Milton._ + +We should render thanks to God for having produced this temporal light, +which is the smile of heaven and joy of the world, spreading it like a +cloth of gold over the face of the air and earth, and lighting it as a +torch, by which we might behold his works.--_Caussin._ + +~Likeness.~--Like, but oh, how different!--_Wordsworth._ + +~Lips.~--Lips like rosebuds peeping out of snow.--_Bailey._ + +He kissed me hard, as though he'd pluck up kisses by the roots that grew +upon my lips.--_Shakespeare._ + +The lips of a fool swallow up himself.--_Bible._ + +~Literature.~--Literature happens to be the only occupation in which wages +are not given in proportion to the goodness of the work done.--_Froude._ + +The literature of a people must spring from the sense of its +nationality; and nationality is impossible without self-respect, and +self-respect is impossible without liberty.--_Mrs. Stowe._ + +Cleverness is a sort of genius for instrumentality. It is the brain of +the hand. In literature, cleverness is more frequently accompanied by +wit, genius, and sense, than by humor.--_Coleridge._ + +When literature is the sole business of life, it becomes a drudgery. +When we are able to resort to it only at certain hours, it is a charming +relaxation. In my earlier days I was a banker's clerk, obliged to be at +the desk everyday from ten till five o'clock; and I shall never forget +the delight with which, on returning home, I used to read and write +during the evening.--_Rogers._ + +Literary history is the great morgue where all seek the dead ones whom +they love, or to whom they are related.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Whatever the skill of any country be in sciences, it is from excellence +in polite learning alone that it must expect a character from +posterity.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Logic.~--Logic differeth from rhetoric as the fist from the palm; the one +close, the other at large.--_Bacon._ + +Syllogism is of necessary use, even to the lovers of truth, to show them +the fallacies that are often concealed in florid, witty, or involved +discourses.--_Locke._ + +Logic is the art of convincing us of some truth.--_Bruyère._ + +~Love.~--Fie, fie! how wayward is this foolish love, that, like a testy +babe, will scratch the nurse, and presently, all humbled, will kiss the +rod!--_Shakespeare._ + +Love is the cross and passion of the heart; its end, its errand.--_P. L. +Bailey._ + +Love is frightened at the intervals of insensibility and callousness +that encroach by little and little on the dominion of grief, and it +makes efforts to recall the keenness of the first anguish.--_George +Eliot._ + +Love while 't is day; night cometh soon, wherein no man or maiden +may.--_Joaquin Miller._ + +Love has a way of cheating itself consciously, like a child who plays at +solitary hide-and-seek; it is pleased with assurances that it all the +while disbelieves.--_George Eliot._ + +As soon go kindle fire with snow, as seek to quench the fire of love +with words.--_Shakespeare._ + +Loves change sure as man or moon, and wane like warm full days of +June.--_Joaquin Miller._ + +Take of love as a sober man takes wine; do not get drunk.--_Alfred de +Musset._ + +Love is the admiration and cherishing of the amiable qualities of the +beloved person, upon the condition of yourself being the object of their +action. The qualities of the sexes correspond. The man's courage is +loved by the woman, whose fortitude again is coveted by the man. His +vigorous intellect is answered by her infallible tact. Can it be true, +what is so constantly affirmed, that there is no sex in souls? I doubt +it--I doubt it exceedingly.--_Coleridge._ + +As love increases prudence diminishes.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +Never self-possessed, or prudent, love is all abandonment.--_Emerson._ + +The desire to be beloved is ever restless and unsatisfied; but the love +that flows out upon others is a perpetual well-spring from on high.--_L. +M. Child._ + +Love is love's reward.--_Dryden._ + +The violence of love is as much to be dreaded as that of hate. When it +is durable, it is serene and equable. Even its famous pains begin only +with the ebb of love, for few are indeed lovers, though all would fain +be.--_Thoreau._ + +Love makes all things possible.--_Shakespeare._ + +Economy in love is peace to nature, much like economy in worldly +matters; we should be prudent, never love too fast; profusion will not, +cannot, always last.--_Peter Pindar._ (_John W. Wolcott._) + +There is no fear in love, for perfect love casteth out fear.--_Bible._ + +O love! thy essence is thy purity! Breathe one unhallowed breath upon +thy flame and it is gone for ever, and but leaves a sullied vase,--its +pure light lost in shame.--_Landor._ + +The pale complexion of true love.--_Shakespeare._ + +Love has no middle term; it either saves or destroys.--_Victor Hugo._ + +Young love is a flame; very pretty, often very hot and fierce, but still +only light and flickering. The love of the older and disciplined heart +is as coals, deep-burning, unquenchable.--_Beecher._ + +In love's war, he who flies is conqueror.--_Mrs. Osgood._ + +Where there is room in the heart there is always room in the +house.--_Moore._ + +Love's like the measles, all the worse when it comes late in +life.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +Only they conquer love who run away.--_Carew._ + +The heart's hushed secret in the soft dark eye.--_L. E. Landon._ + +Love, well thou know'st, no partnership allows; cupid averse rejects +divided vows.--_Prior._ + +Celestial rosy red, love's proper hue.--_Milton._ + +Those who yield their souls captive to the brief intoxication of love, +if no higher and holier feeling mingle with and consecrate their dream +of bliss, will shrink trembling from the pangs that attend their +waking.--_Schlegel._ + +The first sigh of love is the last of wisdom.--_Antoine Bret._ + +I have enjoyed the happiness of this world, I have lived and have +loved.--_Richter._ + +Life is a flower of which love is the honey.--_Victor Hugo._ + +Love is a severe critic. Hate can pardon more than love.--_Thoreau._ + +Young love-making, that gossamer web! Even the points it clings to--the +things whence its subtle interlacings are swung--are scarcely +perceptible: momentary touches of finger-tips, meetings of rays from +blue and dark orbs, unfinished phrases, lightest changes of cheek and +lip, faintest tremors. The web itself is made of spontaneous beliefs and +indefinable joys, yearnings of one life towards another, visions of +completeness, indefinite trust.--_George Eliot._ + +Love is the loadstone of love.--_Mrs. Osgood._ + +Love is never lasting which flames before it burns.--_Feltham._ + +The best part of woman's love is worship; but it is hard to her to be +sent away with her precious spikenard rejected, and her long tresses, +too, that were let fall ready to soothe the wearied feet.--_George +Eliot._ + +Love is an Oriental despot.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +We must love as looking one day to hate.--_George Herbert._ + +Love with old men is as the sun upon the snow, it dazzles more than it +warms them.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +Love is lowliness; on the wedding ring sparkles no jewel.--_Richter._ + +Love alone is wisdom, love alone is power; and where love seems to fail, +it is where self has stepped between and dulled the potency of its +rays.--_George MacDonald._ + +To speak of love is to make love.--_Balzac._ + +A man may be a miser of his wealth; he may tie up his talent in a +napkin; he may hug himself in his reputation; but he is always generous +in his love. Love cannot stay at home; a man cannot keep it to himself. +Like light, it is constantly traveling. A man must spend it, must give +it away.--_Macleod._ + +Repining love is the stillest; the shady flowers in this spring as in +the other, shun sunlight.--_Richter._ + +Love is like the moon; when it does not increase it decreases.--_Ségur._ + +Love is the most terrible, and also the most generous of the passions: +it is the only one that includes in its dreams the happiness of some one +else.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +A woman whom we truly love is a religion.--_Emile de Girardin._ + +Childhood is only a wearisome prologue: the first act of the human +comedy opens only at the moment when love makes a breach in our +hearts.--_Arsène Houssaye._ + +The religion of humanity is love.--_Mazzini._ + +He who is intoxicated with wine will be sober again in the course of the +night, but he who is intoxicated by the cup-bearer will not recover his +senses until the day of judgment.--_Saadi._ + +Love reasons without reason.--_Shakespeare._ + +It seems to me that the coming of love is like the coming of spring--the +date is not to be reckoned by the calendar. It may be slow and gradual; +it may be quick and sudden. But in the morning, when we wake and +recognize a change in the world without, verdure on the trees, blossoms +on the sward, warmth in the sunshine, music in the air, we say spring +has come.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Love and a cough cannot be hid.--_George Herbert._ + +Love is the most dunder-headed of all the passions; it never will listen +to reason. The very rudiments of logic are unknown to it. "Love has no +wherefore," says one of the Latin poets.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Love in marriage should be the accomplishment of a beautiful dream, and +not, as it too often is, the end.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +One dies twice: to cease to live is nothing, but to cease to love and to +be loved is an insupportable death.--_Voltaire._ + +The heart of a woman is never so full of affection that there does not +remain a little corner for flattery and love.--_Mauvaux._ + +Love is always blind and tears his hands whenever he tries to gather +roses.--_Arsène Houssaye._ + +Love is a canvas furnished by Nature and embroidered by +imagination.--_Voltaire._ + +Oh! I was mad to intoxicate myself with the wine of love, and to extend +my hand to the crown of poets. Pleasure! Poetry! you are perfidious +friends. Pain follows you closely.--_Arsène Houssaye._ + +If love gives wit to fools, it undoubtedly takes it from +wits.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +In love, as in everything else, experience is a physician who never +comes until after the disorder is cured.--_Mme. de la Tour._ + +One expresses well only the love he does not feel.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +In love, as in war, a fortress that parleys is half taken.--_Marguerite +de Valois._ + +A supreme love, a motive that gives a sublime rhythm to a woman's life, +and exalts habit into partnership with the soul's highest needs, is not +to be had where and how she wills: to know that high initiation, she +must often tread where it is hard to tread, and feel the chill air, and +watch through darkness.--_George Eliot._ + +To love one who loves you, to admire one who admires you, in a word, to +be the idol of one's idol, is exceeding the limit of human joy; it is +stealing fire from heaven and deserves death.--_Madame de Girardin._ + +But to enlarge or illustrate this power and effects of love is to set a +candle in the sun.--_Burton._ + +There are as many kinds of love as there are races. A great tall German, +learned, virtuous, phlegmatic, said one day: "Souls are sisters, fallen +from heaven, who all at once recognize and run to meet each other." A +little dry Frenchman, hot-blooded, witty, lively, replied to him: "You +are right; you can always find shoes to fit."--_Taine._ + +Love supreme defies all sophistry.--_George Eliot._ + +It is strange that men will talk of miracles, revelations, inspiration, +and the like, as things past, while love remains.--_Thoreau._ + +The love of man to woman is a thing common, and of course, and at first +partakes more of instinct and passion than of choice; but true +friendship between man and man is infinite and immortal.--_Plato._ + +We look at the one little woman's face we love, as we look at the face +of our mother earth, and see all sorts of answers to our own +yearnings.--_George Eliot._ + +Take away love, and not physical nature only, but the heart of the moral +world would be palsied.--_Southey._ + +Among all the many kinds of first love, that which begins in childish +companionship is the strongest and most enduring; when passion comes to +unite its force to long affection, love is at its spring-tide.--_George +Eliot._ + +Nothing quickens the perceptions like genuine love. From the humblest +professional attachment to the most chivalric devotion, what keenness of +observation is born under the influence of that feeling which drives +away the obscuring clouds of selfishness, as the sun consumes the vapor +of the morning.--_Tuckerman._ + +~Luck.~--Hope nothing from luck, and the probability is that you will be +so prepared, forewarned, and forearmed, that all shallow observers will +call you lucky.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Luxury.~--Whenever vanity and gayety, a love of pomp and dress, +furniture, equipage, buildings, great company, expensive diversions, and +elegant entertainments get the better of the principles and judgments of +men and women, there is no knowing where they will stop, nor into what +evils, natural, moral, or political, they will lead us.--_John Adams._ + +He repents on thorns that sleeps in beds of roses.--_Quarles._ + +O brethren, it is sickening work to think of your cushioned seats, your +chants, your anthems, your choirs, your organs, your gowns, and your +bands, and I know not what besides, all made to be instruments of +religious luxury, if not of pious dissipation, while ye need far more to +be stirred up and incited to holy ardor for the propagation of the truth +as it is in Jesus.--_Spurgeon._ + +O Luxury! Thou curst of heaven's decree.--_Goldsmith._ + +Superfluity comes sooner by white hairs, but competency lives +longer.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Lying.~--Lying's a certain mark of cowardice.--_Southern._ + +There are people who lie simply for the sake of lying.--_Pascal._ + +Every brave man shuns more than death the shame of lying.--_Corneille._ + +It is a hard matter for a man to lie all over, nature having provided +king's evidence in almost every member. The hand will sometimes act as a +vane, to show which way the wind blows, even when every feature is set +the other way; the knees smite together and sound the alarm of fear +under a fierce countenance; the legs shake with anger, when all above is +calm.--_Washington Allston._ + +Lies exist only to be extinguished.--_Carlyle._ + +A lie that is half a truth is ever the blackest of lies.--_Tennyson._ + + +M. + +~Madness.~--Many a man is mad in certain instances, and goes through life +without having it perceived. For example, a madness has seized a person +of supposing himself obliged literally to pray continually; had the +madness turned the opposite way, and the person thought it a crime ever +to pray, it might not improbably have continued unobserved.--_Johnson._ + +~Man.~--It is of dangerous consequence to represent to man how near he is +to the level of beasts, without showing him at the same time his +greatness. It is likewise dangerous to let him see his greatness without +his meanness. It is more dangerous yet to leave him ignorant of either; +but very beneficial that he should be made sensible of both.--_Pascal._ + +Man, I tell you, is a vicious animal.--_Molière._ + +He is of the earth, but his thoughts are with the stars. Mean and petty +his wants and his desires; yet they serve a soul exalted with grand, +glorious aims,--with immortal longings,--with thoughts which sweep the +heavens, and wander through eternity. A pigmy standing on the outward +crest of this small planet, his far-reaching spirit stretches outward to +the infinite, and there alone finds rest.--_Carlyle._ + +Alas! what does man here below? A little noise in much +obscurity.--_Victor Hugo._ + +What a piece of work is a man! how noble in reason! how infinite in +faculty! in form and movement, how express and admirable! in action, how +like an angel! in apprehension, how like a god! the beauty of the world! +the paragon of animals!--_Shakespeare._ + +Every man is a divinity in disguise, a god playing the fool. It seems as +if heaven had sent its insane angels into our world as to an asylum. And +here they will break out into their native music, and utter at intervals +the words they have heard in heaven; then the mad fit returns, and they +mope and wallow like dogs!--_Emerson._ + +In my youth I thought of writing a satire on mankind; but now in my age +I think I should write an apology for them.--_Walpole._ + +Man is a reasoning rather than a reasonable animal.--_Alexander +Hamilton._ + +I considered how little man is, yet, in his own mind, how great! He is +lord and master of all things, yet scarce can command anything. He is +given a freedom of his will; but wherefore? Was it but to torment and +perplex him the more? How little avails this freedom, if the objects he +is to act upon be not as much disposed to obey as he is to +command!--_Burke._ + +Men's natures are neither white nor black, but brown.--_Charles Buxton._ + +He is compounded of two very different ingredients, spirit and matter; +but how such unallied and disproportioned substances should act upon +each other, no man's learning yet could tell him.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +Man is the highest product of his own history. The discoverer finds +nothing so grand or tall as himself, nothing so valuable to him. The +greatest star is at the small end of the telescope, the star that is +looking, not looked after nor looked at.--_Theodore Parker._ + +Men are but children of a larger growth; our appetites are apt to change +as theirs, and full as craving, too, and full as vain.--_Dryden._ + +Little things are great to little men.--_Goldsmith._ + +Man himself is the crowning wonder of creation; the study of his nature +the noblest study the world affords.--_Gladstone._ + +Limited in his nature, infinite in his desires.--_Lamartine._ + +~Manners.~--A man ought to carry himself in the world as an orange tree +would if it could walk up and down in the garden, swinging perfume from +every little censer it holds up to the air.--_Beecher._ + +All manners take a tincture from our own.--_Pope._ + +I have seen manners that make a similar impression with personal beauty, +that give the like exhilaration and refine us like that; and in +memorable experiences they are suddenly better than beauty, and make +that superfluous and ugly. But they must be marked by fine perception, +the acquaintance with real beauty. They must always show control; you +shall not be facile, apologetic, or leaky, but king over your word; and +every gesture and action shall indicate power at rest. They must be +inspired by the good heart. There is no beautifier of complexion, or +form, or behavior, like the wish to scatter joy, and not pain, around +us.--_Emerson._ + +We perhaps never detect how much of our social demeanor is made up of +artificial airs, until we see a person who is at once beautiful and +simple: without the beauty, we are apt to call simplicity +awkwardness.--_George Eliot._ + +We cannot always oblige, but we can always speak +obligingly.--_Voltaire._ + +Nature is the best posture-master.--_Emerson._ + +Good breeding consists in having no particular mark of any profession, +but a general elegance of manners.--_Johnson._ + +Men are like wine; not good before the lees of clownishness be +settled.--_Feltham._ + +The person who screams, or uses the superlative degree, or converses +with heat, puts whole drawing-rooms to flight. If you wish to be loved, +love measure. You must have genius or a prodigious usefulness if you +will hide the want of measure.--_Emerson._ + +We are to carry it from the hand to the heart, to improve a ceremonial +nicety into a substantial duty, and the modes of civility into the +realities of religion.--_South._ + +Better were it to be unborn than to be ill-bred.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +Simplicity of manner is the last attainment. Men are very long afraid of +being natural, from the dread of being taken for ordinary.--_Jeffrey._ + +Kings themselves cannot force the exquisite politeness of distance to +capitulate, hid behind its shield of bronze.--_Balzac._ + +Comport thyself in life as at a banquet. If a plate is offered thee, +extend thy hand and take it moderately; if it be withdrawn, do not +detain it. If it come not to thy side, make not thy desire loudly known, +but wait patiently till it be offered thee.--_Epictetus._ + +Good manners and good morals are sworn friends and firm +allies.--_Bartol._ + +The "over-formal" often impede, and sometimes frustrate, business by a +dilatory, tedious, circuitous, and (what in colloquial language is +called) fussy way of conducting the simplest transactions. They have +been compared to a dog which cannot lie down till he has made three +circuits round the spot.--_Whately._ + +~Martyrs.~--Even in this world they will have their judgment-day, and +their names, which went down in the dust like a gallant banner trodden +in the mire, shall rise again all glorious in the sight of +nations.--_Mrs. Stowe._ + +It is not the death that makes the martyr, but the cause.--_Canon Dale._ + +It is admirable to die the victim of one's faith; it is sad to die the +dupe of one's ambition.--_Lamartine._ + +God discovers the martyr and confessor without the trial of flames and +tortures, and will hereafter entitle many to the reward of actions which +they had never the opportunity of performing.--_Addison._ + +~Matrimony.~--When a man and woman are married their romance ceases and +their history commences.--_Rochebrune._ + +It resembles a pair of shears, so joined that they cannot be separated; +often moving in opposite directions, yet always punishing any one who +comes between them.--_S. Smith._ + +Married in haste, we repent at leisure.--_Congreve._ + +I believe marriages would in general be as happy, and often more so, if +they were all made by the Lord Chancellor, upon a due consideration of +the characters and circumstances, without the parties having any choice +in the matter.--_Johnson._ + +Hanging and wiving go by destiny.--_Shakespeare._ + +The married man is like the bee that fixes his hive, augments the world, +benefits the republic, and by a daily diligence, without wronging any, +profits all; but he who contemns wedlock, like a wasp, wanders an +offence to the world, lives upon spoil and rapine, disturbs peace, +steals sweets that are none of his own, and, by robbing the hives of +others, meets misery as his due reward.--_Feltham._ + +One can, with dignity, be wife and widow but once.--_Joubert._ + +Few natures can preserve through years the poetry of the first +passionate illusion. That can alone render wedlock the seal that +confirms affection, and not the mocking ceremonial that consecrates its +grave.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +It's hard to wive and thrive both in a year.--_Tennyson._ + +Maids want nothing but husbands, and when they have them, they want +everything.--_Shakespeare._ + +Wedlock's like wine, not properly judged of till the second +glass.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +A good wife is like the ivy which beautifies the building to which it +clings, twining its tendrils more lovingly as time converts the ancient +edifice into a ruin.--_Johnson._ + +He that marries is like the Doge who was wedded to the Adriatic. He +knows not what there is in that which he marries: mayhap treasures and +pearls, mayhap monsters and tempests, await him.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +A husband is a plaster that cures all the ills of girlhood.--_Molière._ + +There is more of good nature than of good sense at the bottom of most +marriages.--_Thoreau._ + +The love of some men for their wives is like that of Alfieri for his +horse. "My attachment for him," said he, "went so far as to destroy my +peace every time that he had the least ailment; but my love for him did +not prevent me from fretting and chafing him whenever he did not wish to +go my way."--_Bovée._ + +No navigator has yet traced lines of latitude and longitude on the +conjugal sea.--_Balzac._ + +Has any one ever pinched into its pilulous smallness the cobweb of +pre-matrimonial acquaintanceship?--_George Eliot._ + +~Mediocrity.~--Mediocrity is excellent to the eyes of mediocre +people.--_Joubert._ + +Mediocrity is now, as formerly, dangerous, commonly fatal, to the poet; +but among even the successful writers of prose, those who rise sensibly +above it are the very rarest exceptions.--_Gladstone._ + +~Meditation.~--Chewing the cud of sweet and bitter fancy.--_Shakespeare._ + +'Tis greatly wise to talk with our past hours, and ask them what report +they bore to heaven, and how they might have borne more welcome +news.--_Young._ + +Meditation is that exercise of the mind by which it recalls a known +truth, as some kind of creatures do their food, to be ruminated upon +till all vicious parts be extracted.--_Bishop Horne._ + +~Meekness.~--The flower of meekness grows on a stem of grace.--_J. +Montgomery._ + +A boy was once asked what meekness was. He thought for a moment and +said, "Meekness gives smooth answers to rough questions."--_Mrs. +Balfour._ + +~Melancholy.~--Melancholy is a fearful gift; what is it but the telescope +of truth?--_Byron._ + +A lazy frost, a numbness of the mind.--_Dryden._ + +Demoniac frenzy, moping melancholy.--_Milton._ + +The noontide sun is dark, and music discord, when the heart is +low.--_Young._ + +~Memory.~--Memory is what makes us young or old.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +No canvas absorbs color like memory.--_Willmott._ + +Of all the faculties of the mind, memory is the first that flourishes, +and the first that dies.--_Colton._ + +Joy's recollection is no longer joy; but sorrow's memory is sorrow +still.--_Byron._ + +A sealed book, at whose contents we tremble.--_L. E. Landon._ + +And fondly mourn the dear delusions gone.--_Prior._ + +How can such deep-imprinted images sleep in us at times, till a word, a +sound, awake them?--_Lessing._ + +In literature and art memory is a synonym for invention; it is the +life-blood of imagination, which faints and dies when the veins are +empty.--_Willmott._ + +Memory is the scribe of the soul.--_Aristotle._ + +The memory has as many moods as the temper, and shifts its scenery like +a diorama.--_George Eliot._ + +We must always have old memories and young hopes.--_Arsène Houssaye._ + +They teach us to remember; why do not they teach us to forget? There is +not a man living who has not, some time in his life, admitted that +memory was as much of a curse as a blessing.--_F. A. Durivage._ + +~Mercy.~--Mercy more becomes a magistrate than the vindictive wrath which +men call justice!--_Longfellow._ + +Nothing emboldens sin so much as mercy.--_Shakespeare._ + +'Tis mightiest in the mightiest; it becomes the throned monarch better +than his crown.--_Shakespeare._ + +Give money, but never lend it. Giving it only makes a man ungrateful; +lending it makes him an enemy.--_Dumas._ + +Mercy among the virtues is like the moon among the stars,--not so +sparkling and vivid as many, but dispensing a calm radiance that hallows +the whole. It is the bow that rests upon the bosom of the cloud when the +storm is past. It is the light that hovers above the +judgment-seat.--_Chapin._ + +We hand folks over to God's mercy, and show none ourselves.--_George +Eliot._ + +Among the attributes of God, although they are all equal, mercy shines +with even more brilliancy than justice.--_Cervantes._ + +~Milton.~--His poetry reminds us of the miracles of Alpine scenery. Nooks +and dells, beautiful as fairy land, are embosomed in its most rugged and +gigantic elevations. The roses and myrtles bloom unchilled on the verge +of the avalanche.--_Macaulay._ + +~Mind.~--It is with diseases of the mind as with diseases of the body, we +are half dead before we understand our disorder, and half cured when we +do.--_Colton._ + +The end which at present calls forth our efforts will be found when it +is once gained to be only one of the means to some remoter end. The +natural flights of the human mind are not from pleasure to pleasure, but +from hope to hope.--_Johnson._ + +Minds filled with vivid, imaginative thoughts, are the most indolent in +reproducing. Clear, cold, hard minds are productive. They have to +retrace a very simple design.--_X. Doudan._ + +The mind is the atmosphere of the soul.--_Joubert._ + +What is this little, agile, precious fire, this fluttering motion which +we call the mind?--_Prior._ + +Just as a particular soil wants some one element to fertilize it, just +as the body in some conditions has a kind of famine for one special +food, so the mind has its wants, which do not always call for what is +best, but which know themselves and are as peremptory as the salt sick +sailor's call for a lemon or raw potato.--_Holmes._ + +The best way to prove the clearness of our mind is by showing its +faults; as when a stream discovers the dirt at the bottom, it convinces +us of the transparency of the water.--_Pope._ + +A mind once cultivated will not lie fallow for half an +hour.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Mischief.~--The opportunity to do mischief is found a hundred times a +day, and that of doing good once a year.--_Voltaire._ + +~Miser.~--The miser swimming in gold seems to me like a thirsty fish.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +In all meanness there is a deficit of intellect as well as of heart, and +even the cleverness of avarice is but the cunning of +imbecility.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Misery.~--There are a good many real miseries in life that we cannot help +smiling at, but they are the smiles that make wrinkles and not +dimples.--_Holmes._ + +Misery is so little appertaining to our nature, and happiness so much +so, that we in the same degree of illusion only lament over that which +has pained us, but leave unnoticed that which has rejoiced +us.--_Richter._ + +~Misfortune.~--If all the misfortunes of mankind were cast into a public +stock, in order to be equally distributed among the whole species, those +who now think themselves the most unhappy would prefer the share they +are already possessed of before that which would fall to them by such a +division.--_Socrates._ + +Depend upon it, that if a man _talks_ of his misfortunes there is +something in them that is not disagreeable to him; for where there is +nothing but pure misery, there never is any recourse to the mention of +it.--_Johnson._ + +Flowers never emit so sweet and strong a fragrance as before a storm. +Beauteous soul! when a storm approaches thee be as fragrant as a +sweet-smelling flower.--_Richter._ + +Our bravest lessons are not learned through success, but +misadventure.--_Alcott._ + +There is a chill air surrounding those who are down in the world, and +people are glad to get away from them, as from a cold room.--_George +Eliot._ + +Men shut their doors against the setting sun.--_Shakespeare._ + +He that is down needs fear no fall.--_Bunyan._ + +~Moderation.~--Till men have been some time free, they know not how to use +their freedom. The natives of wine countries are generally sober. In +climates where wine is a rarity intemperance abounds. A newly liberated +people may be compared to a Northern army encamped on the Rhine or the +Xeres. It is said that, when soldiers in such a situation first find +themselves able to indulge without restraint in such a rare and +expensive luxury, nothing is to be seen but intoxication. Soon, however, +plenty teaches discretion; and after wine has been for a few months +their daily fare, they become more temperate than they had ever been in +their own country. In the same manner, the final and permanent fruits of +liberty are wisdom, moderation, and mercy.--_Macaulay._ + +The superior man wishes to be slow in his words, and earnest in his +conduct.--_Confucius._ + +Let a man take time enough for the most trivial deed, though it be but +the paring of his nails. The buds swell imperceptibly, without hurry or +confusion; as if the short spring days were an eternity.--_Thoreau._ + +It is a little stream which flows softly, but freshens everything along +its course.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Modesty.~--False modesty is the last refinement of vanity. It is a +lie.--_Bruyère._ + +The first of all virtues is innocence; the next is modesty. If we banish +Modesty out of the world, she carries away with her half the virtue that +is in it.--_Addison._ + +He of his port was meek as is a maid.--_Chaucer._ + +Modesty is the lowest of the virtues, and is a confession of the +deficiency it indicates. He who undervalues himself is justly +undervalued by others.--_Hazlitt._ + +Modesty, who, when she goes, is gone forever.--_Landor._ + +Modesty is the conscience of the body.--_Balzac._ + +There are as many kinds of modesty as there are races. To the English +woman it is a duty; to the French woman a propriety.--_Taine._ + +Virtue which shuns the day.--_Addison._ + +Modesty and the dew love the shade. Each shine in the open day only to +be exhaled to heaven.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +Modesty is still a provocation.--_Poincelot._ + +Modesty is the chastity of merit, the virginity of noble souls.--_E. de +Girardin._ + +~Money.~--Wisdom, knowledge, power--all combined.--_Byron._ + +Oh, what a world of vile ill-favored faults looks handsome in three +hundred pounds a year!--_Shakespeare._ + +It is my opinion that a man's soul may be buried and perish under a +dung-heap, or in a furrow of the field, just as well as under a pile of +money.--_Hawthorne._ + +If you would know the value of money, go and try to borrow some; for he +that goes a-borrowing goes a-sorrowing.--_Franklin._ + +Make all you can, save all you can, give all you can.--_Wesley._ + +The avaricious love of gain, which is so feelingly deplored, appears to +us a principle which, in able hands, might be guided to the most +salutary purposes. The object is to encourage the love of labor, which +is best encouraged by the love of money.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Ready money is Aladdin's lamp.--_Byron._ + +Money does all things; for it gives and it takes away, it makes honest +men and knaves, fools and philosophers; and so forward, _mutatis +mutandis_, to the end of the chapter.--_L'Estrange._ + +Mammon is the largest slave-holder in the world.--_Fred. Saunders._ + +But for money and the need of it, there would not be half the friendship +in the world. It is powerful for good if divinely used. Give it plenty +of air and it is sweet as the hawthorn; shut it up and it cankers and +breeds worms.--_George MacDonald._ + +Money, the life-blood of the nation.--_Swift._ + +~Moon.~--The silver empress of the night.--_Tickell._ + +How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank.--_Shakespeare._ + +Mysterious veil of brightness made.--_Butler._ + +Cynthia, fair regent of the night.--_Gay._ + +The maiden moon in her mantle of blue.--_Joaquin Miller._ + +~Morals.~--Every age and every nation has certain characteristic vices, +which prevail almost universally, which scarcely any person scruples to +avow, and which even rigid moralists but faintly censure. Succeeding +generations change the fashion of their morals with the fashion of their +hats and their coaches; take some other kind of wickedness under their +patronage, and wonder at the depravity of their ancestors.--_Macaulay._ + +We like the expression of Raphael's faces without an edict to enforce +it. I do not see why there should not be a taste in morals formed on the +same principle.--_Hazlitt._ + +Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of much life so. Aim +above morality. Be not simply good; be good for something.--_Thoreau._ + +~Morning.~--Vanished night, shot through with orient beams.--_Milton._ + +The dewy morn, with breath all incense, and with cheek all +bloom.--_Byron._ + +Jocund day stands tiptoe on the misty mountain top.--_Shakespeare._ + +When the glad sun, exulting in his might, comes from the dusky-curtained +tents of night.--_Emma C. Embury._ + +The cock, that is the trumpet of the morn, doth with his lofty and +shrill-sounding throat awake the god of day.--_Shakespeare._ + +Its brightness, mighty divinity! has a fleeting empire over the day, +giving gladness to the fields, color to the flowers, the season of the +loves, harmonious hour of wakening birds.--_Calderon._ + +Temperate as the morn.--_Shakespeare._ + +I was always an early riser. Happy the man who is! Every morning day +comes to him with a virgin's love, full of bloom and freshness. The +youth of nature is contagious, like the gladness of a happy +child.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Mother.~--Children, look in those eyes, listen to that dear voice, notice +the feeling of even a single touch that is bestowed upon you by that +gentle hand! Make much of it while yet you have that most precious of +all good gifts, a loving mother. Read the unfathomable love of those +eyes; the kind anxiety of that tone and look, however slight your pain. +In after life you may have friends, fond, dear friends, but never will +you have again the inexpressible love and gentleness lavished upon you +which none but a mother bestows.--_Macaulay._ + +Nature's loving proxy, the watchful mother.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +I believe I should have been swept away by the flood of French +infidelity, if it had not been for one thing, the remembrance of the +time when my sainted mother used to make me kneel by her side, taking my +little hands folded in hers, and caused me to repeat the Lord's +Prayer.--_Thomas Randolph._ + +The mother's yearning, that completest type of the life in another life +which is the essence of real human love, feels the presence of the +cherished child even in the base, degraded man.--_George Eliot._ + +When Eve was brought unto Adam, he became filled with the Holy Spirit, +and gave her the most sanctified, the most glorious of appellations. He +called her Eva, that is to say, the Mother of All. He did not style her +wife, but simply mother,--mother of all living creatures. In this +consists the glory and the most precious ornament of woman.--_Luther._ + +There is in all this cold and hollow world no fount of deep, strong, +deathless love, save that within a mother's heart.--_Hemans._ + +~Motive.~--The morality of an action depends upon the motive from which we +act. If I fling half-a-crown to a beggar with intention to break his +head, and he picks it up and buys victuals with it, the physical effect +is good; but with respect to me, the action is very wrong.--_Johnson._ + +Whatever touches the nerves of motive, whatever shifts man's moral +position, is mightier than steam, or caloric, or lightning.--_Chapin._ + +Let the motive be in the deed and not in the event. Be not one whose +motive for action is the hope of reward.--_Kreeshna._ + +We must not inquire too curiously into motives. They are apt to become +feeble in the utterance: the aroma is mixed with the grosser air. We +must keep the germinating grain away from the light.--_George Eliot._ + +Every activity proposes to itself a passivity, every labor +enjoyment.--_Jacobi._ + +~Mourning.~--Oh, for the touch of a vanished hand, and the sound of a +voice that is still!--_Tennyson._ + +The meek-ey'd morn appears, mother of dews.--_Thomson._ + +~Music.~--Sentimentally I am disposed to harmony, but organically I am +incapable of a tune.--_Lamb._ + +All musical people seem to be happy; it is the engrossing pursuit; +almost the only innocent and unpunished passion.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Where painting is weakest, namely, in the expression of the highest +moral and spiritual ideas, there music is sublimely strong.--_Mrs. +Stowe._ + +There is something marvelous in music. I might almost say that music is, +in itself, a marvel. Its position is somewhere between the region of +thought and that of phenomena; a glimmering medium between mind and +matter, related to both and yet differing from either. Spiritual, and +yet requiring rhythm; material, and yet independent of space.--_Heinrich +Heine._ + +The hidden soul of harmony.--_Milton._ + +Give me some music! music, moody food of us that trade in +love.--_Shakespeare._ + +Explain it as we may, a martial strain will urge a man into the front +rank of battle sooner than an argument, and a fine anthem excite his +devotion more certainly than a logical discourse.--_Tuckerman._ + +Such sweet compulsion doth in music lie.--_Milton._ + +Music, in the best sense, does not require novelty; nay, the older it +is, and the more we are accustomed to it, the greater its +effect.--_Goethe._ + +Music, which gentler on the spirit lies than tired eyelids upon tired +eyes.--_Tennyson._ + +Melodies die out like the pipe of Pan, with the ears that love them and +listen for them.--_George Eliot._ + +Music can noble hints impart, engender fury, kindle love, with +unsuspected eloquence can move and manage all the man with secret +art.--_Addison._ + +Music is the harmonious voice of creation; an echo of the invisible +world; one note of the divine concord which the entire universe is +destined one day to sound.--_Mazzini._ + + +N. + +~Naïveté.~--Naïveté is the language of pure genius and of discerning +simplicity. It is the most simple picture of a refined and ingenious +idea; a masterpiece of art in him in whom it is not +natural.--_Mendelssohn._ + +~Name.~--A virtuous name is the precious only good for which queens and +peasants' wives must contest together.--_Schiller._ + +A man's name is not like a mantle which merely hangs about him, and +which one perchance may safely twitch and pull, but a perfectly fitting +garment, which, like the skin, has grown over and over him, at which one +cannot rake and scrape without injuring the man himself.--_Goethe._ + +~Napoleon.~--Whose game was empires, and whose stakes were +thrones.--_Byron._ + +Napoleon I. might have been the Washington of France; he preferred to be +another Attila,--a question of taste.--_F. A. Durivage._ + +~Nature.~--Nature has no mind; every man who addresses her is compelled to +force upon her for a moment the loan of his own mind. And if she answers +a question which his own mind puts to her, it is only by such a reply as +his own mind teaches to her parrot-like lips. And as every man has a +different mind, so every man gets a different answer.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Nature will be buried a great time, and yet revive upon the occasion or +temptation: like as it was with Æsop's damsel, turned from a cat to a +woman, who sat very demurely at the board's end till a mouse ran before +her.--_Bacon._ + +Virtue, as understood by the world, is a constant struggle against the +laws of nature.--_De Finod._ + +Nature,--a thing which science and art never appear to see with the same +eyes. If to an artist Nature has a soul, why, so has a steam-engine. Art +gifts with soul all matter that it contemplates; science turns all that +is already gifted with soul into matter.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Nature is too thin a screen; the glory of the One breaks in +_everywhere_.--_Emerson._ + +Nature is poetic, but not mankind. When one aims at truth it is easier +to find the poetic side of nature than of man.--_X. Doudan._ + +All nature is a vast symbolism; every material fact has sheathed within +it a spiritual truth.--_Chapin._ + +Nature is no sentimentalist,--does not cosset or pamper us. We must see +that the world is rough and surly, and will not mind drowning a man or a +woman, but swallows your ships like a grain of dust. The cold, +inconsiderate of persons, tingles your blood, benumbs your feet, freezes +a man like an apple. The diseases, the elements, fortune, gravity, +lightning, respect no persons.--_Emerson._ + +Nature imitates herself. A grain thrown into good ground brings forth +fruit: a principle thrown into a good mind brings forth fruit. +Everything is created and conducted by the same Master,--the root, the +branch, the fruits,--the principles, the consequences.--_Pascal._ + +A noble nature can alone attract the noble, and alone knows how to +retain them.--_Goethe._ + +Nature, the vicar of the almighty Lord.--_Chaucer._ + +A poet ought not to pick Nature's pocket. Let him borrow, and so borrow +as to repay by the very act of borrowing. Examine nature accurately, but +write from recollection, and trust more to the imagination than the +memory.--_Coleridge._ + +We, by art, unteach what Nature taught.--_Dryden._ + +Nature is the armory of genius. Cities serve it poorly, books and +colleges at second hand; the eye craves the spectacle of the horizon, of +mountain, ocean, river and plain, the clouds and stars; actual contact +with the elements, sympathy with the seasons as they rise and +roll.--_Alcott._ + +Nothing is rich but the inexhaustible wealth of Nature. She shows us +only surfaces, but she is million fathoms deep.--_Emerson._ + +Nature is an absolute and jealous divinity. Lovely, eloquent, and +instructive in all her inequalities and contrasts, she hides her face, +and remains mute to those who, by attempting to re-fashion her, profane +her.--_Mazzini._ + +~Necessity.~--Necessity is a bad recommendation to favors of any kind, +which as seldom fall to those who really want them, as to those who +really deserve them.--_Fielding._ + +It is observed in the golden verses of Pythagoras, that power is never +far from necessity. The vigor of the human mind quickly appears when +there is no longer any place for doubt and hesitation, when diffidence +is absorbed in the sense of danger, or overwhelmed by some resistless +passion.--_Johnson._ + +When God would educate a man He compels him to learn bitter lessons. He +sends him to school to the necessities rather than to the graces, that, +by knowing all suffering, he may know also the eternal +consolation.--_Celia Burleigh._ + +Necessity may render a doubtful act innocent, but it cannot make it +praiseworthy.--_Joubert._ + +What was once to me mere matter of the fancy now has grown the vast +necessity of heart and life.--_Tennyson._ + +~Neglect.~--He that thinks he can afford to be negligent is not far from +being poor.--_Johnson._ + +~News.~--Give to a gracious message an host of tongues; but let ill +tidings tell themselves when they be felt.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Newspapers.~--In these times we fight for ideas, and newspapers are our +fortresses.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Before this century shall run out journalism will be the whole press. +Mankind will write their book day by day, hour by hour, page by page. +Thought will spread abroad with the rapidity of light; instantly +conceived, instantly written, instantly understood at the extremities of +the earth; it will spread from Pole to Pole, suddenly burning with the +fervor of soul which made it burst forth; it will be the reign of the +human mind in all its plenitude; it will not have time to ripen, to +accumulate in the form of a book; the book will arrive too late; the +only book possible from day to day is a newspaper.--_Lamartine._ + +Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand +bayonets.--_Napoleon._ + +They preach to the people daily, weekly; admonishing kings themselves; +advising peace or war with an authority which only the first Reformers +and a long-past class of Popes were possessed of; inflicting moral +censure; imparting moral encouragement, consolation, edification; in all +ways diligently "administering the discipline of the Church." It may be +said, too, that in private disposition the new preachers somewhat +resemble the mendicant Friars of old times; outwardly, full of holy +zeal; inwardly, not without stratagem, and hunger for terrestrial +things.--_Carlyle._ + +These papers of the day have uses more adequate to the purposes of +common life than more pompous and durable volumes.--_Johnson._ + +~Night.~--Wisdom mounts her zenith with the stars.--_Mrs. Barbauld._ + +The day is done, and the darkness falls from the wings of +night.--_Longfellow._ + +Sable-vested night, eldest of things.--_Milton._ + +O mysterious night! Thou art not silent: many tongues hast +thou.--_Joanna Baillie._ + +Night, when deep sleep falleth on men.--_Bible._ + +~No.~--No is a surly, honest fellow, speaks his mind rough and round at +once.--_Walter Scott._ + +Learn to say No! and it will be of more use to you than to be able to +read Latin.--_Spurgeon._ + +The woman who really wishes to refuse contents herself with saying No. +She who explains wants to be convinced.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +~Nobility.~--Virtue is the first title of nobility.--_Molière._ + +~Nonsense.~--Nonsense is to sense as shade to light--it heightens +effect.--_Fred. Saunders._ + +~Nothing.~--There is nothing useless to men of sense; clever people turn +everything to account.--_Fontaine._ + +Variety of mere nothings gives more pleasure than uniformity of +something.--_Richter._ + +~Novels.~--Novels are sweet. All people with healthy literary appetites +love them--almost all women; a vast number of clever, hard-headed +men,--Judges, bishops, chancellors, mathematicians,--are notorious novel +readers, as well as young boys and sweet girls, and their kind, tender +mothers.--_Thackeray._ + +We must have books for recreation and entertainment, as well as books +for instruction and for business; the former are agreeable, the latter +useful, and the human mind requires both. The canon law and the codes of +Justinian shall have due honor and reign at the universities, but Homer +and Virgil need not therefore be banished. We will cultivate the olive +and the vine, but without eradicating the myrtle and the +rose.--_Balzac._ + +A little grain of the romance is no ill ingredient to preserve and exalt +the dignity of human nature, without which it is apt to degenerate into +everything that is sordid, vicious, and low.--_Swift._ + +~Novelty.~--The enormous influence of novelty--the way in which it +quickens observation, sharpens sensation, and exalts sentiment--is not +half enough taken note of by us, and is to me a very sorrowful matter. +And yet, if we try to obtain perpetual change, change itself will become +monotonous; and then we are reduced to that old despair, "If water +chokes, what will you drink after it?" The two points of practical +wisdom in the matter are, first, to be content with as little novelty as +possible at a time; and secondly, to preserve, as as much possible, the +sources of novelty.--_Ruskin._ + +Novelty is the great-parent of pleasure.--_South._ + + +O. + +~Obedience.~--To obey is better than sacrifice.--_Bible._ + +How will you find good? It is not a thing of choice, it is a river that +flows from the foot of the Invisible Throne, and flows by the path of +obedience.--_George Eliot._ + +~Oblivion.~--Oblivion is the flower that grows best on graves.--_George +Sand._ + +The grave of human misery.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +~Observation.~--It is the close observation of little things which is the +secret of success in business, in art, in science, and in every pursuit +in life. Human knowledge is but an accumulation of small facts, made by +successive generations of men,--the little bits of knowledge and +experience carefully treasured up by them growing at length into a +mighty pyramid.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Observation made in the cloister, or in the desert, will generally be as +obscure as the one, and as barren as the other; but he that would paint +with his pencil must study originals, and not be over fearful of a +little dust.--_Colton._ + +Each one sees what he carries in his heart.--_Goethe._ + +~Occupation.~--The want of occupation is no less the plague of society +than of solitude.--_Rousseau._ + +The busy have no time for tears.--_Byron._ + +One of the principal occupations of man is to divine +woman.--_Lacretelle._ + +~Ocean.~--Wave rolling after wave in torrent rapture.--_Milton._ + +It plays with the clouds, it mocks the skies, or like a cradled creature +lies.--_Barry Cornwall._ + +The visitation of the winds, who take the ruffian billows by the top, +curling their monstrous heads.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Office.~--The gratitude of place-expectants is a lively sense of future +favors.--_Walpole._ + +~Opinion.~--The men of the past had convictions, while we moderns have +only opinions.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Wind puffs up empty bladders; opinion, fools.--_Socrates._ + +Our pet opinions are usually those which place us in a minority of a +minority amongst our own party: very happily, else those poor opinions, +born with no silver spoon in their mouths, how would they get nourished +and fed?--_George Eliot._ + +Those who never retract their opinions love themselves more than they +love truth.--_Joubert._ + +It has been shrewdly said that when men abuse us, we should suspect +ourselves, and when they praise us, them. It is a rare instance of +virtue to despise censure which we do not deserve, and still more rare +to despise praise, which we do. But that integrity that lives only on +opinion would starve without it.--_Colton._ + +There never was in the world two opinions alike, no more than two hairs +or two grains. The most universal quality is diversity.--_Montaigne._ + +The history of human opinion is scarcely anything more than the history +of human errors.--_Voltaire._ + +If a man should register all his opinions upon love, politics, religion, +learning, etc., beginning from his youth, and so go on to old age, what +a bundle of inconsistencies and contradictions would appear at +last.--_Swift._ + +One of the mistakes in the conduct of human life is, to suppose that +other men's opinions are to make us happy.--_Burton._ + +It is with true opinions which one has the courage to utter as with +pawns first advanced on the chess-board; they may be beaten, but they +have inaugurated a game which must be won.--_Goethe._ + +The feeble tremble before opinion, the foolish defy it, the wise judge +it, the skillful direct it.--_Mme. Roland._ + +~Opportunity.~--The cleverest of all devils is opportunity.--_Vieland._ + +Chance opportunities make us known to others, and still more to +ourselves.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +What is opportunity to the man who can't use it? An unfecundated egg, +which the waves of time wash away into nonentity.--_George Eliot._ + +There is no man whom Fortune does not visit once in his life; but when +she does not find him ready to receive her, she walks in at the door and +flies out at the window.--_Cardinal Imperiali._ + +The golden moments in the stream of life rush past us, and we see +nothing but sand; the angels come to visit us, and we only know them +when they are gone.--_George Eliot._ + +Every one has a fair turn to be as great as he pleases.--_Jeremy +Collier._ + +A philosopher being asked what was the first thing necessary to win the +love of a woman, answered: "Opportunity."--_Moore._ + +Opportunity, sooner or later, comes to all who work and wish.--_Lord +Stanley._ + +You will never "find" time for anything. If you want time you must make +it.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Opposition.~--The effects of opposition are wonderful. There are men who +rise refreshed on hearing of a threat,--men to whom a crisis which +intimidates and paralyzes the majority--demanding, not the faculties of +prudence and thrift, but comprehension, immovableness, the readiness of +sacrifice--comes graceful and beloved as a bride!--_Emerson._ + +Nobody loves heartily unless people take pains to prevent +it.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Oratory.~--Orators are most vehement when they have the weakest cause, as +men get on horseback when they cannot walk.--_Cicero._ + +Metaphor is the figure most suitable for the orator, as men find a +positive pleasure in catching resemblances for +themselves.--_Aristotle._ + +Those orators who give us much noise and many words, but little argument +and less wit, and who are most loud when they are least lucid, should +take a lesson from the great volume of Nature; she often gives us the +lightning even without the thunder, but never the thunder without the +lightning.--_Colton._ + +An orator without judgment is a horse without a bridle.--_Theophrastus._ + +When the Roman people had listened to the diffuse and polished +discourses of Cicero, they departed, saying one to another, "What a +splendid speech our orator has made!" But when the Athenians heard +Demosthenes, he so filled them with the subject-matter of his oration, +that they quite forgot the orator, and left him at the finish of his +harangue, breathing revenge, and exclaiming, "Let us go and fight +against Philip!"--_Colton._ + +Let not a day pass without exercising your powers of speech. There is no +power like that of oratory. Cæsar controlled men by exciting their +fears; Cicero, by captivating their affections and swaying their +passions. The influence of the one perished with its author; that of the +other continues to this day.--_Henry Clay._ + +It was reckoned the fault of the orators at the decline of the Roman +empire, when they had been long instructed by rhetoricians, that their +periods were so harmonious as that they could be sung as well as spoken. +What a ridiculous figure must one of these gentlemen cut, thus measuring +syllables and weighing words when he should plead the cause of his +client!--_Goldsmith._ + +~Originality.~--Originality is nothing but judicious +imitation.--_Voltaire._ + +One couldn't carry on life comfortably without a little blindness to the +fact that everything has been said better than we can put it +ourselves.--_George Eliot._ + +The most original writers borrowed one from another. Boiardo has +imitated Pulci, and Ariosto Boiardo. The instruction we find in books is +like fire. We fetch it from our neighbor's, kindle it at home, +communicate it to others, and it becomes the property of +all.--_Voltaire._ + +All originality is estrangement.--_G. H. Lawes._ + + +P. + +~Pain.~--Psychical pain is more easily borne than physical, and if I had +my choice between a bad conscience and a bad tooth, I should choose the +former.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +The same refinement which brings us new pleasures exposes us to new +pains.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Pardon.~--Pardon is the virtue of victory.--_Mazzini._ + +The heart has always the pardoning power.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +The offender never pardons.--_George Herbert._ + +Love is on the verge of hate each time it stoops for +pardon.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +These evils I deserve, yet despair not of his final pardon whose ear is +ever open, and his eye gracious to readmit the supplicant.--_Milton._ + +Having mourned your sin, for outward Eden lost, find paradise +within.--_Dryden._ + +~Parent.~--The sacred books of the ancient Persians say: If you would be +holy instruct your children, because all the good acts they perform will +be imputed to you.--_Montesquieu._ + +~Partiality.~--Partiality in a parent is commonly unlucky; for fondlings +are in danger to be made fools, and the children that are least cockered +make the best and wisest men.--_L'Estrange._ + +As there is a partiality to opinions, which is apt to mislead the +understanding, so there is also a partiality to studies, which is +prejudicial to knowledge.--_Locke._ + +Partiality is properly the understanding's judging according to the +inclination of the will and affections, and not according to the exact +truth of things, or the merits of the cause.--_South._ + +~Parting.~--In every parting there is an image of death.--_George Eliot._ + +~Party.~--He knows very little of mankind who expects, by any facts or +reasoning, to convince a determined party-man.--_Lavater._ + +He that aspires to be the head of a party will find it more difficult to +please his friends than to perplex his foes.--_Colton._ + +~Passions.~--Passions makes us feel but never see clearly.--_Montesquieu._ + +Passions are likened best to floods and streams: the shallow murmur, but +the deep are dumb.--_Sir Walter Raleigh._ + +The passions are the voice of the body.--_Rousseau._ + +The advice given by a great moralist to his friend was, that he should +compose his passions; and let that be the work of reason which would +certainly be the work of time.--_Addison._ + +A vigorous mind is as necessarily accompanied with violent passions as a +great fire with great heat.--_Burke._ + +There are moments when our passions speak and decide for us, and we seem +to stand by and wonder. They carry in them an inspiration of crime, that +in one instant does the work of long premeditation.--_George Eliot._ + +The blossoms of passion, gay and luxuriant flowers, are brighter and +fuller of fragrance, but they beguile us and lead us astray, and their +odor is deadly.--_Longfellow._ + +"All the passions," says an old writer, "are such near neighbors, that +if one of them is on fire the others should send for the buckets." Thus +love and hate being both passions, the one is never safe from the spark +that sets the other ablaze. But contempt is passionless; it does not +catch, it quenches fire.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +All the passions seek after whatever nourishes them. Fear loves the idea +of danger.--_Joubert._ + +It is the excess and not the nature of our passions which is perishable. +Like the trees which grow by the tomb of Protesilaus, the passions +flourish till they reach a certain height, but no sooner is that height +attained than they wither away.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Past.~--Let the dead past bury its dead.--_Longfellow._ + +Oh vanished times! splendors eclipsed for aye! Oh suns behind the +horizon that have set.--_Victor Hugo._ + +It is to live twice, when we can enjoy the recollections of our former +life.--_Martial._ + +I desire no future that will break the ties of the past.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Patience.~--There is one form of hope which is never unwise, and which +certainly does not diminish with the increase of knowledge. In that form +it changes its name and we call it patience.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +It's easy finding reasons why other folks should be patient.--_George +Eliot._ + +Patience, sovereign o'er transmuted ills.--_Johnson._ + +There's no music in a "rest," that I know of, but there's the making of +music in it. And people are always missing that part of the life melody, +always talking of perseverance, and courage, and fortitude; but patience +is the finest and worthiest part of fortitude, and the rarest, +too.--_Ruskin._ + +The two powers which in my opinion constitute a wise man are those of +bearing and forbearing.--_Epictetus._ + +Enter into the sublime patience of the Lord. Be charitable in view of +it. God can afford to wait; why cannot we, since we have Him to fall +back upon? Let patience have her perfect work, and bring forth her +celestial fruits.--_G. MacDonald._ + +'Tis all men's office to speak patience to those that wring under the +load of sorrow; but no man's virtue nor sufficiency to be so moral when +he shall endure the like himself.--_Shakespeare._ + +He that hath patience hath fat thrushes for a farthing.--_George +Herbert._ + +Imitate time. It destroys slowly. It undermines, wears, loosens, +separates. It does not uproot.--_Joubert._ + +God is with the patient.--_Koran._ + +Patience, the second bravery of man, is, perhaps, greater than the +first.--_Antonio de Solis._ + +Patience--the truest fortitude.--_Milton._ + +~Patriotism.~--In peace patriotism really consists only in this--that +every one sweeps before his own door, minds his own business, also +learns his own lesson, that it may be well with him in his own +house.--_Goethe._ + +Our country! In her intercourse with foreign nations may she always be +in the right; but our country, right or wrong.--_Decatur._ + +How dear is fatherland to all noble hearts.--_Voltaire._ + +Let our object be our country, our whole country, and nothing but our +country. And, by the blessing of God, may that country itself become a +vast and splendid monument, not of oppression and terror, but of wisdom, +of peace, and of liberty, upon which the world may gaze with admiration +forever!--_Daniel Webster._ + +There can be no affinity nearer than our country.--_Plato._ + +Of the whole sum of human life no small part is that which consists of a +man's relations to his country, and his feelings concerning +it.--_Gladstone._ + +~Peace.~--They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears +into pruning-hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, +neither shall they learn war any more.--_Bible._ + +Still in thy right hand carry gentle peace.--_Shakespeare._ + +Lovely concord and most sacred peace doth nourish virtue, and fast +friendship breed.--_Spenser._ + +Peace gives food to the husbandman, even in the midst of rocks; war +brings misery to him, even in the most fertile plains.--_Menander._ + +Peace, dear nurse of arts, plenties, and joyful birth.--_Shakespeare._ + +A land rejoicing and a people blest.--_Pope._ + +~Pedant.~--As pedantry is an ostentatious obtrusion of knowledge, in which +those who hear us cannot sympathize, it is a fault of which soldiers, +sailors, sportsmen, gamesters, cultivators, and all men engaged in a +particular occupation, are quite as guilty as scholars; but they have +the good fortune to have the vice only of pedantry, while scholars have +both the vice and the name for it too.--_S. Smith._ + +With loads of learned lumber in his head.--_Pope._ + +It is not a circumscribed situation so much as a narrow vision that +creates pedants; not having a pet study or science, but a narrow, vulgar +soul, which prevents a man from seeing all sides and hearing all things; +in short, the intolerant man is the real pedant.--_Richter._ + +~Perfection.~--It is reasonable to have perfection in our eye that we may +always advance towards it, though we know it can never be +reached.--_Johnson._ + +Perfection does not exist; to understand it is the triumph of human +intelligence; to desire to possess it is the most dangerous kind of +madness.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +That historian who would describe a favorite character as faultless +raises another at the expense of himself. Zeuxis made five virgins +contribute their charms to his single picture of Helen; and it is as +vain for the moralist to look for perfection in the mind, as for the +painter to expect to find it in the body.--_Colton._ + +Trifles make perfection, but perfection is no trifle.--_Michael Angelo._ + +He who boasts of being perfect is perfect in folly. I never saw a +perfect man. Every rose has its thorns, and every day its night. Even +the sun shows spots, and the skies are darkened with clouds. And faults +of some kind nestle in every bosom.--_Spurgeon._ + +Faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null, dead perfection; no +more.--_Tennyson._ + +~Persecution.~--Of all persecutions, that of calumny is the most +intolerable. Any other kind of persecution can affect our outward +circumstances only, our properties, our lives; but this may affect our +characters forever.--_Hazlitt._ + +~Perseverance.~--Great effects come of industry and perseverance; for +audacity doth almost bind and mate the weaker sort of minds.--_Bacon._ + +Let us only suffer any person to tell us his story, morning and evening, +but for one twelve-month, and he will become our master.--_Burke._ + +Perpetual pushing and assurance put a difficulty out of countenance, and +make a seeming impossibility give way.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +Much rain wears the marble.--_Shakespeare._ + +I'm proof against that word failure. I've seen behind it. The only +failure a man ought to fear is failure in cleaving to the purpose he +sees to be best.--_George Eliot._ + +Every man who observes vigilantly, and resolves steadfastly, grows +unconsciously into genius.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Perseverance is not always an indication of great abilities. An +indifferent poet is invulnerable to a repulse, the want of sensibility +in him being what a noble self-confidence was in Milton. These excluded +suitors continue, nevertheless, to hang their garlands at the gate, to +anoint the door-post, and even kiss the very threshold of her home, +though the Muse beckons them not in.--_Wordsworth._ + +~Perverseness.~--The strength of the donkey mind lies in adopting a course +inversely as the arguments urged, which, well considered, requires as +great a mental force as the direct sequence.--_George Eliot._ + +~Philosophy.~--Philosophy is the art of living.--_Plutarch._ + +Philosophy consists not in airy schemes, or idle speculations; the rule +and conduct of all social life is her great province.--_Thomson._ + +The philosopher knows the universe and knows not himself.--_Fontaine._ + +Philosophy is the rational expression of genius.--_Lamartine._ + +It is a maxim received among philosophers themselves from the days of +Aristotle down to those of Sir William Hamilton, that philosophy ceases +where truth is acknowledged.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Physiognomy.~--It is a point of cunning to wait upon him with whom you +speak with your eye, as the Jesuits give it in precept; for there be +many wise men that have secret hearts and transparent +countenances.--_Bacon._ + +As the language of the face is universal, so 'tis very comprehensive; no +laconism can reach it; 'tis the short-hand of the mind, and crowds a +great deal in a little room.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +The distinguishing characters of the face, and the lineaments of the +body, grow more plain and visible with time and age; but the peculiar +physiognomy of the mind is most discernible in children.--_Locke._ + +What knowledge is there, of which man is capable, that is not founded on +the exterior; the relation that exists between visible and invisible, +the perceptible and the imperceptible?--_Lavater._ + +~Piety.~--Among the many strange servilities mistaken for pieties one of +the least lovely is that which hopes to flatter God by despising the +world and vilifying human nature.--_G. H. Lewes._ + +Piety softens all that courage bears.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Piety is a kind of modesty. It makes us turn aside our thoughts, as +modesty makes us cast down our eyes in the presence of whatever is +forbidden.--_Joubert._ + +Piety is not an end, but a means of attaining the highest degree of +culture by perfect peace of mind. Hence it is to be observed that those +who make piety an end and aim in itself for the most part become +hypocrites.--_Goethe._ + +~Pity.~--Pity is not natural to man. Children are always cruel. Savages +are always cruel. Pity is acquired and improved by the cultivation of +reason. We may have uneasy sensations from seeing a creature in +distress, without pity; for we have not pity unless we wish to relieve +them. When I am on my way to dine with a friend, and, finding it late, +bid the coachman make haste, if I happen to attend when he whips his +horses, I may feel unpleasantly that the animals are put to pain, but I +do not wish him to desist; no, sir, I wish him to drive on.--_Johnson._ + +Pity is sworn servant unto love, and this be sure, wherever it begin to +make the way, it lets the master in.--_Daniel._ + +Those many that need pity, and those infinities of people that refuse to +pity, are miserable upon a several charge, but yet they almost make up +all mankind.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Of all the sisters of Love one of the most charming is Pity.--_Alfred de +Musset._ + +~Place.~--In place there is a license to do good and evil, whereof the +latter is a curse; for in evil the best condition is not to will; the +second, not to can.--_Lord Bacon._ + +Where you are is of no moment, but only what you are doing there. It is +not the place that ennobles you, but you the place; and this only by +doing that which is great and noble.--_Petrarch._ + +I take sanctuary in an honest mediocrity.--_Bruyère._ + +A true man never frets about his place in the world, but just slides +into it by the gravitation of his nature, and swings there as easily as +a star.--_Chapin._ + +~Plagiarism.~--Nothing is sillier than this charge of plagiarism. There is +no sixth commandment in art. The poet dare help himself wherever he +lists--wherever he finds material suited to his work. He may even +appropriate entire columns with their carved capitals, if the temple he +thus supports be a beautiful one. Goethe understood this very well, and +so did Shakespeare before him.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +~Pleasure.~--Consider pleasures as they depart, not as they +come.--_Aristotle._ + +We have not an hour of life in which our pleasures relish not some pain, +our sours some sweetness.--_Massinger._ + +How many there are that take pleasure in toil: that can outrise the sun, +outwatch the moon, and outrun the field's wild beasts! merely out of +fancy and delectation, they can find out mirth in vociferation, music in +the barking of dogs, and be content to be led about the earth, over +hedges and through sloughs, by the windings and the shifts of poor +affrighted vermin; yet, after all, come off, as Messalina, tired, and +not satisfied with all that the brutes can do. But were a man enjoined +to this that did not like it, how tedious and how punishable to him +would it prove! since, in itself, it differs not from riding +post.--_Feltham._ + +Boys immature in knowledge pawn their experience to their present +pleasure.--_Shakespeare._ + +'Tis a wrong way to proportion other men's pleasures to ourselves. 'Tis +like a child's using a little bird--"Oh, poor bird, thou shalt sleep +with me"--so lays it in his bosom and stifles it with his hot breath. +The bird had rather be in the cold air. And yet, too, 'tis the most +pleasing flattery to like what other men like.--_Selden._ + +There is no pleasure but that some pain is nearly allied to +it.--_Menander._ + +All fits of pleasure are balanced by an equal degree of pain or languor; +'tis like spending this year part of the next year's revenue.--_Swift._ + +Fly the pleasure that bites to-morrow.--_George Herbert._ + +Look upon pleasures not upon that side that is next the sun, or where +they look beauteously, that is, as they come towards you to be enjoyed, +for then they paint and smile, and dress themselves up in tinsel, and +glass gems, and counterfeit imagery.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Pleasure has its time; so, too, has wisdom. Make love in thy youth, and +in old age attend to thy salvation.--_Voltaire._ + +A man of pleasure is a man of pains.--_Young._ + +Pleasure is very seldom found where it is sought. Our brightest blazes +of gladness are commonly kindled by unexpected sparks.--_Johnson._ + +What would we not give to still have in store the first blissful moment +we ever enjoyed!--_Rochepèdre._ + +Most pleasures embrace us but to strangle.--_Montaigne._ + +~Poetry.~--Poetry is the apotheosis of sentiment.--_Madame de Staël._ + +Poetry is the sister of sorrow. Every man that suffers and weeps is a +poet; every tear is a verse, and every heart a poem.--_Marc André._ + +Much is the force of heaven-bred poesy.--_Shakespeare._ + +Poetry, good sir, in my opinion, is like a tender virgin, very young, +and extremely beautiful, whom divers other virgins--namely, all the +other sciences--make it their business to enrich, polish, and adorn; and +to her it belongs to make use of them all, and on her part to give a +lustre to them all.--_Cervantes._ + +Poetry is the overflowing of the soul.--_Tuckerman._ + +Poetry is enthusiasm with wings of fire, it is the angel of high +thoughts, that inspires us with the power of sacrifice.--_Mazzini._ + +Poetry is the music of thought, conveyed to us in the music of +language.--_Chatfield._ + +The great secret of morals is love, or a going out of our own nature, +and an identification of ourselves with the beautiful which exists in +thought, action, or person, not our own. A man, to be greatly good, must +imagine intensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place +of another, and of many others; the pains and pleasures of his species +must become his own. The great instrument of moral good is imagination, +and poetry administers to the effect by acting upon the +cause.--_Shelley._ + +Truth shines the brighter clad in verse.--_Pope._ + +It is a shallow criticism that would define poetry as confined to +literary productions in rhyme and metre. The written poem is only poetry +_talking_, and the statue, the picture, and the musical composition are +poetry _acting_. Milton and Goethe, at their desks, were not more truly +poets than Phidias with his chisel, Raphael at his easel, or deaf +Beethoven bending over his piano, inventing and producing strains which +he himself could never hope to hear.--_Ruskin._ + +Thought in blossom.--_Bishop Ken._ + +It is a ruinous misjudgment, too contemptible to be asserted, but not +too contemptible to be acted upon, that the end of poetry is +publication.--_George MacDonald._ + +Wisdom married to immortal verse.--_Wordsworth._ + +By poetry we mean the art of employing words in such a manner as to +produce an illusion on the imagination; the art of doing by means of +words what the painter does by means of colors.--_Macaulay._ + +Thoughts, that voluntary move harmonious numbers.--_Milton._ + +The world is so grand and so inexhaustible that subjects for poems +should never be wanted. But all poetry should be the poetry of +circumstance; that is, it should be inspired by the Real. A particular +subject will take a poetic and general character precisely because it is +created by a poet. All my poetry is the poetry of circumstance. It +wholly owes its birth to the realities of life.--_Goethe._ + +Nothing which does not transport is poetry. The lyre is a winged +instrument.--_Joubert._ + +Perhaps there are no warmer lovers of the muse than those who are only +permitted occasionally to gain her favors. The shrine is more reverently +approached by the pilgrim from afar than the familiar worshiper. Poetry +is often more beloved by one whose daily vocation is amid the bustle of +the world. We read of a fountain in Arabia upon whose basin is +inscribed, "Drink and away;" but how delicious is that hasty draught, +and how long and brightly the thought of its transient refreshment +dwells in the memory!--_Tuckerman._ + +Old-fashioned poetry, but choicely good.--_Izaak Walton._ + +Poetry is not made out of the understanding. The question of common +sense is always: "What is it good for?" a question which would abolish +the rose and be triumphantly answered by the cabbage.--_Lowell._ + +The poetry of earth is never dead.--_Keats._ + +~Poets.~--Poets, like race-horses, must be fed, not fattened.--_Charles +IX._ + +True poets, like great artists, have scarcely any childhood, and no old +age.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Modern poets mix much water with their ink.--_Goethe._ + +There is nothing of which Nature has been more bountiful than poets. +They swarm like the spawn of cod-fish, with a vicious fecundity, that +invites and requires destruction. To publish verses is become a sort of +evidence that a man wants sense; which is repelled not by writing good +verses, but by writing excellent verses.--_Sydney Smith._ + +There is a pleasure in poetic pains which only poets +know.--_Wordsworth._ + +An artist that works in marble or colors has them all to himself and his +tribe, but the man who moulds his thoughts in verse has to employ the +materials vulgarized by everybody's use, and glorify them by his +handling.--_Holmes._ + +A little shallowness might be useful to many a poet! What is depth, +after all? Is the pit deeper than the shallow mirror which reflects its +lowest recesses?--_Heinrich Heine._ + +We praise the dramatic poet who possesses the art of drawing tears--a +talent which he has in common with the meanest onion!--_Heinrich Heine._ + +I have observed a gardener cut the outward rind of a tree (which is the +surtout of it), to make it bear well: and this is a natural account of +the usual poverty of poets, and is an argument why wits, of all men +living, ought to be ill clad. I have always a sacred veneration for any +one I observe to be a little out of repair in his person, as supposing +him either a poet or a philosopher; because the richest minerals are +ever found under the most ragged and withered surfaces of the +earth.--_Swift._ + +Words become luminous when the poet's finger has passed over them its +phosphorescence.--_Joubert._ + +Poets are the hierophants of an unapprehended inspiration; the mirrors +of the gigantic shadows which futurity casts upon the +present.--_Shelley._ + +Poets are far rarer births than kings.--_Ben Jonson._ + +One might discover schools of the poets as distinctly as schools of the +painters, by much converse in them, and a thorough taste of their manner +of writing.--_Pope._ + +They learn in suffering what they teach in song.--_Shelley._ + +~Policy.~--He has mastered all points who has combined the useful with the +agreeable.--_Horace._ + +At court one becomes a sort of human ant-eater, and learns to catch +one's prey by one's tongue.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Measures, not men, have always been my mark.--_Goldsmith._ + +In a troubled state, we must do as in foul weather upon a river, not +think to cut directly through, for the boat may be filled with water; +but rise and fall as the waves do, and give way as much as we +conveniently can.--_Seldon._ + +To manage men one ought to have a sharp mind in a velvet +sheath.--_George Eliot._ + +~Politeness.~--Politeness is fictitious benevolence. It supplies the place +of it among those who see each other only in public, or but little. +Depend upon it, the want of it never fails to produce something +disagreeable to one or other. I have always applied to good breeding +what Addison, in his "Cato," says of honor: "Honor's a sacred tie: the +law of kings; the noble mind's distinguishing perfection; that aids and +strengthens Virtue where it meets her, and imitates her actions where +she is not."--_Johnson._ + +Self-command is the main elegance.--_Emerson._ + +Politeness smooths wrinkles.--_Joubert._ + +Politeness is as natural to delicate natures as perfume is to +flowers.--_De Finod._ + +~Politics.~--It is the misfortune of all miscellaneous political +combinations, that with the purest motives of their more generous +members are ever mixed the most sordid interests and the fiercest +passions of mean confederates.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Nothing is politically right which is morally wrong.--_Daniel +O'Connell._ + +Those who think must govern those who toil.--_Goldsmith._ + +The man who can make two ears of corn, or two blades of grass, grow on +the spot where only one grew before, would deserve better of mankind, +and render more essential service to the country, than the whole race of +politicians put together.--_Swift._ + +Jarring interests of themselves create the according music of a +well-mixed state.--_Pope._ + +Wise men and gods are on the strongest side.--_Sir C. Sedley._ + +The thorough-paced politician must laugh at the squeamishness of his +conscience, and read it another lecture.--_South._ + +A thousand years scarce serve to form a state; an hour may lay it in the +dust.--_Byron._ + +Extended empire, like extended gold, exchanges solid strength for feeble +splendor.--_Johnson._ + +~Possessions.~--It so falls out that what we have we prize not to the +worth whiles we enjoy it; but being lacked and lost, why then we rack +the value; then we find the virtue that possession would not show us +whiles it was ours.--_Shakespeare._ + +All comes from and will go to others.--_George Herbert._ + +In life, as in chess, one's own pawns block one's way. A man's very +wealth, ease, leisure, children, books, which should help him to win, +more often checkmate him.--_Charles Buxton._ + +In all worldly things that a man pursues with the greatest eagerness and +intention of mind imaginable, he finds not half the pleasure in the +actual possession of them as he proposed to himself in the +expectation.--_South._ + +As soon as women become ours we are no longer theirs.--_Montaigne._ + +Attainment is followed by neglect, and possession by disgust. The +malicious remark of the Greek epigrammatist on marriage may apply to +every other course of life,--that its two days of happiness are the +first and the last.--_Johnson._ + +~Posterity.~--Posterity preserves only what will pack into small compass. +Jewels are handed down from age to age, less portable valuables +disappear.--_Lord Stanley._ + +The drafts which true genius draws upon posterity, although they may not +always be honored so soon as they are due, are sure to be paid with +compound interest in the end.--_Colton._ + +~Poverty.~--Many good qualities are not sufficient to balance a single +want--the want of money.--_Zimmerman._ + +Few save the poor feel for the poor.--_L. E. Landon._ + +Thou shalt know by experience how salt the savor is of others' bread, +and how sad a path it is to climb and descend another's +stairs.--_Dante._ + +Riches endless is as poor as winter, to him that ever fears he shall be +poor.--_Shakespeare._ + +A poor man resembles a fiddler, whose music, though liked, is not much +praised, because he lives by it; while a gentleman performer, though the +most wretched scraper alive, throws the audience into +raptures.--_Goldsmith._ + +He is not poor that little hath, but he that much desires.--_Daniel._ + +The wicked man's tempter, the good man's perdition, the proud man's +curse, the melancholy man's halter.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Power.~--The weakest living creature, by concentrating his powers on a +single object, can accomplish something. The strongest, by dispensing +his over many, may fail to accomplish anything. The drop, by continually +falling, bores its passage through the hardest rock. The hasty torrent +rushes over it with hideous uproar, and leaves no trace +behind.--_Carlyle._ + +Oh for a forty parson power.--_Byron._ + +Power is so characteristically calm, that calmness in itself has the +aspect of power, and forbearance implies strength. The orator who is +known to have at his command all the weapons of invective is most +formidable when most courteous.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Praise.~--Expect not praise without envy until you are dead. Honors +bestowed on the illustrious dead have in them no admixture of envy; for +the living pity the dead; and pity and envy, like oil and vinegar, +assimilate not.--_Colton._ + +Praise is the best diet for us after all.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Desert being the essential condition of praise, there can be no reality +in the one without the other.--_Washington Allston._ + +Damn with faint praise.--_Pope._ + +Counsel is not so sacred a thing as praise, since the former is only +useful among men, but the latter is for the most part reserved for the +gods.--_Pythagoras._ + +Praise undeserved is satire in disguise.--_Broadhurst._ + +One good deed, dying tongueless, slaughters a thousand waiting upon +that. Our praises are our wages.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Prayer.~--The Lord's Prayer contains the sum total of religion and +morals.--_Wellington._ + +Nymph, in thy orisons be all my sins remembered.--_Shakespeare._ + +'Tis heaven alone that is given away; 'tis only God may be had for the +asking.--_Lowell._ + +Let our prayers, like the ancient sacrifices, ascend morning and +evening. Let our days begin and end with God.--_Channing._ + +The few that pray at all pray oft amiss.--_Cowper._ + +Such words as Heaven alone is fit to hear.--_Dryden._ + +What are men better than sheep or goats, that nourish a blind life +within the brain, if, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer both +for themselves and those who call them friends!--_Tennyson._ + +Prayer ardent opens heaven.--_Young._ + +Solicitude is the audience-chamber of God.--_Landor._ + +The best answer to all objections urged against prayer is the fact that +man cannot help praying; for we may be sure that that which is so +spontaneous and ineradicable in human nature has its fitting objects and +methods in the arrangements of a boundless Providence.--_Chapin._ + +He prayeth best who loveth best.--_Coleridge._ + +~Preaching.~--Preachers say, do as I say, not as I do. But if a physician +had the same disease upon him that I have, and he should bid me do one +thing and he do quite another, could I believe him?--~Selden.~ + +~Preface.~--Your opening promises some great design.--_Horace._ + +A preface, being the entrance of a book, should invite by its beauty. An +elegant porch announces the splendor of the interior.--_Disraeli._ + +A good preface is as essential to put the reader into good humor, as a +good prologue is to a play, or a fine symphony is to an opera, +containing something analogous to the work itself; so that we may feel +its want as a desire not elsewhere to be gratified. The Italians call +the preface--La salsa del libro--the sauce of the book; and, if +well-seasoned, it creates an appetite in the reader to devour the book +itself.--_Disraeli._ + +~Prejudice.~--He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of +that.--_J. Stuart Mill._ + +Prejudice, which sees what it pleases, cannot see what is +plain.--_Aubrey de Vere._ + +All looks yellow to the jaundiced eye.--_Pope._ + +Prejudice is the reason of fools.--_Voltaire._ + +Ignorance is less remote from the truth than prejudice.--_Diderot._ + +~Present, The.~--Since Time is not a person we can overtake when he is +gone, let us honor him with mirth and cheerfulness of heart while he is +passing.--_Goethe._ + +Man, living, feeling man, is the easy sport of the over-mastering +present.--_Schiller._ + +'Tis but a short journey across the isthmus of Now.--_Bovée._ + +The present hour is always wealthiest when it is poorer than the future +ones, as that is the pleasantest site which affords the pleasantest +prospect.--_Thoreau._ + +Let us enjoy the fugitive hour. Man has no harbor, time has no shore, it +rushes on and carries us with it.--_Lamartine._ + +~Presentiment.~--We walk in the midst of secrets--we are encompassed with +mysteries. We know not what takes place in the atmosphere that +surrounds us--we know not what relations it has with our minds. But one +thing is sure, that, under certain conditions, our soul, through the +exercise of mysterious functions, has a greater power than reason, and +that the power is given it to antedate the future,--ay, to see into the +future.--_Goethe._ + +We should not neglect a presentiment. Every man has within him a spark +of divine radiance which is often the torch which illumines the darkness +of our future.--_Madame de Girardin._ + +~Press.~--The press is not only free, it is powerful. That power is ours. +It is the proudest that man can enjoy. It was not granted by monarchs, +it was not gained for us by aristocracies; but it sprang from the +people, and, with an immortal instinct, it has always worked for the +people.--_B. Disraeli._ + +~Presumption.~--Presumption is our natural and original +disease.--_Montaigne._ + +Presumption never stops in its first attempt. If Cæsar comes once to +pass the Rubicon, he will be sure to march further on, even till he +enters the very bowels of Rome, and breaks open the Capitol itself. He +that wades so far as to wet and foul himself, cares not how much he +trashes further.--_South._ + +He that presumes steps into the throne of God.--_South._ + +~Pretence.~--As a general rule, people who flagrantly pretend to anything +are the reverse of that which they pretend to. A man who sets up for a +saint is sure to be a sinner, and a man who boasts that he is a sinner +is sure to have some feeble, maudlin, sniveling bit of saintship about +him which is enough to make him a humbug.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Pretension.~--Pretences go a great way with men that take fair words and +magisterial looks for current payment.--_L'Estrange._ + +~Pride.~--I have been more and more convinced, the more I think of it, +that in general, pride is at the bottom of all great mistakes. All the +other passions do occasional good; but whenever pride puts in _its_ +word, everything goes wrong; and what it might really be desirable to +do, quietly and innocently, it is mortally dangerous to do +proudly.--_Ruskin._ + +Pride's chickens have bonny feathers, but they are an expensive brood to +rear--they eat up everything, and are always lean when brought to +market.--_Alexander Smith._ + +When pride thaws look for floods.--_Bailey._ + +Pride, like laudanum and other poisonous medicines, is beneficial in +small, though injurious in large, quantities. No man who is not pleased +with himself, even in a personal sense, can please others.--_Frederick +Saunders._ + +Pride is seldom delicate; it will please itself with very mean +advantages.--_Johnson._ + +~Principles.~--Principle is a passion for truth.--_Hazlitt._ + +Principles, like troops of the line, are undisturbed, and stand +fast.--_Richter._ + +Whatever lies beyond the limits of experience, and claims another origin +than that of induction and deduction from established data, is +illegitimate.--_G. H. Lewes._ + +The value of a principle is the number of things it will explain; and +there is no good theory of disease which does not at once suggest a +cure.--_Emerson._ + +What is the essence and the life of character? Principle, integrity, +independence, or, as one of our great old writers has it, "that inbred +loyalty unto virtue which can serve her without a +livery."--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The change we personally experience from time to time we obstinately +deny to our principles.--_Zimmerman._ + +~Printing.~--Things printed can never be stopped; they are like babies +baptized, they have a soul from that moment, and go on forever.--_George +Meredith._ + +~Prison.~--Young Crime's finishing school.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +The worst prison is not of stone. It is of a throbbing heart, outraged +by an infamous life.--_Beecher._ + +~Procrastination.~--Indulge in procrastination, and in time you will come +to this, that because a thing ought to be done, therefore you can't do +it.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The man who procrastinates struggles with ruin.--_Hesiod._ + +There is, by God's grace, an immeasurable distance between late and too +late.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Prodigality.~--This is a vice too brave and costly to be kept and +maintained at any easy rate; it must have large pensions, and be fed +with both hands, though the man who feeds it starve for his pains.--_Dr. +South._ + +When I see a young profligate squandering his fortune in bagnios, or at +the gaming-table, I cannot help looking on him as hastening his own +death, and in a manner digging his own grave.--_Goldsmith._ + +The gains of prodigals are like fig-trees growing on a precipice: for +these, none are better but kites and crows; for those, only harlots and +flatterers.--_Socrates._ + +~Progress.~--All that is human must retrograde if it do not +advance.--_Gibbon._ + +What matters it? say some, a little more knowledge for man, a little +more liberty, a little more general development. Life is so short! He is +a being so limited! But it is precisely because his days are few, and he +cannot attain to all, that a little more culture is of importance to +him. The ignorance in which God leaves man is divine; the ignorance in +which man leaves himself is a crime and a shame.--_X. Doudan._ + +Revolutions never go backwards.--_Emerson._ + +What pains and tears the slightest steps of man's progress have cost! +Every hair-breadth forward has been in the agony of some soul, and +humanity has reached blessing after blessing of all its vast achievement +of good with bleeding feet.--_Bartol._ + +Progress is lame.--_St. Bueve._ + +We know what a masquerade all development is, and what effective shapes +may be disguised in helpless embryos. In fact, the world is full of +hopeful analogies and handsome dubious eggs called +possibilities.--_George Eliot._ + +The pathway of progress will still, as of old, bear the traces of +martyrdom, but the advance is inevitable.--_G. H. Lewes._ + +Nations are educated through suffering, mankind is purified through +sorrow. The power of creating obstacles to progress is human and +partial. Omnipotence is with the ages.--_Mazzini._ + +Every age has its problem, by solving which, humanity is helped +forward.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Men of great genius and large heart sow the seeds of a new degree of +progress in the world, but they bear fruit only after many +years.--_Mazzini._ + +It is curious to note the old sea-margins of human thought. Each +subsiding century reveals some new mystery; we build where monsters used +to hide themselves.--_Longfellow._ + +The activity of to-day and the assurance of to-morrow.--_Emerson._ + +The moral law of the universe is progress. Every generation that passes +idly over the earth without adding to that progress by one degree +remains uninscribed upon the register of humanity, and the succeeding +generation tramples its ashes as dust.--_Mazzini._ + +A fresh mind keeps the body fresh. Take in the ideas of the day, drain +off those of yesterday. As to the morrow, time enough to consider it +when it becomes to-day.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Promise.~--Promises hold men faster than benefits: hope is a cable and +gratitude a thread.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +~Proof.~--In the eyes of a wise judge proofs by reasoning are of more +value than witnesses.--_Cicero._ + +Give me the ocular proof; make me see't; or at the least, so prove it, +that the probation bear no hinge, no loop, to hang a doubt +upon.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Prosperity.~--Prosperity makes some friends and many +enemies.--_Vauvenargues._ + +That fortitude which has encountered no dangers, that prudence which has +surmounted no difficulties, that integrity which has been attacked by no +temptation, can at best be considered but as gold not yet brought to the +test, of which therefore the true value cannot be assigned.--_Johnson._ + +Alas for the fate of men! Even in the midst of the highest prosperity a +shadow may overturn them; but if they be in adverse fortune a moistened +sponge can blot out the picture.--_Æschylus._ + +Prosperity lets go the bridle.--_George Herbert._ + +~Proverbs.~--Proverbs are somewhat analogous to those medical formulas +which, being in frequent use, are kept ready made up in the chemists' +shops, and which often save the framing of a distinct +prescription.--_Bishop Whately._ + +The study of proverbs may be more instructive and comprehensive than the +most elaborate scheme of philosophy.--_Motherwell._ + +The proverbial wisdom of the populace in the street, on the roads, and +in the markets, instructs the ear of him who studies man more fully than +a thousand rules ostentatiously displayed.--_Lavater._ + +~Prudence.~--There is no amount of praise which is not heaped on prudence; +yet there is not the most insignificant event of which it can make us +sure.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +Too many, through want of prudence, are golden apprentices, silver +journeymen, and copper masters.--_Whitfield._ + +Men of sense often learn from their enemies. Prudence is the best +safeguard. This principle cannot be learned from a friend, but an enemy +extorts it immediately. It is from their foes, not their friends, that +cities learn the lesson of building high walls and ships of war. And +this lesson saves their children, their homes, and their +properties.--_Aristophanes._ + +~Punctuality.~--The most indispensable qualification of a cook is +punctuality. The same must be said of guests.--_Brillat Savarin._ + +Punctuality is the stern virtue of men of business, and the graceful +courtesy of princes.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Punishment.~--One man meets an infamous punishment for that crime which +confers a diadem upon another.--_Juvenal._ + +It is as expedient that a wicked man be punished as that a sick man be +cured by a physician; for all chastisement is a kind of +medicine.--_Plato._ + +Punishment is lame, but it comes.--_George Herbert._ + +If punishment makes not the will supple it hardens the +offender.--_Locke._ + +Don't let us rejoice in punishment, even when the hand of God alone +inflicts it. The best of us are but poor wretches just saved from +shipwreck: can we feel anything but awe and pity when we see a +fellow-passenger swallowed by the waves?--_George Eliot._ + +The work of eradicating crimes is not by making punishment familiar, but +formidable.--_Goldsmith._ + +The public have more interest in the punishment of an injury than he who +receives it.--_Cato._ + +The best of us being unfit to die, what an inexpressible absurdity to +put the worst to death!--_Hawthorne._ + +~Puns.~--I have very little to say about puns; they are in very bad +repute, and so they _ought_ to be. The wit of language is so miserably +inferior to the wit of ideas, that it is very deservedly driven out of +good company. Sometimes, indeed, a pun makes its appearance which seems +for a moment to redeem its species; but we must not be deceived by them: +it is a radically bad race of wit.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Conceits arising from the use of words that agree in sound but differ in +sense.--_Addison._ + +~Purposes.~--Man proposes, but God disposes.--_Thomas à Kempis._ + +A man's heart deviseth his way; but the Lord directeth his +steps.--_Bible._ + +It is better by a noble boldness to run the risk of being subject to +half of the evils which we anticipate, than to remain in cowardly +listlessness for fear of what may happen.--_Herodotus._ + +Purposes, like eggs, unless they be hatched into action, will run into +decay.--_Smiles._ + +~Pursuit.~--The rapture of pursuing is the prize the vanquished +gain.--_Longfellow._ + +The fruit that can fall without shaking, indeed is too mellow for +me.--_Lady Montagu._ + + +Q. + +~Quacks.~--Pettifoggers in law and empirics in medicine have held from +time immemorial the fee simple of a vast estate, subject to no +alienation, diminution, revolution, nor tax--the folly and ignorance of +mankind.--_Colton._ + +Nothing more strikingly betrays the credulity of mankind than medicine. +Quackery is a thing universal, and universally successful. In this case +it becomes literally true that no imposition is too great for the +credulity of men.--_Thoreau._ + +~Qualities.~--Wood burns because it has the proper stuff in it; and a man +becomes famous because he has the proper stuff in him.--_Goethe._ + +~Quarrels.~--Coarse kindness is, at least, better than coarse anger; and +in all private quarrels the duller nature is triumphant by reason of its +dullness.--_George Eliot._ + +The quarrels of lovers are like summer storms. Everything is more +beautiful when they have passed.--_Mme. Necker._ + +~Questions.~--There are innumerable questions to which the inquisitive +mind can, in this state, receive no answer: Why do you and I exist? Why +was this world created? And, since it was to be created, why was it not +created sooner?--_Johnson._ + +~Quotation.~--In quoting of books, quote such authors as are usually read; +others you may read for your own satisfaction, but not name +them.--_Selden._ + +If these little sparks of holy fire which I have thus heaped up together +do not give life to your prepared and already enkindled spirit, yet they +will sometimes help to entertain a thought, to actuate a passion, to +employ and hallow a fancy.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +If the grain were separated from the chaff which fills the works of our +National Poets, what is truly valuable would be to what is useless in +the proportion of a mole-hill to a mountain.--_Burke._ + +It is the beauty and independent worth of the citations, far more than +their appropriateness, which have made Johnson's Dictionary popular even +as a reading-book.--_Coleridge._ + +Ruin half an author's graces by plucking bon-mots from their +places.--_Hannah More._ + +I take memorandums of the schools.--_Swift._ + +The obscurest sayings of the truly great are often those which contain +the germ of the profoundest and most useful truths.--_Mazzini._ + +To select well among old things is almost equal to inventing new +ones.--_Trublet._ + +Why are not more gems from our great authors scattered over the country? +Great books are not in everybody's reach; and though it is better to +know them thoroughly than to know them only here and there, yet it is a +good work to give a little to those who have neither time nor means to +get more. Let every bookworm, when in any fragrant, scarce old tome he +discovers a sentence, a story, an illustration, that does his heart +good, hasten to give it.--_Coleridge._ + +A couplet of verse, a period of prose, may cling to the rock of ages as +a shell that survives a deluge.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Selected thoughts depend for their flavor upon the terseness of their +expression, for thoughts are grains of sugar, or salt, that must be +melted in a drop of water.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +As people read nothing in these days that is more than forty-eight hours +old, I am daily admonished that allusions, the most obvious, to anything +in the rear of our own times need explanation.--_De Quincey._ + + +R. + +~Rain.~--Clouds dissolved the thirsty ground supply.--_Roscommon._ + +The kind refresher of the summer heats.--_Thomson._ + +Vexed sailors curse the rain for which poor shepherds prayed in +vain.--_Waller._ + +The spongy clouds are filled with gathering rain.--_Dryden._ + +~Rainbow.~--That smiling daughter of the storm.--_Colton._ + +Born of the shower, and colored by the sun.--_J. C. Prince._ + +God's glowing covenant.--_Hosea Ballou._ + +~Rank.~--If it were ever allowable to forget what is due to superiority of +rank, it would be when the privileged themselves remember it.--_Madame +Swetchine._ + +I weigh the man, not his title; 'tis not the king's stamp can make the +metal better.--_Wycherley._ + +Of the king's creation you may be; but he who makes a count ne'er made a +man.--_Southerne._ + +~Rashness.~--Rashness and haste make all things insecure.--_Denham._ + +We may outrun by violent swiftness that which we run at, and lose by +overrunning.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Reading.~--Read, and refine your appetite; learn to live upon +instruction; feast your mind and mortify your flesh; read, and take your +nourishment in at your eyes, shut up your mouth, and chew the cud of +understanding.--_Congreve._ + +Deep versed in books, but shallow in himself.--_Milton._ + +The love of reading enables a man to exchange the wearisome hours of +life, which come to every one, for hours of delight.--_Montesquieu._ + +There was, it is said, a criminal in Italy, who was suffered to make his +choice between Guicciardini and the galleys. He chose the history. But +the war of Pisa was too much for him. He changed his mind, and went to +the oars.--_Macaulay._ + +Exceedingly well read and profited in strange +concealments.--_Shakespeare._ + +The reader, who would follow a close reasoner to the summit of the +absolute principle of any one important subject, has chosen a +chamois-hunter for his guide. He cannot carry us on his shoulders; we +must strain our sinews, as he has strained his; and make firm footing on +the smooth rock for ourselves, by the blood of toil from our own +feet.--_Coleridge._ + +~Reason.~--Reason lies between the spur and the bridle.--_George Herbert._ + +Many are destined to reason wrongly; others not to reason at all; and +others to persecute those who do reason.--_Voltaire._ + +If reasons were as plenty as blackberries I would give no man a reason +upon compulsion.--_Shakespeare._ + +We can only reason from what is; we can reason on actualities, but not +on possibilities.--_Bolingbroke._ + +I do not call reason that brutal reason which crushes with its weight +what is holy and sacred; that malignant reason which delights in the +errors it succeeds in discovering; that unfeeling and scornful reason +which insults credulity.--_Joubert._ + +I have no other but a woman's reason: I think him so, because I think +him so.--_Shakespeare._ + +Reason 's progressive; instinct is complete: swift instinct leaps; slow +reason feebly climbs.--_Young._ + +Faith evermore looks upward and descries objects remote; but reason can +discover things only near,--sees nothing that's above her.--_Quarles._ + +How can finite grasp infinity?--_Dryden._ + +Let us not dream that reason can ever be popular. Passions, emotions, +may be made popular, but reason remains ever the property of the +few.--_Goethe._ + +Reason is, so to speak, the police of the kingdom of art, seeking only +to preserve order. In life itself a cold arithmetician who adds up our +follies. Sometimes, alas! only the accountant in bankruptcy of a broken +heart.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Sure He that made us with such large discourse, looking before and +after, gave us not that capability and godlike reason to rust in us +unused.--_Shakespeare._ + +Reason may cure illusions but not suffering.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +~Reciprocity.~--There is one word which may serve as a rule of practice +for all one's life, that word is _reciprocity_. What you do not wish +done to yourself, do not do to others.--_Confucius._ + +~Reconciliation.~--It is much safer to reconcile an enemy than to conquer +him; victory may deprive him of his poison, but reconciliation of his +will.--_Owen Feltham._ + +~Rectitude.~--The great high-road of human welfare lies along the highway +of steadfast well-doing, and they who are the most persistent, and work +in the truest spirit, will invariably be the most successful.--_Samuel +Smiles._ + +If you would convince a man that he does wrong, do right. But do not +care to convince him. Men will believe what they see. Let them +see.--_Thoreau._ + +No man can do right unless he is good, wise, and strong. What wonder we +fail?--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Refinement.~--Refinement that carries us away from our fellow-men is not +God's refinement.--_Beecher._ + +Refinement is the lifting of one's self upwards from the merely sensual, +the effort of the soul to etherealize the common wants and uses of +life.--_Beecher._ + +~Reflection.~--We are told, "Let not the sun go down on your wrath." This, +of course, is best; but, as it generally does, I would add, never act or +write till it has done so. This rule has saved me from many an act of +folly. It is wonderful what a different view we take of the same event +four-and-twenty hours after it has happened.--_Sydney Smith._ + +~Reform.~--We are reformers in spring and summer; in autumn and winter we +stand by the old--reformers in the morning, conservatives at night. +Reform is affirmative, conservatism is negative; conservatism goes for +comfort, reform for truth.--_Emerson._ + +Long is the way and hard, that out of hell leads up to light.--_Milton._ + +Conscious remorse and anguish must be felt, to curb desire, to break the +stubborn will, and work a second nature in the soul.--_Rowe._ + +They say best men are moulded out of faults, and, for the most, become +much more the better for being a little bad!--_Shakespeare._ + +~Regret.~--Why is it that a blessing only when it is lost cuts as deep +into the heart as a sharp diamond? Why must we first weep before we can +love so deeply that our hearts ache?--_Richter._ + +~Religion.~--Natural religion supplies still all the facts which are +disguised under the dogma of popular creeds. The progress of religion is +steadily to its identity with morals.--_Emerson._ + +I endeavor in vain to give my parishioners more cheerful ideas of +religion; to teach them that God is not a jealous, childish, merciless +tyrant; that He is best served by a regular tenor of good actions, not +by bad singing, ill-composed prayers, and eternal apprehensions. But the +luxury of false religion is to be unhappy!--_Sydney Smith._ + +Nowhere would there be consolation if religion were not.--_Jacobi._ + +Monopolies are just as injurious to religion as to trade. With +competition religions preserve their strength, but they will never again +flourish in their original glory until religious freedom, or, in other +words, free trade among the gods, is introduced.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +A religion giving dark views of God, and infusing superstitious fear of +innocent enjoyment, instead of aiding sober habits, will, by making men +abject and sad, impair their moral force, and prepare them for +intemperance as a refuge from depression or despair.--_Channing._ + +Religion is the hospital of the souls that the world has wounded.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +Ah! what a divine religion might be found out if charity were really +made the principle of it instead of faith.--_Shelley._ + +The ship retains her anchorage yet drifts with a certain range, subject +to wind and tide. So we have for an anchorage the cardinal truths of the +gospel.--_Gladstone._ + +The best religion is the most tolerant.--_Emile de Girardin._ + +~Remembrance.~--The greatest comfort of my old age, and that which gives +me the highest satisfaction, is the pleasing remembrance of the many +benefits and friendly offices I have done to others.--_Cato._ + +Pleasure is the flower that fades; remembrance is the lasting +perfume.--_Boufflers._ + +~Remorse.~--Remorse is the punishment of crime; repentance its expiation. +The former appertains to a tormented conscience; the latter to a soul +changed for the better.--_Joubert._ + +Remorse sleeps in the atmosphere of prosperity.--_Rousseau._ + +Unnatural deeds do breed unnatural troubles. Infected minds to their +deaf pillows will discharge their secrets.--_Shakespeare._ + +Truth severe, by fairy fiction drest.--_Gray._ + +~Repartee.~--The impromptu reply is precisely the touchstone of the man of +wit.--_Molière._ + +~Repentance.~---Repentance clothes in grass and flowers the grave in which +the past is laid.--_Sterling._ + +He repents on thorns that sleeps in beds of roses.--_Quarles._ + +Beholding heaven, and feeling hell.--_Moore._ + +Is it not in accordance with divine order that every mortal is thrown +into that situation where his hidden evils can be brought forth to his +own view, that he may know them, acknowledge them, struggle against +them, and put them away?--_Anna Cora Ritchie._ + +Repentance is second innocence.--_De Bonald._ + +~Repose.~--Repose is agreeable to the human mind; and decision is repose. +A man has made up his opinions; he does not choose to be disturbed; and +he is much more thankful to the man who confirms him in his errors, and +leaves him alone, than he is to the man who refutes him, or who +instructs him at the expense of his tranquillity.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Rest is the sweet sauce of labor.--_Plutarch._ + +~Reproach.~--Few love to hear the sins they love to act.--_Shakespeare._ + +The silent upbraiding of the eye is the very poetry of reproach; it +speaks at once to the imagination.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +~Republic.~--Though I admire republican principles in theory, yet I am +afraid the practice may be too perfect for human nature. We tried a +republic last century and it failed. Let our enemies try next. I hate +political experiments.--_Walpole._ + +The same fact that Boccaccio offers in support of religion, might be +adduced in behalf of a republic: "It exists in spite of its +ministers."--_Heinrich Heine._ + +At twenty, every one is republican.--_Lamartine._ + +~Reputation.~--Reputation is one of the prizes for which men contend: it +is, as Mr. Burke calls it, "the cheap defence and ornament of nations, +and the nurse of manly exertions;" it produces more labor and more +talent then twice the wealth of a country could ever rear up. It is the +coin of genius; and it is the imperious duty of every man to bestow it +with the most scrupulous justice and the wisest economy.--_Sydney +Smith._ + +An eminent reputation is as dangerous as a bad one.--_Tacitus._ + +Reputation is but the synonym of popularity; dependent on suffrage, to +be increased or diminished at the will of the voters.--_Washington +Allston._ + +My name and memory I leave to men's charitable speeches, to foreign +nations, and to the next age.--_Bacon._ + +The blaze of reputation cannot be blown out, but it often dies in the +socket.--_Johnson._ + +One may be better than his reputation or his conduct, but never better +than his principles.--_Laténa._ + +~Request.~--No music is so charming to my ear as the requests of my +friends, and the supplications of those in want of my +assistance.--_Cæsar._ + +He who goes round about in his requests wants commonly more than he +chooses to appear to want.--_Lavater._ + +~Resignation.~--O Lord, I do most cheerfully commit all unto +Thee.--_Fénelon._ + +Let God do with me what He will, anything He will; and, whatever it be, +it will be either heaven itself, or some beginning of it.--_Mountford._ + +A man that fortune's buffets and rewards has ta'en with equal +thanks.--_Shakespeare._ + +Trust in God, as Moses did, let the way be ever so dark; and it shall +come to pass that your life at last shall surpass even your longing. +Not, it may be, in the line of that longing, that shall be as it +pleaseth God; but the glory is as sure as the grace, and the most +ancient heavens are not more sure than that.--_Robert Collyer._ + +Vulgar minds refuse to crouch beneath their load; the brave bear theirs +without repining.--_Thomson._ + +"My will, not thine, be done," turned Paradise into a desert. "Thy will, +not mine, be done," turned the desert into a paradise, and made +Gethsemane the gate of heaven.--_Pressense._ + +Resignation is the courage of Christian sorrow.--_Dr. Vinet._ + +~Responsibility.~--Responsibility educates.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +~Restlessness.~--The mind is found most acute and most uneasy in the +morning. Uneasiness is, indeed, a species of sagacity--a passive +sagacity. Fools are never uneasy.--_Goethe._ + +Always driven towards new shores, or carried hence without hope of +return, shall we never, on the ocean of age cast anchor for even a +day?--_Lamartine._ + +~Retribution.~--Nemesis is lame, but she is of colossal stature, like the +gods; and sometimes, while her sword is not yet unsheathed, she +stretches out her huge left arm and grasps her victim. The mighty hand +is invisible, but the victim totters under the dire clutch.--_George +Eliot._ + +"One soweth and another reapeth" is a verity that applies to evil as +well as good.--_George Eliot._ + +~Revenge.~--Revenge at first, though sweet, bitter ere long back on itself +recoils.--_Milton._ + +Revenge is a debt, in the paying of which the greatest knave is honest +and sincere, and, so far as he is able, punctual.--_Colton._ + +There are some professed Christians who would gladly burn their enemies, +but yet who forgive them merely because it is heaping coals of fire on +their heads.--_F. A. Durivage._ + +~Revery.~--In that sweet mood when pleasant thoughts bring sad thoughts to +the mind.--_Wordsworth._ + +~Revolution.~--The working of revolutions, therefore, misleads me no more; +it is as necessary to our race as its waves to the stream, that it may +not be a stagnant marsh. Ever renewed in its forms, the genius of +humanity blossoms.--_Herder._ + +Great revolutions are the work rather of principles than of bayonets, +and are achieved first in the moral, and afterwards in the material +sphere.--_Mazzini._ + +All experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, +while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the +forms to which they are accustomed.--_Jefferson._ + +Nothing has ever remained of any revolution hut what was ripe in the +conscience of the masses.--_Ledru Rollin._ + +Revolution is the larva of civilization.--_Victor Hugo._ + +We deplore the outrages which accompany revolutions. But the more +violent the outrages, the more assured we feel that a revolution was +necessary! The violence of these outrages will always lie proportioned +to the ferocity and ignorance of the people: and the ferocity and +ignorance of the people will be proportioned to the oppression and +degradation under which they have been accustomed to live.--_Macaulay._ + +Let them call it mischief; when it's past and prospered, 't will be +virtue.--_Ben Jonson._ + +~Rhetoric.~--In composition, it is the art of putting ideas together in +graceful and accurate prose; in speaking, it is the art of delivering +ideas with propriety, elegance, and force; or, in other words, it is the +science of oratory.--_Locke._ + +Rhetoric without logic is like a tree with leaves and blossoms, but no +root; yet more are taken with rhetoric than logic, because they are +caught with a free expression, when they understand not +reason.--_Selden._ + +The florid, elevated, and figurative way is for the passions; for love +and hatred, fear and anger, are begotten in the soul by showing their +objects out of their true proportion, either greater than the life, or +less; but instruction is to be given by showing them what they naturally +are. A man is to cheated into passion, but reasoned into +truth.--_Dryden._ + +All the art of rhetoric, besides order and clearness, are for nothing +else but to insinuate wrong ideas, move the passions, and thereby +mislead the judgment.--_Locke._ + +Rhetoric is very good, or stark naught; there's no medium in +rhetoric.--_Selden._ + +~Riches.~--The shortest road to riches lies through contempt of +riches.--_Seneca._ + +One cause, which is not always observed, of the insufficiency of riches, +is that they very seldom make their owner rich.--_Johnson._ + +Of all the riches that we hug, of all the pleasures we enjoy, we can +carry no more out of this world than out of a dream.--_Bonnell._ + +If the search for riches were sure to be successful, though I should +become a groom with a whip in my hand to get them, I will do so. As the +search may not be successful, I will follow after that which I +love.--_Confucius._ + +I have a rich neighbor that is always so busy that he has no leisure to +laugh; the whole business of his life is to get money, more money, that +he may still get more. He is still drudging, saying what Solomon says, +"The diligent hand maketh rich." And it is true, indeed; but he +considers not that it is not in the power of riches to make a man happy; +for it was wisely said by a man of great observation that "there be as +many miseries beyond riches as on this side of them."--_Izaak Walton._ + +Riches, though they may reward virtues, yet they cannot cause them; he +is much more noble who deserves a benefit, than he who bestows +one.--_Owen Feltham._ + +In these times gain is not only a matter of greed, but of +ambition.--_Joubert._ + +~Ridicule.~--Some men are, in regard to ridicule, like tin-roofed +buildings in regard to hail: all that hits them bounds rattling off, not +a stone goes through.--_Beecher._ + +~Rogues.~--Rogues are always found out in some way. Whoever is a wolf will +act as a wolf; that is the most certain of all things.--_La Fontaine._ + +Many a man would have turned rogue if he knew how.--_Hazlitt._ + +~Ruin.~--To be ruined your own way is some comfort. When so many people +would ruin us, it is a triumph over the villany of the world to be +ruined after one's own pattern.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + + +S. + +~Sacrifice.~--You cannot win without sacrifice.--_Charles Buxton._ + +What you most repent of is a lasting sacrifice made under an impulse of +good-nature. The good-nature goes, the sacrifice sticks.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +~Sadness.~--Take my word for it, the saddest thing under the sky is a soul +incapable of sadness.--_Countess de Gasparin._ + +Our sadness is not sad, but our cheap joys.--_Thoreau._ + +~Salary.~--Other rules vary; this is the only one you will find without +exception: That in this world the salary or reward is always in the +inverse ratio of the duties performed.--_Sydney Smith._ + +~Sarcasm.~--A true sarcasm is like a sword-stick--it appears, at first +sight, to be much more innocent than it really is, till, all of a +sudden, there leaps something out of it--sharp and deadly and +incisive--which makes you tremble and recoil.--_Sydney Smith._ + +~Satire.~--To lash the vices of a guilty age.--_Churchill._ + +Thou shining supplement of public laws!--_Young._ + +By satire kept in awe, shrink from ridicule, though not from +law.--_Byron._ + +When dunces are satiric I take it for a panegyric.--_Swift._ + +~Scandal.~--Believe that story false that ought not to be +true.--_Sheridan._ + +Scandal has something so piquant, it is a sort of cayenne to the +mind.--_Byron._ + +~School.~--More is learned in a public than in a private school from +emulation: there is the collision of mind with mind, or the radiation of +many minds pointing to one centre--_Johnson._ + +Let the soldier be abroad if he will; he can do nothing in this age. +There is another personage abroad,--a person less imposing,--in the eyes +of some, perhaps, insignificant. The schoolmaster is abroad; and I trust +to him, armed with his primer, against the soldier in full military +array.--_Brougham._ + +The whining school-boy, with his satchel, and shining morning face, +creeping like a snail, unwillingly to school.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Science.~--They may say what they like; everything is organized matter. +The tree is the first link of the chain, man is the last. Men are young, +the earth is old. Vegetable and animal chemistry are still in their +infancy. Electricity, galvanism,--what discoveries in a few +years!--_Napoleon._ + +Human science is uncertain guess.--_Prior._ + +Twin-sister of natural and revealed religion, and of heavenly birth, +science will never belie her celestial origin, nor cease to sympathize +with all that emanates from the same pure home. Human ignorance and +prejudice may for a time seem to have divorced what God has joined +together; but human ignorance and prejudice shall at length pass away, +and then science and religion shall be seen blending their parti-colored +rays into one beautiful bow of light, linking heaven to earth and earth +to heaven.--_Prof. Hitchcock._ + +Science is a first rate piece of furniture for a man's upper chamber, if +he has common sense on the ground-floor. But if a man hasn't got plenty +of good common sense, the more science he has the worse for his +patient.--_Holmes._ + +~Scriptures.~--The majesty of Scripture strikes me with admiration, as the +purity of the Gospel has its influence on my heart. Peruse the works of +our philosophers; with all their pomp of diction, how mean, how +contemptible, are they, compared with the Scriptures! Is it possible +that a book at once so simple and sublime should be merely the work of +man? The Jewish authors were incapable of the diction, and strangers to +the morality contained in the Gospel, the marks of whose truths are so +striking and inimitable that the inventor would be a more astonishing +character than the hero.--_Rousseau._ + +~Secrecy.~--Thou hast betrayed thy secret as a bird betrays her nest, by +striving to conceal it.--_Longfellow._ + +Never confide your secrets to paper: it is like throwing a stone in the +air, and if you know who throws the stone, you do not know where it may +fall.--_Calderon._ + +People addicted to secrecy are so without knowing why; they are not so +for cause, but for secrecy's sake.--_Hazlitt._ + +~Sect.~--The effective strength of sects is not to be ascertained merely +by counting heads.--_Macaulay._ + +All sects are different, because they come from men; morality is +everywhere the same, because it comes from God.--_Voltaire._ + +Fierce sectarianism breeds fierce latitudinarianism.--_De Quincey._ + +~Self-Abnegation.~--'Tis much the doctrine of the times that men should +not please themselves, but deny themselves everything they take delight +in; not look upon beauty, wear no good clothes, eat no good meat, etc., +which seems the greatest accusation that can be upon the Maker of all +good things. If they are not to be used why did God make +them?--_Selden._ + +Self-abnegation, that rare virtue that good men preach and good women +practice.--_Holmes._ + +~Self-Examination.~--We neither know nor judge ourselves,--others may +judge, but cannot know us,--God alone judges, and knows too.--_Wilkie +Collins._ + +It belongs to every large nature, when it is not under the immediate +power of some strong unquestioning emotion, to suspect itself, and doubt +the truth of its own impressions, conscious of possibilities beyond its +own horizon.--_George Eliot._ + +There are two persons in the world we never see as they are,--one's self +and one's other self.--_Arsène Houssaye._ + +~Selfishness.~--Our infinite obligations to God do not fill our hearts +half as much as a petty uneasiness of our own; nor his infinite +perfections as much as our smallest wants.--_Hannah More._ + +It is astonishing how well men wear when they think of no one but +themselves.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Our selfishness is so robust and many-clutching that, well encouraged, +it easily devours all sustenance away from our poor little +scruples.--_George Eliot._ + +There is an ill-breeding to which, whatever our rank and nature, we are +almost equally sensitive,--the ill-breeding that comes from want of +consideration for others.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Self-Love.~--That household god, a man's own self.--_Flavel._ + +The greatest of all flatterers is self-love.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +Self-love exaggerates both our faults and our virtues.--_Goethe._ + +Whatever discoveries we may have made in the regions of self-love, there +still remain many unknown lands.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +Selfishness, if but reasonably tempered with wisdom, is not such an evil +trait.--_Ruffini._ + +A prudent consideration for Number One.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Oh, the incomparable contrivance of Nature who has ordered all things in +so even a method that wherever she has been less bountiful in her gifts, +there she makes it up with a larger dose of self-love, which supplies +the former deficits and makes all even.--_Erasmus._ + +The most inhibited sin in the canon.--_Shakespeare._ + +Ofttimes nothing profits more than self-esteem, grounded on just and +right.--_Milton._ + +Whose thoughts are centered on thyself alone.--_Dryden._ + +~Self-reliance.~--The spirit of self-help is the root of all genuine +growth in the individual; and, exhibited in the lives of many, it +constitutes the true source of national vigor and strength. Help from +without is often enfeebling in its effects, but help from within +invariably invigorates. Whatever is done _for_ men or classes, to a +certain extent takes away the stimulus and necessity of doing for +themselves; and where men are subjected to over-guidance and +over-government, the inevitable tendency is to render them comparatively +helpless.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Doubt whom you will, but never yourself.--_Bovée._ + +A person under the firm persuasion that he can command resources +virtually has them.--_Livy._ + +The supreme fall of falls is this, the first doubt of one's +self.--_Countess de Gasparin._ + +It's right to trust in God; but if you don't stand to your halliards, +your craft'll miss stays, and your faith'll be blown out of the +bolt-ropes in the turn of a marlinspike.--_George MacDonald._ + +The best lightning-rod for your protection is your own +spine.--_Emerson._ + +~Sensibility.~--The wild-flower wreath of feeling, the sunbeam of the +heart.--_Halleck._ + +Sensibility is the power of woman.--_Lavater._ + +Feeling loves a subdued light.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Sensitiveness.~--Solomon's Proverbs, I think, have omitted to say, that +as a sore palate findeth grit, so an uneasy consciousness heareth +innuendoes.--_George Eliot._ + +That chastity of honor which felt a stain like a wound.--_Burke._ + +~Sentiment.~--Cure the drunkard, heal the insane, mollify the homicide, +civilize the Pawnee, but what lessons can be devised for the debaucher +of sentiment?--_Emerson._ + +~Separation.~--Indifferent souls never part. Impassioned souls part, and +return to one another, because they can do no better.--_Madame +Swetchine._ + +~Shakespeare.~--There is only one writer in whom I find something that +reminds me of the directness of style which is found in the Bible. It is +Shakespeare.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Far from fearing, as an inferior artist would have done, the +juxtaposition of the familiar and the divine, the wildest and most +fantastic comedy with the loftiest and gravest tragedy, Shakespeare not +only made such apparently discordant elements mutually heighten and +complete the general effect which he contemplated, but in so doing +teaches us that, in human life, the sublime and ridiculous are always +side by side, and that the source of laughter is placed close by the +fountain of tears.--_T. B. Shaw._ + +Shakespeare is a great psychologist, and whatever can be known of the +heart of man may be found in his plays.--_Goethe._ + +In Shakespeare one sentence begets the next naturally; the meaning is +all inwoven. He goes on kindling like a meteor through the dark +atmosphere.--_Coleridge._ + +No man is too busy to read Shakespeare.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Shakespeare's personages live and move as if they had just come from the +hand of God, with a life that, though manifold, is one, and, though +complex, is harmonious.--_Mazzini._ + +Sweetest Shakespeare, fancy's child.--_Milton._ + +And rival all but Shakespeare's name below.--_Campbell._ + +Shakespeare is one of the best means of culture the world possesses. +Whoever is at home in his pages is at home everywhere.--_H. N. Hudson._ + +His imperial muse tosses the creation like a bauble from hand to hand to +embody any capricious thought that is uppermost in her mind. The +remotest spaces of nature are visited, and the farthest sundered things +are brought together by a subtle spiritual connection.--_Emerson._ + +I think most readers of Shakespeare sometimes find themselves thrown +into exalted mental conditions like those produced by music.--_O. W. +Holmes._ + +Whatever other learning he wanted he was master of two books unknown to +many profound readers, though books which the last conflagration can +alone destroy. I mean the book of Nature and of Man.--_Young._ + +If ever Shakespeare rants, it is not when his imagination is hurrying +him along, but when he is hurrying his imagination along.--_Macaulay._ + +It was said of Euripides, that every verse was a precept; and it may be +said of Shakespeare, that from his works may be collected a system of +civil and economical prudence.--_Johnson._ + +The genius of Shakespeare was an innate university.--_Keats._ + +Shame.--Nature's hasty conscience.--_Maria Edgeworth._ + +Mortifications are often more painful than real +calamities.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Ship.~--A prison with the chance of being drowned.--_Johnson._ + +Cradle of the rude imperious surge.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Silence.~--The main reason why silence is so efficacious an element of +repute is, first, because of that magnification which proverbially +belongs to the unknown; and, secondly, because silence provokes no man's +envy, and wounds no man's self-love.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Give thy thoughts no tongue.--_Shakespeare._ + +True gladness doth not always speak; joy bred and born but in the tongue +is weak.--_Ben Jonson._ + +I hear other men's imperfections, and conceal my own.--_Zeno._ + +Silence in times of suffering is the best.--_Dryden._ + +Silence! coeval with eternity.--_Pope._ + +Silence is the sanctuary of prudence.--_Balthasar Gracian._ + +The unspoken word never does harm.--_Kossuth._ + +Silence is the understanding of fools and one of the virtues of the +wise.--_Bonnard._ + +Speech is often barren; but silence also does not necessarily brood over +a full nest. Your still fowl, blinking at you without remark, may all +the while be sitting on one addled nest-egg; and when it takes to +cackling, will have nothing to announce but that addled +delusion.--_George Eliot._ + +Silence gives consent.--_Goldsmith._ + +Silence is the safest response for all the contradiction that arises +from impertinence, vulgarity, or envy.--_Zimmerman._ + +~Simplicity.~--Simplicity is doubtless a fine thing, but it often appeals +only to the simple. Art is the only passion of true artists. +Palestrina's music resembles the music of Rossini, as the song of the +sparrow is like the cavatina of the nightingale. Choose.--_Madame de +Girardin._ + +Simplicity is Nature's first step, and the last of Art.--_P. J. Bailey._ + +The world could not exist if it were not simple. This ground has been +tilled a thousand years, yet its powers remain ever the same; a little +rain, a little sun, and each spring it grows green again.--_Goethe._ + +The fairest lives, in my opinion, are those which regularly accommodate +themselves to the common and human model, without miracle, without +extravagance.--_Montaigne._ + +There is a majesty in simplicity which is far above the quaintness of +wit.--_Pope._ + +~Sin.~--Original sin is in us like the beard: we are shaved to-day, and +look clean, and have a smooth chin; to-morrow our beard has grown again, +nor does it cease growing while we remain on earth. In like manner +original sin cannot be extirpated from us; it springs up in us as long +as we exist; Nevertheless, we are bound to resist it to our utmost +strength, and to cut it down unceasingly.--_Luther._ + +Sin, in fancy, mothers many an ugly fact.--_Theodore Parker._ + +There is no immunity from the consequences of sin; punishment is swift +and sure to one and all.--_Hosea Ballou._ + +Every man has his devilish minutes.--_Lavater._ + +Death from sin no power can separate.--_Milton._ + +Our sins, like to our shadows, when our day is in its glory, scarce +appeared. Towards our evening how great and monstrous they are!--_Sir J. +Suckling._ + +'Tis the will that makes the action good or ill.--_Herrick._ + +Guilt, though it may attain temporal splendor, can never confer real +happiness. The evident consequences of our crimes long survive their +commission, and, like the ghosts of the murdered, forever haunt the +steps of the malefactor.--_Sir Walter Scott._ + +Some rise by sin, and some by virtue fall.--_Shakespeare._ + +Sin is disease, deformity, and weakness.--_Plato._ + +Sin and her shadow death.--_Milton._ + +If ye do well, to your own behoof will ye do it; and if ye do evil, +against yourselves will ye do it.--_Koran._ + +It is the sin which we have not committed which seems the most +monstrous.--_Boileau._ + +There are sins of omission as well as those of commission.--_Madame +Deluzy._ + +~Sincerity.~--Sincerity is to speak as we think, to do as we pretend and +profess, to perform and make good what we promise, and really to be what +we would seem and appear to be.--_Tillotson._ + +The whole faculties of man must be exerted in order to call forth noble +energies; and he who is not earnestly sincere lives in but half his +being, self-mutilated, self-paralyzed.--_Coleridge._ + +~Skepticism.~--Skepticism is slow suicide.--_Emerson._ + +~Skill.~--Nobody, however able, can gain the very highest success, except +in one line. He may rise above others, but he will fall below +himself.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Whatever may be said about luck, it is skill that leads to +fortune.--_Walter Scott._ + +The winds and waves are always on the side of the ablest +navigators.--_Gibbon._ + +~Slander.~--Done to death by slanderous tongues.--_Shakespeare._ + +Slugs crawl and crawl over our cabbages, like the world's slander over a +good name. You may kill them, it is true, but there is the +slime.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +Slander lives upon succession, forever housed where it gets +possession.--_Shakespeare._ + +When the absent are spoken of, some will speak gold of them, some +silver, some iron, some lead, and some always speak dirt, for they have +a natural attraction towards what is evil, and think it shows +penetration in them. As a cat watching for mice does not look up though +an elephant goes by, so are they so busy mousing for defects, that they +let great excellences pass them unnoticed. I will not say it is not +Christian to make beads of others' faults, and tell them over every day; +I say it is infernal. If you want to know how the devil feels, you do +know if you are such an one.--_Beecher._ + +If parliament were to consider the sporting with reputation of as much +importance as sporting on manors, and pass an act for the preservation +of fame as well as game, there are many would thank them for the +bill.--_Sheridan._ + +~Sleep.~--When one asked Alexander how he could sleep so soundly and +securely in the midst of danger, he told them that _Parmenio_ watched. +Oh, how securely may they sleep over whom He watches that never slumbers +nor sleeps! "I will," said David, "lay me down and sleep, for thou, +Lord, makest me to dwell in safety."--_Venning._ + +After life's fitful fever he sleeps well.--_Shakespeare._ + +Sleep is no servant of the will; it has caprices of its own; when +courted most, it lingers still; when most pursued, 'tis swiftly +gone.--_Bowring._ + +Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to +sleep.--_Bible._ + +Heaven trims our lamps while we sleep.--_Alcott._ + +Night's sepulchre.--_Byron._ + +Sleep is pain's easiest salve, and doth fulfill all offices of death, +except to kill.--_Donne._ + +Sleep, to the homeless thou art home; the friendless find in thee a +friend.--_Ebenezer Elliott._ + +The soul shares not the body's rest.--_Maturin._ + +Our foster nurse of nature is repose.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Sloth.~--Sloth, if it has prevented many crimes, has also smothered many +virtues.--_Colton._ + +~Smile.~--A woman has two smiles that an angel might envy--the smile that +accepts a lover afore words are uttered, and the smile that lights on +the first-born baby.--_Haliburton._ + +Smiles are smiles only when the heart pulls the wire.--_Winthrop._ + +Those happiest smiles that played on her ripe lips seemed not to know +what guests were in her eyes, which parted thence as pearls from +diamonds dropped.--_Shakespeare._ + +The smile that was childlike and bland.--_Bret Harte._ + +A soul only needs to see a smile in a white crape bonnet in order to +enter the palace of dreams.--_Victor Hugo._ + +~Sneer.~--The most insignificant people are the most apt to sneer at +others. They are safe from reprisals, and have no hope of rising in +their own esteem but by lowering their neighbors. The severest critics +are always those who have either never attempted, or who have failed in +original composition.--_Hazlitt._ + +~Society.~--If you wish to appear agreeable in society, you must consent +to be taught many things which you know already.--_Lavater._ + +Formed of two mighty tribes, the bores and bored.--_Byron._ + +Society undergoes continual changes; it is barbarous, it is civilized, +it is Christianized, it is rich, it is scientific; but this change is +not amelioration. For everything that is given something is taken. +Society acquires new arts, and loses old instincts. The civilized man +has built a coach, but has lost the use of his feet; he has a fine +Geneva watch, but cannot tell the hour by the sun.--_Emerson._ + +We take our colors, chameleon-like, from each other.--_Chamfort._ + +Society is the union of men, and not men themselves; the citizen may +perish, and yet man may remain.--_Montesquieu._ + +There are four varieties in society; the lovers, the ambitious, +observers, and fools. The fools are the happiest.--_Taine._ + +Society is the offspring of leisure; and to acquire this forms the only +rational motive for accumulating wealth, notwithstanding the cant that +prevails on the subject of labor.--_Tuckerman._ + +Intercourse is the soul of progress.--_Charles Buxton._ + +One ought to love society if he wishes to enjoy solitude. It is a social +nature that solitude works upon with the most various power. If one is +misanthropic, and betakes himself to loneliness that he may get away +from hateful things, solitude is a silent emptiness to +him.--_Zimmermann._ + +The most lucrative commerce has ever been that of hope, pleasure, and +happiness, the merchandise of authors, priests, and kings.--_Madame +Roland._ + +The more I see of men the better I think of animals.--_Tauler._ + +~Soldier.~--A soldier seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's +mouth.--_Shakespeare._ + +Policy goes beyond strength, and contrivance before action; hence it is +that direction is left to the commander, execution to the soldier, who +is not to ask Why? but to do what he is commanded.--_Xenophon._ + +Without a home must the soldier go, a changeful wanderer, and can warm +himself at no home-lit hearth.--_Schiller._ + +Soldiers looked at as they ought to be: they are to the world as poppies +to corn fields.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +~Solitude.~--Solitude is dangerous to reason without being favorable to +virtue. Pleasures of some sort are necessary to the intellectual as to +the corporal health, and those who resist gayety will be likely for the +most part to fall a sacrifice to appetite, for the solicitations of +sense are always at hand, and a dram to a vacant and solitary person is +a speedy and seducing relief. Remember that the solitary person is +certainly luxurious, probably superstitious, and possibly mad. The mind +stagnates for want of employment, and is extinguished, like a candle in +foul air.--_Johnson._ + +To be exempt from the passions with which others are tormented, is the +only pleasing solitude.--_Addison._ + +Conversation enriches the understanding, but solitude is the school of +genius.--_Gibbon._ + +Solitude has but one disadvantage; it is apt to give one too high an +opinion of one's self. In the world we are sure to be often reminded of +every known or supposed defect we may have.--_Byron._ + +Through the wide world he only is alone who lives not for +another.--_Rogers._ + +Solitude is the worst of all companions when we seek comfort and +oblivion.--_Méry._ + +~Sophistry.~--The juggle of sophistry consists, for the most part, in +using a word in one sense in all the premises, and in another sense in +the conclusion.--_Coleridge._ + +There is no error which hath not some appearance of probability +resembling truth, which, when men who study to be singular find out, +straining reason, they then publish to the world matter of contention +and jangling.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +~Sorrow.~--Our sweetest songs are those which tell of saddest +thought.--_Shelley._ + +If hearty sorrow be a sufficient ransom for offence, I tender it here; I +do as truly suffer as e'er I did commit.--_Shakespeare._ + +And weep the more, because I weep in vain.--_Gray._ + +The man who has learned to triumph over sorrow wears his miseries as +though they were sacred fillets upon his brow, and nothing is so +entirely admirable as a man bravely wretched.--_Seneca._ + +Sorrow more beautiful than beauty's self.--_Keats._ + +The violence of sorrow is not at the first to be striven withal; being, +like a mighty beast, sooner tamed with following than overthrown by +withstanding.--_Sir P. Sidney._ + +Never morning wore to evening, but some heart did break.--_Tennyson._ + +Sorrow being the natural and direct offspring of sin, that which first +brought sin into the world must, by necessary consequence, bring in +sorrow too.--_South._ + +In extent sorrow is boundless. It pours from ten million sources, and +floods the world. But its depth is small. It drowns few.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +It is the veiled angel of sorrow who plucks away one thing and another +that bound us here in ease and security, and, in the vanishing of these +dear objects, indicates the true home of our affections and our +peace.--_Chapin._ + +The mind profits by the wreck of every passion, and we may measure our +road to wisdom by the sorrows we have undergone.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Earth hath no sorrow that heaven cannot heal.--_Moore._ + +Sorrow breaks seasons, and reposing hours; makes the night morning, and +the noontide night.--_Shakespeare._ + +Sorrow is not evil, since it stimulates and purifies.--_Mazzini._ + +Sorrows must die with the joys they outnumber.--_Schiller._ + +He that hath so many causes of joy, and so great, is very much in love +with sorrow and peevishness, who loses all these pleasures, and chooses +to sit down on his little handful of thorns. Such a person is fit to +bear Nero company in his funeral sorrow for the loss of one of Poppea's +hairs, or help to mourn for Lesbia's sparrow; and because he loves it, +he deserves to starve in the midst of plenty, and to want comfort while +he is encircled with blessings.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +~Soul.~--Had I no other proof of the immortality of the soul than the +oppression of the just and the triumph of the wicked in this world, this +alone would prevent my having the least doubt of it. So shocking a +discord amidst a general harmony of things would make me naturally look +for a cause; I should say to myself we do not cease to exist with this +life; everything reassumes its order after death.--_Rousseau._ + +What is mind? No matter. What is matter? Never mind. What is the soul? +It is immaterial.--_Hood._ + +The human soul is hospitable, and will entertain conflicting sentiments +and contradictory opinions with much impartiality.--_George Eliot._ + +Our immortal souls, while righteous, are by God himself beautified with +the title of his own image and similitude.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +~Specialty.~--No one can exist in society without some specialty. Eighty +years ago it was only necessary to be well dressed and amiable; to-day a +man of this kind would be too much like the garçons at the +cafés.--_Taine._ + +~Speech.~--Sheridan once said of some speech, in his acute, sarcastic way, +that "it contained a great deal both of what was new and what was true: +but that unfortunately what was new was not true, and what was true was +not new."--_Hazlitt._ + +God has given us speech in order that we may say pleasant things to our +friends, and tell bitter truths to our enemies.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +The common fluency of speech in many men, and most women, is owing to a +scarcity of matter and a scarcity of words; for whoever is a master of +language and has a mind full of ideas, will be apt in speaking to +hesitate upon the choice of both; whereas common speakers have only one +set of ideas, and one set of words to clothe them in; and these are +always ready at the mouth: so people come faster out of a church when it +is almost empty, than when a crowd is at the door.--_Dean Swift._ + +Speech is like cloth of Arras, opened and put abroad, whereby the +imagery doth appear in figure; whereas in thoughts they lie but as in +packs.--_Plutarch._ + +Never is the deep, strong voice of man, or the low, sweet voice of +woman, finer than in the earnest but mellow tones of familiar speech, +richer than the richest music, which are a delight while they are heard, +which linger still upon the ear in softened echoes, and which, when they +have ceased, come, long after, back to memory, like the murmurs of a +distant hymn.--_Henry Giles._ + +Half the sorrows of women would be averted if they could repress the +speech they know to be useless--nay, the speech they have resolved not +to utter.--_George Eliot._ + +~Sport.~--Dwell not too long upon sports; for as they refresh a man that +is weary, so they weary a man that is refreshed.--_Fuller._ + +~Spring.~--Stately Spring! whose robe-folds are valleys, whose +breast-bouquet is gardens, and whose blush is a vernal +evening.--_Richter._ + +Fair-handed Spring unbosoms every grace.--_Thomson._ + +The spring, the summer, the chiding autumn, angry winter, change their +wonted liveries.--_Shakespeare._ + +Sweet daughter of a rough and stormy sire, hoar Winter's blooming child, +delightful Spring.--_Mrs. Barbauld._ + +Ye may trace my step o'er the wakening earth, by the winds which tell of +the violet's birth.--_Mrs. Hemans._ + +~Stars.~--These preachers of beauty, which light the world with their +admonishing smile.--_Emerson._ + +I am as constant as the northern star; of whose true, fixed, and resting +quality there is no fellow in the firmament.--_Shakespeare._ + +The stars are so far,--far away!--_L. E. Landon._ + +Day hath put on his jacket, and around his burning bosom buttoned it +with stars.--_Holmes._ + +The evening star, love's harbinger, appeared.--_Milton._ + +~Statesman.~--The great difference between the real statesman and the +pretender is, that the one sees into the future, while the other regards +only the present; the one lives by the day, and acts on expediency; the +other acts on enduring principles and for immortality.--_Burke._ + +The worth of a state, in the long run, is the worth of the individuals +composing it.--_J. Stuart Mill._ + +~Storms.~--When splitting winds make flexible the knees of knotted +oaks.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Strength.~--Oh! it is excellent to have a giant's strength; but it is +tyrannous to use it like a giant.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Study.~--Histories make men wise; poets, witty; the mathematics, subtile; +natural philosophy, deep; moral, grave; logic and rhetoric, able to +contend.--_Bacon._ + +Whatever study tends neither directly nor indirectly to make us better +men and citizens is at best but a specious and ingenious sort of +idleness, and the knowledge we acquire by it only a creditable kind of +ignorance, nothing more.--_Bolingbroke._ + +There is no one study that is not capable of delighting us after a +little application to it.--_Pope._ + +They are not the best students who are most dependent on books. What can +be got out of them is at best only material: a man must build his house +for himself.--_George MacDonald._ + +The man who has acquired the habit of study, though for only one hour +every day in the year, and keeps to the one thing studied till it is +mastered, will be startled to see the way he has made at the end of a +twelvemonth.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Style.~--The style is the man.--_Buffon._ + +As it is a great point of art, when our matter requires it, to enlarge +and veer out all sail, so to take it in and contract it is of no less +praise when the argument doth ask it.--_Ben Jonson._ + +Not poetry, but prose run mad.--_Pope._ + +There is a certain majesty in plainness; as the proclamation of a prince +never frisks it in tropes or fine conceits, in numerous and well-turned +periods, but commands in sober natural expressions.--_South._ + +In the present day our literary masonry is well done, but our +architecture is poor.--_Joubert._ + +Perhaps that is nearly the perfection of good writing which is original, +but whose truth alone prevents the reader from suspecting that it is so; +and which effects that for knowledge which the lense effects for the +sunbeam, when it condenses its brightness in order to increase its +force.--_Colton._ + +A temperate style is alone classical.--_Joubert._ + +Obscurity and affectation are the two great faults of style. Obscurity +of expression generally springs from confusion of ideas; and the same +wish to dazzle, at any cost, which produces affectation in the manner of +a writer, is likely to produce sophistry in his reasoning.--_Macaulay._ + +Style is the gossamer on which the seeds of truth float through the +world.--_Bancroft._ + +The lively phraseology of Montesquieu was the result of long meditation. +His words, as light as wings, bear on them grave +reflections.--_Joubert._ + +~Subordination.~--The usual way that men adopt to appease the wrath of +those whom they have offended, when they are at their mercy, is humble +submission; whereas a bold front, a firm and resolute bearing,--means +the very opposite,--have been at times equally +successful.--_Montaigne._ + +Reverences stand in awe of yourself.--_Sydney Smith._ + +He who reigns within himself, and rules passions, desires, and fears, is +more than a king.--_Milton._ + +~Success.~--It is a mistake to suppose that men succeed through success; +they much oftener succeed through failure.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +From mere success nothing can be concluded in favor of any nation upon +whom it is bestowed.--_Atterbury._ + +He that would relish success to purpose should keep his passion cool, +and his expectation low.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +The road to success is not to be run upon by seven-leagued boots. Step +by step, little by little, bit by bit,--that is the way to wealth, that +is the way to wisdom, that is the way to glory. Pounds are the sons, not +of pounds, but of pence.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The talent of success is nothing more than doing what you can do well; +and doing well whatever you do, without a thought of +fame.--_Longfellow._ + +Nothing can seem foul to those that win.--_Shakespeare._ + +All the proud virtue of this vaunting world fawns on success and power, +however acquired.--_Thomson._ + +A successful career has been full of blunders.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The man who succeeds above his fellows is the one who, early in life, +clearly discerns his object, and towards that object habitually directs +his powers. Thus, indeed, even genius itself is but fine observation +strengthened by fixity of purpose. Every man who observes vigilantly and +resolves steadfastly grows unconsciously into genius.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Success soon palls. The joyous time is when the breeze first strikes +your sails, and the waters rustle under your bows.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Success at first doth many times undo men at last.--_Venning._ + +~Suicide.~--Suicide itself, that fearful abuse of the dominion of the soul +over the body, is a strong proof of the distinction of their destinies. +Can the power that kills be the same that is killed? Must it not +necessarily be something superior and surviving? The act of the soul, +which in that fatal instant is in one sense so great an act of power, +can it at the same time be the act of its own annihilation? The will +kills the body, but who kills the will?--_Auguste_ _Nicolas._ + +Those men who destroy a healthful constitution of body by intemperance +as manifestly kill themselves as those who hang, or poison, or drown +themselves.--_Sherlock._ + +He who, superior to the checks of nature, dares make his life the victim +of his reason, does in some sort that reason deify, and takes a flight +at heaven.--_Young._ + +~Summer.~--Child of the sun, refulgent Summer comes.--_Thomson._ + +Beneath the Winter's snow lie germs of summer flowers.--_Whittier._ + +~Sun.~--The glorious sun stays in his course, and plays the alchemist, +turning with the splendor of his precious eyes the meagre, cloddy earth +to glittering gold.--_Shakespeare._ + +The downward sun looks out effulgent from amid the flash of broken +clouds.--_Thomson._ + +~Sunday.~--If the Sunday had not been observed as a day of rest during the +last three centuries, I have not the slightest doubt that we should have +been at this moment a poorer people and less civilized.--_Macaulay._ + +Oh, what a blessing is Sunday, interposed between the waves of worldly +business like the divine path of the Israelites through Jordan! There is +nothing in which I would advise you to be more strictly conscientious +than in keeping the Sabbath-day holy. I can truly declare that to me the +Sabbath has been invaluable.--_W. Wilberforce._ + +~Superstition.~--A peasant can no more help believing in a traditional +superstition than a horse can help trembling when he sees a +camel.--_George Eliot._ + +Religion worships God, while superstition profanes that +worship.--_Seneca._ + +Every inordination of religion that is not in defect is properly called +superstition.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +The child taught to believe any occurrence a good or evil omen, or any +day of the week lucky, hath a wide inroad made upon the soundness of his +understanding.--_Watts._ + +Superstition is the only religion of which base souls are +capable.--_Joubert._ + +It is of such stuff that superstitions are commonly made; an intense +feeling about ourselves which makes the evening star shine at us with a +threat, and the blessing of a beggar encourage us. And superstitions +carry consequences which often verify their hope or their +foreboding.--_George Eliot._ + +We are all tattooed in our cradles with the beliefs of our tribe; the +record may seem superficial, but it is indelible. You cannot educate a +man wholly out of the superstitious fears which were implanted in his +imagination, no matter how utterly his reason may reject +them.--_Holmes._ + +~Surety.~--He who is surety is never sure. Take advice, and never be +security for more than you are quite willing to lose. Remember the words +of the wise man. "He that is surety for a stranger shall smart for it; +and he that hateth suretyship is sure."--_Spurgeon._ + +~Surfeit.~--They are sick, that surfeit with too much, as they that starve +with nothing.--_Shakespeare._ + +Satiety comes of riches, and contumaciousness of satiety.--_Solon._ + +~Suspicion.~--To be suspicious is to invite treachery.--_Voltaire._ + +There is no rule more invariable than that we are paid for our +suspicions by finding what we suspect.--_Thoreau._ + +Suspicion has its dupes, as well as credulity.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Don't seem to be on the lookout for crows, else you'll set other people +watching.--_George Eliot._ + +~Sympathy.~--Surely, surely, the only true knowledge of our fellow-man is +that which enables us to feel with him--which gives us a fine ear for +the heart-pulses that are beating under the mere clothes of circumstance +and opinion.--_George Eliot._ + +Next to love, sympathy is the divinest passion of the human +heart.--_Burke._ + +Outward things don't give, they draw out. You find in them what you +bring to them. A cathedral makes only the devotional feel devotional. +Scenery refines only the fine-minded.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Of all the virtues necessary to the completion of the perfect man, there +is none to be more delicately implied and less ostentatiously vaunted +than that of exquisite feeling or universal +benevolence.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +I would go fifty miles on foot to kiss the hand of that man whose +generous heart will give up the reins of his imagination into his +author's hands; be pleased, he knows not why, and cares not +wherefore.--_Sterne._ + + +T. + +~Tact.~--A tact which surpassed the tact of her sex as much as the tact of +her sex surpasses the tact of ours.--_Macaulay._ + +~Talent.~--It is adverse to talent to be consorted and trained up with +inferior minds or inferior companions, however high they may rank. The +foal of the racer neither finds out his speed, nor calls out his powers, +if pastured out with the common herd that are destined for the collar +and the yoke.--_Colton._ + +Whatever you are from nature, keep to it; never desert your own line of +talent. Be what nature intended you for, and you will succeed; be +anything else, and you will be ten thousand times worse than +nothing!--_Sydney Smith._ + +Gross and vulgar minds will always pay a higher respect to wealth than +to talent; for wealth, although it be a far less efficient source of +power than talent, happens to be far more intelligible.--_Colton._ + +As to great and commanding talents, they are the gift of Providence in +some way unknown to us. They rise where they are least expected. They +fail when everything seems disposed to produce them, or at least to call +them forth.--_Burke._ + +Talent is the capacity of doing anything that depends on application and +industry, and it is a voluntary power, while genius is +involuntary.--_Hazlitt._ + +Talent, lying in the understanding, is often inherited; genius, being +the action of reason or imagination, rarely or never.--_Coleridge._ + +It always seemed to me a sort of clever stupidity only to have one sort +of talent,--almost like a carrier-pigeon.--_George Eliot._ + +~Talking.~--I know a lady that loves talking so incessantly, she won't +give an echo fair play; she has that everlasting rotation of tongue, +that an echo must wait till she dies, before it can catch her last +words!--_Congreve._ + +Talkers are no good doers.--_Shakespeare._ + +When I think of talking, it is of course with a woman. For talking at +its best being an inspiration, it wants a corresponding divine quality +of receptiveness, and where will you find this but in woman?--_Holmes._ + +Who think too little and who talk too much.--_Dryden._ + +They talk most who have the least to say.--_Prior._ + +~Taste.~--Taste is the power of relishing or rejecting whatever is offered +for the entertainment of the imagination.--_Goldsmith._ + +There are some readers who have never read an essay on taste; and if +they take my advice they never will; for they can no more improve their +taste by so doing than they could improve their appetite or digestion by +studying a cookery-book.--_Southey._ + +Those internal powers, active and strong, and feelingly alive to each +fine impulse.--_Akenside._ + +All our tastes are but reminiscences.--_Lamartine._ + +~Teaching.~--Count it one of the highest virtues upon earth to educate +faithfully the children of others, which so few, and scarcely any, do by +their own.--_Luther._ + +The best teacher is the one who suggests rather than dogmatizes, and +inspires his listener with the wish to teach himself.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Tears.~--The overflow of a softened heart.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the +morning.--_Bible._ + +In woman's eye the unanswerable tear.--_Byron._ + +Blest tears of soul-felt penitence.--_Moore._ + +God washes the eyes by tears until they can behold the invisible land +where tears shall come no more. O love! O affliction! ye are the guides +that show us the way through the great airy space where our loved ones +walked; and, as hounds easily follow the scent before the dew be risen, +so God teaches us, while yet our sorrow is wet, to follow on and find +our dear ones in heaven.--_Beecher._ + +The kind oblation of a falling tear.--_Dryden._ + +A penitent's tear is an undeniable ambassador, and never returns from +the throne of grace unsatisfied.--_Spencer._ + +Fate and the dooming gods are deaf to tears.--_Dryden._ + +We praise the dramatic poet who possesses the art of drawing tears, a +power which he has in common with the meanest onion.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Her tears her only eloquence.--_Rogers._ + +Eye-offending brine.--_Shakespeare._ + +The tears which flow, and the honors that are paid, when the founders of +the republic die, give hope that the republic itself may be +immortal.--_Daniel Webster._ + +All my mother came into mine eyes, and gave me up to +tears.--_Shakespeare._ + +The tear that is wiped with a little address may be followed, perhaps, +by a smile.--_Cowper._ + +Virtue is the daughter of Religion. Her sole treasure is her +tears.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Nothing dries sooner than a tear.--_George Herbert._ + +My plenteous joys, wanton in fullness, seek to hide themselves in drops +of sorrow.--_Shakespeare._ + +Bright as young diamonds in their infant dew.--_Dryden._ + +Tears are sometimes the happiest smiles of love.--_Stendhal._ + +~Tediousness.~--The sin of excessive length.--_Shirley._ + +Life is as tedious as a twice-told tale, vexing the dull ear of a drowsy +man.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Teeth.~--Teeth like falling snow for white.--~Cowley.~ + +Such a pearly row of teeth that sovereignty would have pawned her jewels +for them.--_Sterne._ + +~Temperance.~--Temperance puts wood on the fire, meal in the barrel, flour +in the tub, money in the purse, credit in the country, contentment in +the house, clothes on the back, and vigor in the body.--_Franklin._ + +I consider the temperance cause the foundation of all social and +political reform.--_Cobden._ + +If temperance prevails, then education can prevail; if temperance fails, +then education must fail.--_Horace Mann._ + +Temperance to be a virtue must be free and not forced. Virtue may be +defended, as vice may be withstood, by a statute, but no virtue is or +can be created by a law, any more than by a battering ram a temple or +obelisk can be reared.--_Bartol._ + +If you wish to keep the mind clear and the body healthy, abstain from +all fermented liquors.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Use, do not abuse; neither abstinence nor excess ever renders man +happy.--_Voltaire._ + +He who would keep himself to himself should imitate the dumb animals, +and drink water.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Temptation.~--No man is matriculated to the art of life till he has been +well tempted.--~George Eliot.~ + +Temptation is a fearful word. It indicates the beginning of a possible +series of infinite evils. It is the ringing of an alarm bell, whose +melancholy sounds may reverberate through eternity. Like the sudden, +sharp cry of "Fire!" under our windows by night, it should rouse us to +instantaneous action, and brace every muscle to its highest +tension.--_Horace Mann._ + +Most confidence has still most cause to doubt.--_Dryden._ + +It is a most fearful fact to think of, that in every heart there is some +secret spring that would be weak at the touch of temptation, and that is +liable to be assailed. Fearful, and yet salutary to think of, for the +thought may serve to keep our moral nature braced. It warns us that we +can never stand at ease, or lie down in the field of life, without +sentinels of watchfulness and camp-fires of prayer.--_Chapin._ + +Love cries victory when the tears of a woman become the sole defense of +her virtue.--_La Fontaine._ + +When devils will their blackest sins put on, they do suggest at first +with heavenly shows.--_Shakespeare._ + +The devil tempts us not: it is we tempt him, beckoning his skill with +opportunity.--_George Eliot._ + +Better shun the bait than struggle in the snare.--_Dryden._ + +There are times when it would seem as if God fished with a line, and the +devil with a net.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Tenderness.~--When death, the great reconciler, has come, it is never our +tenderness that we repent of, but our severity.--_George Eliot._ + +~Theatre.~--A man who enters the theatre is immediately struck with the +view of so great a multitude, participating of one common amusement; and +experiences, from their very aspect, a superior sensibility or +disposition of being affected with every sentiment which he shares with +his fellow-creatures.--_Hume._ + +The theatre has often been at variance with the pulpit; they ought not +to quarrel. How much it is to be wished that the celebration of nature +and of God were intrusted to none but men of noble minds!--_Goethe._ + +~Theories.~--Most men take least notice of what is plain, as if that were +of no use; but puzzle their thoughts, and lose themselves in those vast +depths and abysses which no human understanding can fathom.--_Sherlock._ + +Metaphysicians can unsettle things, but they can erect nothing. They can +pull down a church, but they cannot build a hovel.--_Cecil._ + +~Thought.~--I have asked several men what passes in their minds when they +are thinking, and I could never find any man who could think for two +minutes together. Everybody has seemed to admit that it was a perpetual +deviation from a particular path, and a perpetual return to it; which, +imperfect as the operation is, is the only method in which we can +operate with our minds to carry on any process of thought.--_Sydney +Smith._ + +A delicate thought is a flower of the mind.--_Rollin._ + +Earnest men never think in vain though their thoughts may be +errors.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Though an inheritance of acres may be bequeathed, an inheritance of +knowledge and wisdom cannot. The wealthy man may pay others for doing +his work for him, but it is impossible to get his thinking done for him +by another, or to purchase any kind of self-culture.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Thoughts shut up want air, and spoil like bales unopened to the +sun.--_Young._ + +Good thoughts are blessed guests, and should be heartily welcomed, well +fed, and much sought after. Like rose leaves, they give out a sweet +smell if laid up in the jar of memory.--_Spurgeon._ + +Thought is invisible nature--nature is invisible thought.--_Heinrich +Heine._ + +Ingenious philosophers tell you, perhaps, that the great work of the +steam-engine is to create leisure for mankind. Do not believe them, it +only creates a vacuum for eager thought to rush in.--_George Eliot._ + +Wherever a great mind utters its thoughts,--there is +Golgotha.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +"Give me," said Herder to his son, as he lay in the parched weariness of +his last illness, "give me a great thought, that I may quicken myself +with it."--_Richter._ + +You shall see them on a beautiful quarto page, where a neat rivulet of +text shall meander through a meadow of margin.--_Sheridan._ + +Fully to understand a grand and beautiful thought requires, perhaps, as +much time as to conceive it.--_Joubert._ + +Many men's thoughts are not acorns, but merely pebbles.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +A vivid thought brings the power to paint it; and in proportion to the +depth of its source is the force of its projection.--_Emerson._ + +~Threats.~--Those that are the loudest in their threats are the weakest in +the execution of them.--_Colton._ + +It makes a great difference in the force of a sentence whether a man be +behind it or no.--_Emerson._ + +~Time.~--Time's abyss, the common grave of all.--_Dryden._ + +Come what come may, time and the hour run through the roughest +day.--_Shakespeare._ + +Time makes more converts than reason.--_Thomas Paine._ + +Time stoops to no man's lure.--_Swinburne._ + +Time is the wisest councillor.--_Pericles._ + +Time is a wave which never murmurs, because there is no obstacle to its +flow.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Time hath often cured the wound which reason failed to heal.--_Seneca._ + +The slow sweet hours that bring us all things good.--_Tennyson._ + +Part with it as with money, sparing; pay no moment but in purchase of +its worth; and what its worth! ask death-beds, they can tell.--_Young._ + +The crutch of Time accomplishes more than the club of +Hercules.--_Balthaser Gracian._ + +Time is the shower of Danæ; each drop is golden.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Title.~--How impious is the title of "sacred majesty" applied to a worm, +who, in the midst of his splendor, is crumbling into dust!--_Thomas +Paine._ + +The three highest titles that can be given a man are those of martyr, +hero, saint.--_Gladstone._ + +~Toleration.~--The responsibility of tolerance lies with those who have +the wider vision.--_George Eliot._ + +Error tolerates, truth condemns.--_Fernan Caballero._ + +Toleration is the best religion.--_Victor Hugo._ + +~Tongue~.--When we advance a little into life, we find that the tongue of +man creates nearly all the mischief of the world.--_Paxton Hood._ + +~Travel.~--Rather see the wonders of the world abroad, than, living dully +sluggardized at home wear out thy youth with shapeless +idleness.--_Shakespeare._ + +Of dead kingdoms I recall the soul, sitting amid their ruins.--_N. P. +Willis._ + +The use of traveling is to regulate imagination by reality, and, instead +of thinking how things may be, to see them as they are.--_Johnson._ + +To see the world is to judge the judges.--_Joubert._ + +The bee, though it finds every rose has a thorn, comes back loaded with +honey from his rambles, and why should not other tourists do the +same.--_Haliburton._ + +~Treason.~--Treason pleases, but not the traitor.--_Cervantes._ + +The man was noble; but with his last attempt he wiped it out; betrayed +his country; and his name remains to the ensuing age +abhorred.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Trifles.~--A snapper-up of unconsidered trifles.--_Shakespeare._ + +We are not only pleased but turned by a feather. The history of a man is +a calendar of straws. If the nose of Cleopatra had been shorter, said +Pascal, in his brilliant way, Antony might have kept the +world.--_Willmott._ + +A drop of water is as powerful as a thunderbolt.--_Huxley._ + +Riches may enable us to confer favors; but to confer them with propriety +and with grace requires a something that riches cannot give: even +trifles may be so bestowed as to cease to be trifles. The citizens of +Megara offered the freedom of their city to Alexander; such an offer +excited a smile in the countenance of him who had conquered the world; +but he received this tribute of their respect with complacency on being +informed that they had never offered it to any but to Hercules and +himself.--_Colton._ + +There is a kind of latent omniscience not only in every man but in every +particle.--_Emerson._ + +It is in those acts called trivialities that the seeds of joy are +forever wasted, until men and women look round with haggard faces at the +devastation their own waste has made, and say, the earth bears no +harvest of sweetness--calling their denial knowledge.--_George Eliot._ + +The chains which cramp us most are those which weigh on us +least.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Little things console us, because little things afflict us.--_Pascal._ + +~Trouble.~--Annoyance is man's leaven; the element of movement, without +which we would grow mouldy.--_Feuchtersleben._ + +~Truth.~--Veracity is a plant of Paradise, and the seeds have never +flourished beyond the walls.--_George Eliot._ + +Nothing so beautiful as truth.--_Des Cartes._ + +All high truth is poetry. Take the results of science: they glow with +beauty, cold and hard as are the methods of reaching them.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +Truth never turns to rebuke falsehood; her own straightforwardness is +the severest correction.--_Thoreau._ + +Whenever you look at human nature in masses, you find every truth met by +a counter truth, and both equally true.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Truth need not always be embodied; enough if it hovers around like a +spiritual essence, which gives one peace, and fills the atmosphere with +a solemn sweetness like harmonious music of bells.--_Goethe._ + +Dare to be true; nothing can need a lie.--_George Herbert._ + +We must never throw away a bushel of truth because it happens to contain +a few grains of chaff; on the contrary, we may sometimes profitably +receive a bushel of chaff for the few grains of truth it may +contain.--_Dean Stanley._ + +The first great work is that yourself may to yourself be +true.--_Roscommon._ + +In troubled water you can scarce see your face, or see it very little, +till the water be quiet and stand still: so in troubled times you can +see little truth; when times are quiet and settled, then truth +appears.--_Selden._ + +Men are as cold as ice to the truth, hot as fire to falsehood.--_La +Fontaine._ + +The way of truth is like a great road. It is not difficult to know it. +The evil is only that men will not seek it. Do you go home and search +for it.--_Mencius._ + +Speaking truth is like writing fair, and comes only by practice; it is +less a matter of will than of habit; and I doubt if any occasion can be +trivial which permits the practice and formation of such a +habit.--_Ruskin._ + +Forgetting that the only eternal part for man to act is man, and that +the only immutable greatness is truth.--_Lamartine._ + +Truth takes the stamp of the souls it enters. It is rigorous and rough +in arid souls, but tempers and softens itself in loving +natures.--_Joubert._ + +Truth severe, by fairy fiction drest.--_Gray._ + +The only amaranthine flower on earth is virtue; the only lasting +treasure, truth.--_Cowper._ + +Blunt truths make more mischief than nice falsehoods do.--_Pope._ + +Truth has rough flavors if we bite through.--_George Eliot._ + +Truth is a torch, but one of enormous size; so that we slink past it in +rather a blinking fashion for fear it should burn us.--_Goethe._ + +All truths are not to be repeated, still it is well to hear them.--_Mme. +du Deffaud._ + +It is only when one is thoroughly true that there can be purity and +freedom. Falsehood always avenges itself.--_Auerbach._ + +Nothing from man's hands, nor law, nor constitution, can be final. Truth +alone is final.--_Charles Sumner._ + +Verity is nudity.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +~Twilight.~--Parting day dies like the dolphin, whom each pang imbues with +a new color as it gasps away, the last still loveliest, till 'tis gone, +and all is gray.--_Byron._ + +Softly the evening came. The sun from the western horizon, like a +magician, extended his golden wand o'er the landscape.--_Longfellow._ + +Twilight gray hath in her sober livery all things clad.--_Milton._ + +The day is done; and slowly from the scene the stooping sun upgathers +his spent shafts, and puts them back into his golden +quiver!--_Longfellow._ + +The weary sun hath made a golden set, and, by the bright track of his +fiery car, gives token of a goodly day to-morrow.--_Shakespeare._ + + +U. + +~Ugliness.~--I do not know that she was virtuous; but she was always ugly, +and with a woman, that is half the battle.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Ugliness, after virtue, is the best guardian of a young woman.--_Mme. de +Genlis._ + +~Understanding.~--The eye of the understanding is like the eye of the +sense; for as you may see great objects through small crannies or holes, +so you may see great axioms of nature through small and contemptible +instances.--_Bacon._ + +In its wider acceptation, understanding is the entire power of +perceiving and conceiving, exclusive of the sensibility; the power of +dealing with the impressions of sense, and composing them into wholes, +according to a law of unity: and in its most comprehensive meaning it +includes even simple apprehension.--_Coleridge._ + +~Unselfishness.~--The essence of true nobility is neglect of self. Let the +thought of self pass in, and the beauty of great action is gone, like +the bloom from a soiled flower.--_Froude._ + +~Uprightness.~--To redeem a world sunk in dishonesty has not been given +thee. Solely over one man therein thou hast quite absolute control. Him +redeem, him make honest.--_Thomas Carlyle._ + +~Urbanity.~--Poor wine at the table of a rich host is an insult without an +apology. Urbanity ushers in water that needs no apology, and gives a +zest to the worst vintage.--_Zimmermann._ + +~Usefulness.~--Nothing in this world is so good as usefulness. It binds +your fellow-creatures to you, and you to them; it tends to the +improvement of your own character; and it gives you a real importance in +society, much beyond what any artificial station can bestow.--_Sir B. C. +Brodie._ + +On the day of his death, in his eightieth year, Elliott, "the Apostle of +the Indians," was found teaching an Indian child at his bed-side. "Why +not rest from your labors now?" asked a friend. "Because," replied the +venerable man, "I have prayed God to render me useful in my sphere, and +He has heard my prayers; for now that I can no longer preach, He leaves +me strength enough to teach this poor child the alphabet."--_Rev. J. +Chaplin._ + +There is but one virtue--the eternal sacrifice of self.--_George Sand._ + + +V. + +~Valentine.~--Hail to thy returning festival, old Bishop Valentine! Great +is thy name in the rubric. Like unto thee, assuredly, there is no other +mitred father in the calendar.--_Charles Lamb._ + +The fourteenth of February is a day sacred to St. Valentine! It was a +very odd notion, alluded to by Shakespeare, that on this day birds begin +to couple; hence, perhaps, arose the custom of sending on this day +letters containing professions of love and affection.--_Noah Webster._ + +~Valor.~--Valor gives awe, and promises protection to those who want heart +or strength to defend themselves. This makes the authority of men among +women, and that of a master buck in a numerous herd.--_Sir W. Temple._ + +How strangely high endeavors may be blessed, where piety and valor +jointly go.--_Dryden._ + +Those who believe that the praises which arise from valor are superior +to those which proceed from any other virtues have not +considered.--_Dryden._ + +~Vanity.~--Verily every man at his best state is altogether +vanity.--_Bible._ + +Our vanities differ as our noses do: all conceit is not the same +conceit, but varies in correspondence with the minutiæ of mental make in +which one of us differs from another.--_George Eliot._ + +One of the few things I have always most wondered at is, that there +should be any such thing as human vanity. If I had any, I had enough to +mortify it a few days ago; for I lost my mind for a whole day.--_Pope._ + +Greater mischiefs happen often from folly, meanness, and vanity than +from the greater sins of avarice and ambition.--_Burke._ + +It is vanity which makes the rake at twenty, the worldly man at forty, +and the retired man at sixty. We are apt to think that best in general +for which we find ourselves best fitted in particular.--_Pope._ + +O frail estate of human things.--_Dryden._ + +The vainest woman is never thoroughly conscious of her beauty till she +is loved by the man who sets her own passion vibrating in +return.--_George Eliot._ + +Vanity is the quicksand of reason.--_George Sand._ + +To be vain is rather a mark of humility than pride. Vain men delight in +telling what honors have been done them, what great company they have +kept, and the like; by which they plainly confess that these honors were +more than their due and such as their friends would not believe if they +had not been told. Whereas a man truly proud thinks the greatest honors +below his merits, and consequently scorns to boast. I, therefore, +deliver it as a maxim, that whoever desires the character of a proud man +ought to conceal his vanity.--_Swift._ + +~Vexations.~--Petty vexations may at times be petty, but still they are +vexations. The smallest and most inconsiderable annoyances are the most +piercing. As small letters weary the eye most, so also the smallest +affairs disturb us most.--_Montaigne._ + +~Vice.~--As to the general design of providence, the two extremes of vice +may serve (like two opposite biases) to keep up the balance of things. +When we speak against one capital vice, we ought to speak against its +opposite; the middle betwixt both is the point for virtue.--_Pope._ + +This is the essential evil of vice; it debases a man.--_Chapin._ + +It is only in some corner of the brain which we leave empty that Vice +can obtain a lodging. When she knocks at your door be able to say: "No +room for your ladyship: pass on."--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +I ne'er heard yet that any of these bolder vices wanted less impudence +to gainsay what they did, than to perform it first.--_Shakespeare._ + +Wise men will apply their remedies to vices, not to names; to the causes +of evil which are permanent, not the occasional organs by which they +act, and the transitory modes in which they appear.--_Burke._ + +One vice worn out makes us wiser than fifty tutors.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Vicissitudes.~--We do not marvel at the sunrise of a joy, only at its +sunset! Then, on the other hand, we are amazed at the commencement of a +sorrow-storm; but that it should go off in gentle showers we think quite +natural.--_Richter._ + +Who ordered toil as the condition of life, ordered weariness, ordered +sickness, ordered poverty, failure, success,--to this man a foremost +place, to the other a nameless struggle with the crowd; to that a +shameful fall, or paralyzed limb, or sudden accident; to each some work +upon the ground he stands on, until he is laid beneath it.--_Thackeray._ + +~Victory.~--Victory or Westminster Abbey.--_Nelson._ + +Victory may be honorable to the arms, but shameful to the counsels, of a +nation.--_Bolingbroke._ + +Victory belongs to the most persevering.--_Napoleon._ + +It is more difficult to look upon victory than upon battle.--_Walter +Scott._ + +~Villainy.~--Villainy, when detected, never gives up, but boldly adds +impudence to imposture.--_Goldsmith._ + +Villainy that is vigilant will be an overmatch for virtue, if she +slumber at her post.--_Colton._ + +~Violence.~--Nothing good comes of violence.--_Luther._ + +Violence does even justice unjustly.--_Carlyle._ + +Vehemence without feeling is rant.--_H. Lewes._ + +~Virtue.~--I willingly confess that it likes me better when I find virtue +in a fair lodging than when I am bound to seek it in an ill-favored +creature.--_Sir P. Sidney._ + +This is the tax a man must pay to his virtues--they hold up a torch to +his vices, and render those frailties notorious in him which would have +passed without observation in another.--_Colton._ + +True greatness is sovereign wisdom. We are never deceived by our +virtues.--_Lamartine._ + +It would not be easy, even for an unbeliever, to find a better +translation of the rule of virtue from the abstract into the concrete, +than to endeavor so to live that Christ would approve our life.--_John +Stuart Mill._ + +Most men admire virtue, who follow not her lore.--_Milton._ + +To be able under all circumstances to practice five things constitutes +perfect virtue: these five are gravity, generosity of soul, sincerity, +earnestness, and kindness.--_Confucius._ + +Of the two, I prefer those who render vice lovable to those who degrade +virtue.--_Joubert._ + +No man can purchase his virtue too dear, for it is the only thing whose +value must ever increase with the price it has cost us. Our integrity is +never worth so much as when we have parted with our all to keep +it.--_Colton._ + +Virtue can see to do what virtue would by her own radiant light, though +sun and moon were in the flat sea sunk.--_Milton._ + +Virtue is voluntary, vice involuntary.--_Plato._ + +Virtue is a rough way but proves at night a bed of down.--_Wotton._ + +Is virtue a thing remote? I wish to be virtuous, and lo! virtue is at +hand.--_Confucius._ + +Virtues that shun the day and lie concealed in the smooth seasons and +the calm of life.--_Addison._ + +That virtue which requires to be ever guarded is scarce worth the +sentinel.--_Goldsmith._ + +Why expect that extraordinary virtues should be in one person united, +when one virtue makes a man extraordinary? Alexander is eminent for his +courage; Ptolemy for his wisdom; Scipio for his continence; Trajan for +his love of truth; Constantius for his temperance.--_Zimmermann._ + +Virtue dwells at the head of a river, to which we cannot get but by +rowing against the stream.--_Feltham._ + +Our virtues live upon our income, our vices consume our capital.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +Wealth is a weak anchor, and glory cannot support a man; this is the law +of God, that virtue only is firm, and cannot be shaken by a +tempest.--_Pythagoras._ + +All bow to virtue and then walk away.--_De Finod._ + +Virtue is an angel; but she is a blind one, and must ask of Knowledge to +show her the pathway that leads to her goal. Mere knowledge, on the +other hand, like a Swiss mercenary, is ready to combat either in the +ranks of sin or under the banners of righteousness,--ready to forge +cannon-balls or to print New Testaments, to navigate a corsair's vessel +or a missionary ship.--_Horace Mann._ + +~Vulgarity.~--The vulgarity of inanimate things requires time to get +accustomed to; but living, breathing, bustling, plotting, planning, +human vulgarity is a species of moral ipecacuanha, enough to destroy any +comfort.--_Carlyle._ + +Dirty work wants little talent and no conscience.--_George Eliot._ + + +W. + +~Waiting.~--It is the slowest pulsation which is the most vital. The hero +will then know how to wait, as well as to make haste. All good abides +with him who waiteth wisely.--_Thoreau._ + +~Want.~--Nothing makes men sharper than want.--_Addison._ + +Hundreds would never have known _want_ if they had not first known +_waste_.--_Spurgeon._ + +It is not from nature, but from education and habits, that our wants are +chiefly derived.--_Fielding._ + +If any one say that he has seen a just man in want of bread, I answer +that it was in some place where there was no other just man.--_St. +Clement._ + +~War.~--Take my word for it, if you had seen but one day of war, you would +pray to Almighty God that you might never see such a thing +again.--_Wellington._ + +Wherever there is war, there must be injustice on one side or the other, +or on both. There have been wars which were little more than trials of +strength between friendly nations, and in which the injustice was not to +each other, but to the God who gave them life. But in a malignant war +there is injustice of ignobler kind at once to God and man, which must +be stemmed for both their sakes.--_Ruskin._ + +Civil wars leave nothing but tombs.--_Lamartine._ + +The fate of war is to be exalted in the morning, and low enough at +night! There is but one step from triumph to ruin.--_Napoleon._ + +Woe to the man that first did teach the cursed steel to bite in his own +flesh, and make way to the living spirit.--_Spenser._ + +Providence for war is the best prevention of it.--_Bacon._ + +The bodies of men, munition, and money, may justly be called the sinews +of war.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +War is the matter which fills all history, and consequently the only or +almost the only view in which we can see the external of political +society is in a hostile shape; and the only actions to which we have +always seen, and still see, all of them intent, are such as tend to the +destruction of one another.--_Burke._ + +As long as mankind shall continue to bestow more liberal applause on +their destroyers than on their benefactors, the thirst of military glory +will ever be the vice of the most exalted characters.--_Gibbon._ + +The fate of a battle is the result of a moment,--of a thought: the +hostile forces advance with various combinations, they attack each other +and fight for a certain time; the critical moment arrives, a mental +flash decides, and the least reserve accomplishes the +object.--_Napoleon._ + +The feast of vultures, and the waste of life.--_Byron._ + +I abhor bloodshed, and every species of terror erected into a system, as +remedies equally ferocious, unjust, and inefficacious against evils that +can only be cured by the diffusion of liberal ideas.--_Mazzini._ + +~Weakness.~--Weakness is thy excuse, and I believe it; weakness to resist +Philistian gold: what murderer, what traitor, parricide, incestuous, +sacrilegious, but may plead it? All wickedness is weakness.--_Milton._ + +The strength of man sinks in the hour of trial; but there doth live a +Power that to the battle girdeth the weak.--_Joanna Baillie._ + +How many weak shoulders have craved heavy burdens?--_Joubert._ + +Weakness is born vanquished.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Wealth.~--An accession of wealth is a dangerous predicament for a man. At +first he is stunned, if the accession be sudden; he is very humble and +very grateful. Then he begins to speak a little louder, people think him +more sensible, and soon he thinks himself so.--_Cecil._ + +If Wealth come, beware of him, the smooth, false friend! There is +treachery in his proffered hand; his tongue is eloquent to tempt; lust +of many harms is lurking in his eye; he hath a hollow heart; use him +cautiously.--_Tupper._ + +Men pursue riches under the idea that their possession will set them at +ease, and above the world. But the law of association often makes those +who begin by loving gold as a servant, finish by becoming themselves its +slaves; and independence without wealth is at least as common as wealth +without independence.--_Colton._ + +~Weeping.~--What women would do if they could not cry, nobody knows! What +poor, defenseless creatures they would be!--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +~Welcome.~--Heaven opened wide her ever-during gates, harmonious sound! on +golden hinges turning.--_Milton._ + +~Wickedness.~--The happiness of the wicked passes away like a +torrent.--_Racine._ + +The hatred of the wicked is only roused the more from the impossibility +of finding any just grounds on which it can rest; and the very +consciousness of their own injustice is only a grievance the more +against him who is the object of it.--_Rousseau._ + +Wickedness is a wonderfully diligent architect of misery, of shame, +accompanied with terror and commotion, and remorse, and endless +perturbation.--_Plutarch._ + +What rein can hold licentious wickedness, when down the hill he holds +his fierce career?--_Shakespeare._ + +~Wife.~--Thy wife is a constellation of virtues; she's the moon, and thou +art the man in the moon.--_Congreve._ + +A light wife doth make a heavy husband.--_Shakespeare._ + +O woman! thou knowest the hour when the goodman of the house will +return, when the heat and burden of the day are past; do not let him at +such time, when he is weary with toil and jaded with discouragement, +find upon his coming to his habitation that the foot which should hasten +to meet him is wandering at a distance, that the soft hand which should +wipe the sweat from his brow is knocking at the door of other +houses.--_Washington Irving._ + +Her pleasures are in the happiness of her family.--_Rousseau._ + +Hanging and wiving goes by destiny.--_Shakespeare._ + +The wife safest and seemliest by her husband stays.--_Milton._ + +~Will.~--In the schools of the wrestling master, when a boy falls he is +bidden to get up again, and to go on wrestling day by day till he has +acquired strength; and we must do the same, and not be like those poor +wretches who, after one failure, suffer themselves to be swept along as +by a torrent. You need but _will_, and it is done; but if you relax your +efforts, you will be ruined; for ruin and recovery are both from +within.--_Epictetus._ + +~Winter.~--After summer ever more succeeds the barren winter with his +nipping cold.--_Shakespeare._ + +Winter binds our strengthened bodies in a cold embrace +constringent.--_Thomson._ + +~Wisdom.~--Wisdom for a man's self is, in many branches thereof, a +depraved thing: it is the wisdom of rats, that will be sure to leave a +house some time before it fall; it is the wisdom of the fox, that +thrusts out the badger, who digged and made room for him; it is the +wisdom of the crocodiles, that shed tears when they would +devour.--_Bacon._ + +Common sense in an uncommon degree is what the world calls +wisdom.--_Coleridge._ + +Human wisdom makes as ill use of her talent when she exercises it in +rescinding from the number and sweetness of those pleasures that are +naturally our due, as she employs it favorably, and well, in +artificially disguising and tricking out the ills of life to alleviate +the sense of them.--_Montaigne._ + +It may be said, almost without qualification, that true wisdom consists +in the ready and accurate perception of analogies. Without the former +quality, knowledge of the past is uninstructive; without the latter, it +is deceptive.--_Whately._ + +You read of but one wise man, and all that he knew was--that he knew +nothing.--_Congreve._ + +To be wiser than other men is to be honester than they; and strength of +mind is only courage to see and speak the truth.--_Hazlitt._ + +Knowledge comes but wisdom lingers.--_Tennyson._ + +Seize wisdom ere 'tis torment to be wise; that is, seize wisdom ere she +seizes thee.--_Young._ + +Wisdom married to immortal verse.--_Wordsworth._ + +No man can be wise on an empty stomach.--_George Eliot._ + +Among mortals second thoughts are wisest.--_Euripides._ + +~Wishes.~--The apparently irreconcilable dissimilarity between our wishes +and our means, between our hearts and this world, remains a +riddle.--_Richter._ + +~Wit.~--I have no more pleasure in hearing a man attempting wit, and +failing, than in seeing a man trying to leap over a ditch, and tumbling +into it.--_Johnson._ + +Thy wit is a very bitter sweeting; it is a most sharp +sauce.--_Shakespeare._ + +Wit must grow like fingers. If it be taken from others 'tis like plums +stuck upon blackthorns; there they are for a while, but they come to +nothing.--_Selden._ + +If he who has little wit needs a master to inform his stupidity, he who +has much frequently needs ten to keep in check his worldly wisdom, which +might otherwise, like a high-mettled charger, toss him to the +ground.--_Scriver._ + +To place wit above sense is to place superfluity above utility.--_Madame +de Maintenon._ + +~Woe.~--No scene of mortal life but teems with mortal woe.--_Walter +Scott._ + +Thus woe succeeds a woe, as wave a wave.--_Herrick._ + +So many miseries have crazed my voice, that my woe-wearied tongue is +still.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Woman.~--Who does know the bent of woman's fantasy?--_Spenser._ + +Pretty women without religion are like flowers without +perfume.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +The happiest women, like the happiest nations, have no history.--_George +Eliot._ + +To a gentleman every woman is a lady in right of her +sex.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +They never reason, or, if they do, they either draw correct inferences +from wrong premises, or wrong inferences from correct premises; and they +always poke the fire from the top.--_Bishop Whately._ + +The woman must not belong to herself; she is bound to alien destinies. +But she performs her part best who can take freely, of her own choice, +the alien to her heart, can bear and foster it with sincerity and +love.--_Richter._ + +God has placed the genius of women in their hearts; because the works of +this genius are always works of love.--_Lamartine._ + +Women for the most part do not love us. They do not choose a man because +they love him, but because it pleases them to be loved by him. They love +love of all things in the world, but there are very few men whom they +love personally.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +Woman is the Sunday of man; not his repose only, but his joy; the salt +of his life.--_Michelet._ + +Women see through and through each other; and often we most admire her +whom they most scorn.--_Charles Buxton._ + +It goes far to reconciling me to being a woman when I reflect that I am +thus in no danger of ever marrying one.--_Lady Montague._ + +Men are women's playthings; woman is the devil's.--_Victor Hugo._ + +Sing of the nature of woman, and the song shall be surely full of +variety,--old crotchets and most sweet closes,--it shall be humorous, +grave, fantastic, amorous, melancholy, sprightly,--one in all, and all +in one!--_Beaumont._ + +Her step is music and her voice is song.--_Bailey._ + +Woman is a miracle of divine contradictions.--_Michelet._ + +Woman, sister! there are some things which you do not execute as well as +your brother, man; no, nor ever will. Pardon me, if I doubt whether you +will ever produce a great poet from your choirs, or a Mozart, or a +Phidias, or a Michael Angelo, or a great philosopher, or a great +scholar. By which last is meant, not one who depends simply on an +infinite memory, but also on an infinite and electrical power of +combination; bringing together from the four winds, like the angel of +the resurrection, what else were dust from dead men's bones, into the +unity of breathing life. If you can create yourselves into any of these +grand creators, why have you not?--_De Quincey._ + +There are three things a wise man will not trust: the wind, the sunshine +of an April day, and woman's plighted faith.--_Southey._ + +Woman is mistress of the art of completely embittering the life of the +person on whom she depends.--_Goethe._ + +Women generally consider consequences in love, seldom in +resentment.--_Colton._ + +Just corporeal enough to attest humanity, yet sufficiently transparent +to let the celestial origin shine through.--_Ruffini._ + +There are female women, and there are male women.--_Charles Buxton._ + +To think of the part one little woman can play in the life of a man, so +that to renounce her may be a very good imitation of heroism, and to win +her may be a discipline!--_George Eliot._ + +Men at most differ as heaven and earth; but women, worst and best, as +heaven and hell.--_Tennyson._ + +Women of forty always fancy they have found the Fountain of Youth, and +that they remain young in the midst of the ruins of their day.--_Arsène +Houssaye._ + +A woman's hopes are woven of sunbeams; a shadow annihilates +them.--_George Eliot._ + +There remains in the faces of women who are naturally serene and +peaceful, and of those rendered so by religion, an after-spring, and +later, an after-summer, the reflex of their most beautiful +bloom.--_Richter._ + +Women see without looking; their husbands often look without +seeing.--_Louis Desnoyeas._ + +She was in the lovely bloom and spring-time of womanhood; at that age +when, if ever, angels be for God's good purposes enthroned in mortal +forms, they may be, without impiety, supposed to abide in such as hers. +Cast in so slight and exquisite a mould, so mild and gentle, so pure and +beautiful, that earth seemed not her element, nor its rough creatures +her fit companions.--_Dickens._ + +There is a woman at the beginning of all great things.--_Lamartine._ + +There is something still more to be dreaded than a Jesuit, and that is a +Jesuitess.--_Eugene Sue._ + +The honor of woman is badly guarded when it is guarded by keys and +spies. No woman is honest who does not wish to be.--_Adrian Dupuy._ + +~Words.~--There are words which sever hearts more than sharp swords; there +are words, the point of which sting the heart through the course of a +whole life.--_Fredrika Bremer._ + +Words are often everywhere as the minute-hands of the soul, more +important than even the hour-hands of action.--_Richter._ + +"The last word" is the most dangerous of infernal machines; and husband +and wife should no more fight to get it than they would struggle for the +possession of a lighted bomb-shell.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +Words, like glass, darken whatever they do not help us to +see.--_Joubert._ + +If we use common words on a great occasion they are the more striking, +because they are felt at once to have a particular meaning, like old +banners, or every-day clothes, hung up in a sacred place.--_George +Eliot._ + +Words are but the signs and counters of knowledge, and their currency +should be strictly regulated by the capital which they +represent.--_Colton._ + +~World.~--The world is a comedy to those who think, a tragedy to those who +feel.--_Horace Walpole._ + +Creation's heir, the world, the world is mine.--_Goldsmith._ + +Contact with the world either breaks or hardens the heart.--_Chamfort._ + +Why, then the world's mine oyster, which I with sword will +open.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Worship.~--Worship as though the Deity were present. If my mind is not +engaged in my worship, it is as though I worshiped not.--_Confucius._ + +~Writing.~--Writing, after all, is a cold and coarse interpreter of +thought. How much of the imagination, how much of the intellect, +evaporates and is lost while we seek to embody it in words! Man made +language and God the genius.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +We must write as Homer wrote, not what he wrote.--_Théophile Vian._ + +~Wrong.~--There is no sort of wrong deed of which a man can bear the +punishment alone; you can't isolate yourself and say that the evil that +is in you shall not spread. Men's lives are as thoroughly blended with +each other as the air they breathe: evil spreads as necessarily as +disease.--_George Eliot._ + +My soul is sick with every day's report of wrong and outrage with which +earth is filled.--_Cowper._ + + +Y. + +~Youth.~--The canker galls the infants of the spring, too oft before their +buttons be disclosed; and in the morn and liquid dew of youth contagious +blastments are most imminent.--_Shakespeare._ + +Reckless youth makes rueful age.--_Moore._ + +In general, a man in his younger years does not easily cast off a +certain complacent self-conceit, which principally shows itself in +despising what he has himself been a little time before.--_Goethe._ + +Too young for woe, though not for tears.--_Washington Irving._ + +O youth! thou often tearest thy wings against the thorns of +voluptuousness.--_Victor Hugo._ + +O youth! ephemeral song, eternal canticle! The world may end, the +heavens fall, yet loving voices would still find an echo in the ruins of +the universe.--_Jules Janin._ + +The youthful freshness of a blameless heart.--_Washington Irving._ + +The heart of youth is reached through the senses; the senses of age are +reached through the heart.--_Rétif de la Bretonne._ + +Agreeable surprises are the perquisites of youth.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + + +Z. + +~Zeal.~--I like men who are temperate and moderate in everything. An +excessive zeal for that which is good, though it may not be offensive to +me, at all events raises my wonder, and leaves me in a difficulty how I +should call it.--_Montaigne._ + +In the ardor of pursuit men soon forget the goal from which they +start.--_Schiller._ + +Experience shows that success is due less to ability than to zeal. The +winner is he who gives himself to his work, body and soul.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +Tell zeal it lacks devotion.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +Nothing to build and all things to destroy.--_Dryden._ + +Nothing can be fairer, or more noble, than the holy fervor of true +zeal.--_Molière._ + +People give the name of zeal to their propensity to mischief and +violence, though it is not the cause, but their interest, that inflames +them.--_Montaigne._ + +The frenzy of nations is the statesmanship of fate.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Zealot.~--When we see an eager assailant of one of these wrongs, a +special reformer, we feel like asking him, What right have you, sir, to +your one virtue? Is virtue piecemeal?--_Emerson._ + +What I object to Scotch philosophers in general is, that they reason +upon man as they would upon a divinity; they pursue truth without caring +if it be useful truth.--_Sydney Smith._ + +I have never known a trader in philanthropy who was not wrong in his +head or heart somewhere or other.--_Coleridge._ + +They have an idol, to which they consecrate themselves high-priests, and +deem it holy work to offer sacrifices of whatever is most +precious.--_Hawthorne._ + + * * * * * + +The end crowns all; and that old common arbitrator, Time, will one day +end all.--_Shakespeare._ + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearls of Thought, by Maturin M. 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Ballou. + </title> + <style type="text/css"> +/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */ +<!-- + p { margin-top: .75em; + text-align: justify; + margin-bottom: .75em; + } + h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 { + text-align: center; /* all headings centered */ + clear: both; + } + hr { width: 33%; + margin-top: 2em; + margin-bottom: 2em; + margin-left: auto; + margin-right: auto; + clear: both; + } + + + body{margin-left: 15%; + margin-right: 15%; + } + + .pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */ + /* visibility: hidden; */ + position: absolute; + left: 92%; + font-size: smaller; + text-align: right; + } /* page numbers */ + + .linenum {position: absolute; top: auto; left: 4%;} /* poetry number */ + .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;} + .sidenote {width: 20%; padding-bottom: .5em; padding-top: .5em; + padding-left: .5em; padding-right: .5em; margin-left: 1em; + float: right; clear: right; margin-top: 1em; + font-size: smaller; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: dashed 1px;} + + + .center {text-align: center;} + .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;} + + + + .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;} + + + .centerbox { width: 50%; /* heading box */ + margin: 0 auto; + text-align: center; + padding: 1em; + } + + .author {text-align: right; margin-right: 10%;} + + + // --> + /* XML end ]]>*/ + </style> + </head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearls of Thought, by Maturin M. Ballou + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Pearls of Thought + +Author: Maturin M. Ballou + +Release Date: September 13, 2008 [EBook #26604] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEARLS OF THOUGHT *** + + + + +Produced by Julia Miller and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + +</pre> + + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[Pg i]</a></span></p> + + +<h1>PEARLS OF THOUGHT.</h1> + +<h3>BY</h3> + +<h2>MATURIN M. BALLOU,</h2> + +<h4>AUTHOR OF THE "TREASURY OF THOUGHT," "HISTORY OF CUBA,"<br />"BIOGRAPHY OF +HOSEA BALLOU," ETC., ETC.</h4> + +<p class="center"><i>Infinite riches in a little room.</i>—<span class="smcap">Marlowe.</span></p> + + +<p class="center">BOSTON: HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY. The Riverside Press, Cambridge. +1881.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span></p> + +<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1880,<br /> + +By MATURIN M. BALLOU.<br /><br /> + +<i>All rights reserved.</i><br /> + +<i>The Riverside Press, Cambridge:</i> Electrotyped and Printed by H. O. +Houghton & Co.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span></p> + + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<h4>To</h4> + +<h2>MY WIFE,</h2> + +<h4>THE PATIENT AND CHEERFUL ASSOCIATE OF MY STUDIES,<br /> + +AFTER MORE THAN FORTY YEARS OF<br /> + +HAPPY COMPANIONSHIP,<br /><br /> + +This Volume<br /><br /> + +IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED<br /><br /> + +BY<br /> + +THE COMPILER.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></p> + +<div class="centerbox"> +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">Writers of an abler sort,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Whose wit well managed, and whose classic style,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Give Truth a lustre, and make Wisdom smile.</span> +<br /><span style="margin-left: 16em;"><span class="smcap">Cowper.</span></span> +</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>General observations drawn from particulars are the jewels of +knowledge, comprehending great store in a little room.</p> + +<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Locke.</span> </p></div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Out of monuments, names, wordes, proverbs, traditions, private +recordes, and evidences, fragments of stories, passages of bookes, +and the like, we doe save and recover somewhat from the deluge of +time.</p> + +<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Bacon.</span> </p></div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>I would fain coin wisdom,—mould it, I mean, into maxims, proverbs, +sentences, that can easily be retained and transmitted.</p> + +<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Joubert.</span> </p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</a></span></p> +</div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p> + +<p> </p> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<h2><br /><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE.</h2> + +<p class="center"> +<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">A verse may find him whom a sermon flies.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 11em;"><span class="smcap">George Herbert.</span></span><br /> +</p> + + +<p>The volume herewith presented is the natural result of the compiler's +habit of transferring and classifying significant passages from known +authors. No special course of reading has been pursued, the thoughts +being culled from foreign and native tongues—from the moss-grown tomes +of ancient literature and the verdant fields of to-day. The terse +periods of others, appropriately quoted, become in a degree our own; and +a just estimation is very nearly allied to originality, or, as the +author of <i>Vanity Fair</i> tells us, "Next to excellence is the +appreciation of it." Without indorsing the idea of a modern authority +that the multiplicity of facts and writings is becoming so great that +every available book must soon be composed of extracts only, still it is +believed that such a volume as "Pearls of Thought" will serve the +interest of general literature, and especially stimulate the mind of the +thoughtful reader to further research. The pleasant duty of the +com<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>piler has been to follow the expressive idea of Colton, and he has +made the same use of books as a bee does of flowers,—she steals the +sweets from them, but does not injure them.</p> + +<p>To the observant reader many familiar quotations will naturally occur, +the absence of which may seem a singular omission in such a connection +and classification, but doubtless such excerpts will be found in the +"Treasury of Thought," a much more extended work by the same author, to +which this volume is properly a supplement. Of course care has been +taken not to repeat any portion of the previous collection.</p> + +<p class="author">M. M. B.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<h2><a name="PEARLS_OF_THOUGHT" id="PEARLS_OF_THOUGHT"></a>PEARLS OF THOUGHT.</h2> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p> + +<h3>A.</h3> + +<p><b>Ability.</b>—Natural abilities can almost compensate for the want of every +kind of cultivation, but no cultivation of the mind can make up for the +want of natural abilities.—<i>Schopenhaufer.</i></p> + +<p>Words must be fitted to a man's mouth,—'twas well said of the fellow +that was to make a speech for my Lord Mayor, when he desired to take +measure of his lordship's mouth.—<i>Selden.</i></p> + +<p><b>Absence.</b>—Absence in love is like water upon fire; a little quickens, +but much extinguishes it.—<i>Hannah More.</i></p> + +<p>Absence from those we love is self from self! A deadly +banishment.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Short retirement urges sweet return.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Whatever is genuine in social relations endures despite of time, error, +absence, and destiny; and that which has no inherent vitality had better +die at once. A great poet has truly declared that constancy is no +virtue, but a fact.—<i>Tuckerman.</i></p> + +<p>Frozen by distance.—<i>Wordsworth.</i></p> + +<p>Short absence quickens love, long absence kills it.—<i>Mirabeau.</i></p> + +<p>We often wish most for our friends when they are absent. Even in married +life love is not diminished by distance. A man, like a burning-glass, +should be placed at a certain distance from the object he wishes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> to +dissolve, in order that the proper focus may be obtained.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p><b>Abstinence.</b>—Refrain to-night, and that shall lend a hand of easiness to +the next abstinence; the next more easy; for use almost can change the +stamp of nature, and either curb the devil, or throw him out with +wondrous potency.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Abuse.</b>—Abuse is not so dangerous when there is no vehicle of wit or +delicacy, no subtle conveyance. The difference between coarse and +refined abuse is as the difference between being bruised by a club and +wounded by a poisoned arrow.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Accident.</b>—What reason, like the careful ant, draws laboriously +together, the wind of accident collects in one brief +moment.—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>What men call accident is God's own part.—<i>P. J. Bailey.</i></p> + +<p><b>Acquirements.</b>—Every noble acquisition is attended with its risks: he +who fears to encounter the one must not expect to obtain the +other.—<i>Metastasio.</i></p> + +<p><b>Action.</b>—Action can have no effect upon reasonable minds. It may augment +noise, but it never can enforce argument. If you speak to a dog, you use +action; you hold up your hand thus, because he is a brute; and in +proportion as men are removed from brutes, action will have the less +influence upon them.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Heaven ne'er helps the man who will not act.—<i>Sophocles.</i></p> + +<p>When Demosthenes was asked what was the first part of an orator, what +the second, and what the third? he answered, "Action." The same may I +say. If any should ask me what is the first, the second, the third part +of a Christian, I must answer, "Action."—<i>T. Brooks.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p> + +<p>Our best conjectures, as to the true spring of actions, are very +uncertain; the actions themselves are all we must pretend to know from +history. That Cæsar was murdered by twenty-four conspirators, I doubt +not; but I very much doubt whether their love of liberty was the sole +cause.—<i>Chesterfield.</i></p> + +<p>Action is generally defective, and proves an abortion without previous +contemplation. Contemplation generates, action propagates.—<i>Owen +Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>Remember you have not a sinew whose law of strength is not action; you +have not a faculty of body, mind, or soul, whose law of improvement is +not energy.—<i>E. B. Hall.</i></p> + +<p>Our actions must clothe us with an immortality loathsome or +glorious.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Outward actions can never give a just estimate of us, since there are +many perfections of a man which are not capable of appearing in +actions.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Mark this well, ye proud men of action! Ye are, after all, nothing but +unconscious instruments of the men of thought.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Actors.</b>—Players, sir! I look upon them as no better than creatures set +upon tables and joint stools to make faces and produce laughter, like +dancing dogs. But, sir, you will allow that some players are better than +others? Yes, sir; as some dogs dance better than others.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Each under his borrowed guise the actor belongs to himself. He has put +on a mask, beneath it his real face still exists; he has thrown himself +into a foreign individuality, which in some sense forms a shelter to the +integrity of his own character; he may indeed wear festive attire, but +his mourning is beneath it; he may smile, divert, act, his soul is still +his own; his inner life is undisturbed; no indiscreet question will lift +the veil, no coarse hand will burst open the gates of the +sanctuary.—<i>Countess de Gasparin.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p> + +<p>Oh, there be players that I have seen play, and heard others praise, and +that highly, not to speak it profanely, that, neither having the accent +of Christians, nor the gait of Christian, pagan, or man, have so +strutted and bellowed, that I have thought some of Nature's journeymen +had made men, and not made them well, they imitated humanity so +abominably!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>An actor should take lessons from a painter and a sculptor. For an actor +to represent a Greek hero it is imperative he should have thoroughly +studied those antique statues which have lasted to our day, and mastered +the particular grace they exhibited in their postures, whether sitting, +standing, or walking. Nor should he make attitude his only study. He +should highly develop his mind by an assiduous study of the best +writers, ancient and modern, which will enable him not only to +understand his parts, but to communicate a nobler coloring to his +manners and mien.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + + +<p><b>Admiration.</b>—Admiration and love are like being intoxicated with +champagne; judgment and friendship like being enlivened.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Season your admiration for awhile.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>I wonder whether the subtle measuring of forces will ever come to +measuring the force there would be in one beautiful woman whose mind was +as noble as her face was beautiful—who made a man's passion for her +rush in one current with all the great aims of his life.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Admiration is the base of ignorance.—<i>Balthasar Gracian.</i></p> + +<p>It is better in some respects to be admired by those with whom you live, +than to be loved by them. And this not on account of any gratification +of vanity, but because admiration is so much more tolerant than +love.—<i>Arthur Helps.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p> + +<p>Admiration is a forced tribute, and to extort it from mankind (envious +and ignorant as they are) they must be taken unawares.—<i>James +Northcote.</i></p> + + +<p><b>Adversity.</b>—If adversity hath killed his thousands, prosperity hath +killed his ten thousands; therefore adversity is to be preferred. The +one deceives, the other instructs; the one miserably happy, the other +happily miserable; and therefore many philosophers have voluntarily +sought adversity and so much commend it in their precepts.—<i>Burton.</i></p> + +<p>Adversity borrows its sharpest sting from our impatience.—<i>Bishop +Horne.</i></p> + +<p>Adversity is like the period of the former and of the latter +rain,—cold, comfortless, unfriendly to man and to animal; yet from that +season have their birth the flower and the fruit, the date, the rose, +and the pomegranate.—<i>Walter Scott.</i></p> + +<p>Two powerful destroyers: Time and Adversity.—<i>A. de Musset.</i></p> + +<p>Our dependence upon God ought to be so entire and absolute that we +should never think it necessary, in any kind of distress, to have +recourse to human consolation.—<i>Thomas à Kempis.</i></p> + +<p>Adversity, like winter weather, is of use to kill those vermin which the +summer of prosperity is apt to produce and nourish.—<i>Arrowsmith.</i></p> + +<p>Adversity, how blunt are all the arrows of thy quiver in comparison with +those of Guilt!—<i>Blair.</i></p> + +<p><b>Advice.</b>—People are sooner reclaimed by the side wind of a surprise than +by downright admonition.—<i>L'Estrange.</i></p> + +<p>Agreeable advice is seldom useful advice.—<i>Massillon.</i></p> + +<p><b>Affectation.</b>—All affectation proceeds from the supposition of +possessing something better than the rest of the world possesses. Nobody +is vain of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> possessing two legs and two arms, because that is the +precise quantity of either sort of limb which everybody +possesses.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Affectation is certain deformity.—<i>Blair.</i></p> + +<p><b>Affection.</b>—None of the affections have been noted to fascinate and +bewitch, but love and envy.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>None are so desolate but something dear, dearer than self, possesses or +possess'd.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Those childlike caresses which are the bent of every sweet woman, who +has begun by showering kisses on the hard pate of her bald doll, +creating a happy soul within that woodenness from the wealth of her own +love.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>God give us leisure for these rights of love.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Afflictions.</b>—Before an affliction is digested, consolation comes too +soon; and after it is digested, it comes too late; but there is a mark +between these two, as fine, almost, as a hair, for a comforter to take +aim at.—<i>Sterne.</i></p> + +<p>Stars shine brightest in the darkest night; torches are better for +beating; grapes come not to the proof till they come to the press; +spices smell best when bruised; young trees root the faster for shaking; +gold looks brighter for scouring; juniper smells sweetest in the fire; +the palm-tree proves the better for pressing; chamomile, the more you +tread it, the more you spread it. Such is the condition of all God's +children: they are then most triumphant when most tempted; most glorious +when most afflicted.—<i>Bogatzky.</i></p> + +<p>That which thou dost not understand when thou readest, thou shalt +understand in the day of thy visitation. For many secrets of religion +are not perceived till they be felt, and are not felt but in the day of +a great calamity.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p> + +<p>Nothing so much increases one's reverence for others as a great sorrow +to one's self. It teaches one the depths of human nature. In happiness +we are shallow, and deem others so.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Affliction, like the iron-smith, shapes as it smites.—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p>Afflictions sent by Providence melt the constancy of the noble-minded +but confirm the obduracy of the vile. The same furnace that hardens clay +liquefies gold; and in the strong manifestations of divine power Pharoah +found his punishment, but David his pardon.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Though all afflictions are evils in themselves, yet they are good for +us, because they discover to us our disease and tend to our +cure.—<i>Tillotson.</i></p> + +<p>To love all mankind, from the greatest to the lowest (or meanest), a +cheerful state of being is required; but in order to see into mankind, +into life, and, still more, into ourselves, suffering is +requisite.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Count up man's calamities and who would seem happy? But in truth, +calamity leaves fully half of your life untouched.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Age.</b>—Wrinkles are the tomb of love.—<i>Sarros in.</i></p> + +<p>It cuts one sadly to see the grief of old people; they've no way o' +working it off; and the new spring brings no new shoots out on the +withered tree.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Autumnal green.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Ye old men, brief is the space of life allotted to you; pass it as +pleasantly as ye can, not grieving from morning till eve. Since time +knows not how to preserve our hopes, but, attentive to its own concerns, +flies away.—<i>Euripides.</i></p> + +<p>The Grecian ladies counted their age from their marriage, not their +birth.—<i>Homer.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span></p> + +<p>The vices of old age have the stiffness of it too; and as it is the +unfittest time to learn in, so the unfitness of it to unlearn will be +found much greater.—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p>Old men's eyes are like old men's memories; they are strongest for +things a long way off.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Serene, and safe from passion's stormy rage, how calm they glide into +the port of age!—<i>Shenstone.</i></p> + +<p>Providence gives us notice by sensible declensions, that we may +disengage from the world by degrees.—<i>Jeremy Collier.</i></p> + +<p>Age oppresses by the same degrees that it instructs us, and permits not +that our mortal members, which are frozen with our years, should retain +the vigor of our youth.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Old age adds to the respect due to virtue, but it takes nothing from the +contempt inspired by vice, for age whitens only the hair.—<i>J. Petit +Senn.</i></p> + +<p>Up to forty a woman has only forty springs in her heart. After that age +she has only forty winters.—<i>Arsène Houssaye.</i></p> + +<p>I love everything that's old. Old friends, old times, old manners, old +books, old wine.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>Let us respect gray hairs, especially our own.—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>There are two things which grow stronger in the breast of man, in +proportion as he advances in years: the love of country and religion. +Let them be never so much forgotten in youth, they sooner or later +present themselves to us arrayed in all their charms, and excite in the +recesses of our hearts an attachment justly due to their +beauty.—<i>Chateaubriand.</i></p> + +<p><b>Agitation.</b>—Agitation is the marshaling of the conscience of a nation to +mould its laws.—<i>Sir R. Peel.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p> + +<p>Agitation is the method that plants the school by the side of the +ballot-box.—<i>Wendell Phillips.</i></p> + +<p>Agitation prevents rebellion, keeps the peace, and secures progress. +Every step she gains is gained forever. Muskets are the weapons of +animals. Agitation is the atmosphere of the brains.—<i>Wendell Phillips.</i></p> + +<p><b>Agriculture.</b>—Agriculture is the foundation of manufactures, since the +productions of nature are the materials of art.—<i>Gibbon.</i></p> + +<p>Agriculture not only gives riches to a nation but the only riches she +can call her own.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Let the farmer for evermore be honored in his calling, for they who +labor in the earth are the chosen people of God.—<i>Thomas Jefferson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Allegory.</b>—Allegories and spiritual significations, when applied to +faith, and that seldom, are laudable; but when they are drawn from the +life and conversation, they are dangerous, and, when men make too many +of them, pervert the doctrine of faith. Allegories are fine ornaments, +but not of proof.—<i>Luther.</i></p> + +<p>The allegory of a sophist is always screwed; it crouches and bows like a +snake, which is never straight, whether she go, creep, or lie still; +only when she is dead, she is straight enough.—<i>Luther.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ambition.</b>—It was not till after the terrible passage of the bridge of +Lodi that the idea entered my mind that I might become a decisive actor +in the political arena. Then arose for the first time the spark of great +ambition.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>Well is it known that ambition can creep as well as soar. The pride of +no person in a flourishing condition is more justly to be dreaded than +that of him who is mean and cringing under a doubtful and unprosperous +fortune.—<i>Burke.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p> + +<p>If there is ever a time to be ambitious, it is not when ambition is +easy, but when it is hard. Fight in darkness; fight when you are down; +die hard, and you won't die at all.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>By that sin angels fell.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Where ambition can be so happy as to cover its enterprises, even to the +person himself, under the appearance of principle, it is the most +incurable and inflexible of all human passions.—<i>Hume.</i></p> + +<p>An ardent thirst of honor; a soul unsatisfied with all it has done, and +an unextinguished desire of doing more.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Ambition is but the evil shadow of aspiration.—<i>George MacDonald.</i></p> + +<p>Think not ambition wise, because 'tis brave.—<i>Sir W. Davenant.</i></p> + +<p>Soar not too high to fall, but stoop to rise.—<i>Massinger.</i></p> + +<p><b>America.</b>—Child of the earth's old age.—<i>L. E. Langdon.</i></p> + +<p>The name—American, must always exalt the pride of +patriotism.—<i>Washington.</i></p> + +<p>In America we see a country of which it has been truly said that in no +other are there so few men of great learning and so few men of great +ignorance.—<i>Buckle.</i></p> + +<p>America is as yet in the youth and gristle of her strength.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>If all Europe were to become a prison, America would still present a +loop-hole of escape; and, God be praised! that loop-hole is larger than +the dungeon itself.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Ere long, thine every stream shall find a tongue, land of the many +waters.—<i>Hoffman.</i></p> + +<p>America is rising with a giant's strength. Its bones are yet but +cartilages.—<i>Fisher Ames.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Amusement.</b>—Amusement is the waking sleep of labor. When it absorbs +thought, patience, and strength that might have been seriously employed, +it loses its distinctive character, and becomes the task-master of +idleness.—<i>Willmott.</i></p> + +<p><b>Analogy.</b>—Analogy, although it is not infallible, is yet that telescope +of the mind by which it is marvelously assisted in the discovery of both +physical and moral truth.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Anarchy.</b>—The choking, sweltering, deadly, and killing rule of no rule; +the consecration of cupidity and braying of folly, and dim stupidity and +baseness, in most of the affairs of men. Slop-shirts attainable +three-half-pence cheaper by the ruin of living bodies and immortal +souls.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ancestry.</b>—We take rank by descent. Such of us as have the longest +pedigree, and are therefore the furthest removed from the first who made +the fortune and founded the family, we are the noblest. The nearer to +the fountain the fouler the stream: and that first ancestor who has +soiled his fingers by labor is no better than a parvenu.—<i>Froude.</i></p> + +<p>Breed is stronger than pasture.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The glory of ancestors sheds a light around posterity; it allows neither +their good nor bad qualities to remain in obscurity.—<i>Sallust.</i></p> + +<p>Nobility of birth does not always insure a corresponding nobility of +mind; if it did, it would always act as a stimulus to noble actions; but +it sometimes acts as a clog rather than a spur.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Honorable descent is in all nations greatly esteemed; besides, it is to +be expected that the children of men of worth will be like their +fathers, for nobility is the virtue of a family.—<i>Aristotle.</i></p> + +<p>A long series of ancestors shows the native lustre with advantage; but +if he any way degenerate from his line, the least spot is visible on +ermine.—<i>Dryden.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p> + +<p>The happiest lot for a man, as far as birth is concerned, is that it +should be such as to give him but little occasion to think much about +it.—<i>Whately.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ancients.</b>—In tragedy and satire I maintain, against some critics, that +this age and the last have excelled the ancients; and I would instance +in Shakespeare of the former, in Dorset of the latter.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Though the knowledge they have left us be worth our study, yet they +exhausted not all its treasures; they left a great deal for the industry +and sagacity of after-ages.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p><b>Angels.</b>—In old days there were angels who came and took men by the hand +and led them away from the city of destruction. We see no white-winged +angels now. But yet men are led away from threatening destruction: a +hand is put in theirs, which leads them forth gently towards a calm and +bright land, so that they look no more backward; and the hand may be a +little child's.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth unseen, both when we wake +and when we sleep.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Anger.</b>—If a man meets with injustice, it is not required that he shall +not be roused to meet it; but if he is angry after he has had time to +think upon it, that is sinful. The flame is not wrong, but the coals +are.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>Temperate anger well becomes the wise.—<i>Philemon.</i></p> + +<p>When anger rushes, unrestrained, to action, like a hot steed, it +stumbles in its way.—<i>Savage.</i></p> + +<p>Bad temper is its own scourge. Few things are bitterer than to feel +bitter. A man's venom poisons himself more than his victim.—<i>Charles +Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Above all, gentlemen, no heat.—<i>Talleyrand.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p> + +<p>Anger ventilated often hurries towards forgiveness; anger concealed +often hardens into revenge.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Keep cool and you command everybody.—<i>St. Just.</i></p> + +<p>I never work better than when I am inspired by anger; when I am angry I +can write, pray, and preach well; for then my whole temperament is +quickened, my understanding sharpened, and all mundane vexations and +temptations depart.—<i>Luther.</i></p> + +<p>When one is in a good sound rage, it is astonishing how calm one can +be.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Angling.</b>—I give up fly-fishing; it is a light, volatile, dissipated +pursuit. But ground-bait with a good steady float that never bobs +without a bite is an occupation for a bishop, and in no way interferes +with sermon-making.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>He that reads Plutarch shall find that angling was not contemptible in +the days of Mark Antony and Cleopatra.—<i>Izaak Walton.</i></p> + +<p>Idle time not idly spent.—<i>Sir Henry Wotton.</i></p> + +<p>To see the fish cut with her golden oars the silver stream and greedily +devour the treacherous bait.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Anticipation.</b>—It has been well said that no man ever sank under the +burden of the day. It is when to-morrow's burden is added to the burden +of to-day that the weight is more than a man can bear.—<i>George +MacDonald.</i></p> + +<p>The craving for a delicate fruit is pleasanter than the fruit +itself.—<i>Herder.</i></p> + +<p>The hours we pass with happy prospects in view are more pleasing than +those crowned with fruition. In the first instance, we cook the dish to +our own appetite; in the latter, nature cooks it for us.—<i>Goldsmith.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p> + +<p>We are apt to rely upon future prospects, and become really expensive +while we are only rich in possibility. We live up to our expectations, +not to our possessions, and make a figure proportionable to what we may +be, not what we are. We outrun our present income, as not doubting to +disburse ourselves out of the profits of some future place, project, or +reversion that we have in view.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing is so good as it seems beforehand.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Antiquarian.</b>—A thorough-paced antiquarian not only remembers what all +other people have thought proper to forget, but he also forgets what all +other people think it proper to remember.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>The earliest and the longest has still the mastery over us.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Antithesis.</b>—Young people are dazzled by the brilliancy of antithesis, +and employ it.—<i>Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p>Antithesis may be the blossom of wit, but it will never arrive at +maturity unless sound sense be the trunk, and truth the root.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Apology.</b>—An apology in the original sense was a pleading off from some +charge or imputation, by explaining or defending principles or conduct. +It therefore amounted to a vindication.—<i>Crabbe.</i></p> + +<p>Brother, brother, we are both in the wrong.—<i>Gay.</i></p> + +<p><b>Apothegms.</b>—Nor do apothegms only serve for ornament and delight, but +also for action and civil use, as being the edge tools of speech, which +cut and penetrate the knots of business and affairs.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Exclusively of the abstract sciences, the largest and worthiest portion +of our knowledge consists of aphorisms, and the greatest and best of men +is but an aphorism.—<i>Coleridge.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p> + +<p>Proverbs are potted wisdom.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Appeal.</b>—Seeing all men are not Œdipuses to read the riddle of +another man's inside, and most men judge by appearances, it behooves a +man to barter for a good esteem, even from his clothes and outside. We +guess the goodness of the pasture by the mantle we see it +wears.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p><b>Appearances.</b>—It is the appearances that fill the scene; and we pause +not to ask of what realities they are the proxies. When the actor of +Athens moved all hearts as he clasped the burial urn, and burst into +broken sobs, how few then knew that it held the ashes of his +son!—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>What waste, what misery, what bankruptcy, come from all this ambition to +dazzle others with the glare of apparent worldly success, we need not +describe. The mischievous results show themselves in a thousand ways—in +the rank frauds committed by men who dare to be dishonest, but do not +dare to seem poor; and in the desperate dashes at fortune, in which the +pity is not so much for those who fail, as for the hundreds of innocent +families who are so often involved in their ruin.—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>Foolish men mistake transitory semblances for eternal fact, and go +astray more and more.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>What is a good appearance? It is not being pompous and starchy; for +proud looks lose hearts, and gentle words win them. It is not wearing +fine clothes; for such dressing tells the world that the outside is the +better part of the man. You cannot judge a horse by his harness; but a +modest, gentlemanly appearance, in which the dress is such as no one +could comment upon, is the right and most desirable thing.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>He was a man who stole the livery of the court of heaven to serve the +devil in.—<i>Pollok.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p> + +<p>I more and more see this, that we judge men's abilities less from what +they say or do, than from what they look. 'T is the man's face that +gives him weight. His doings help, but not more than his brow.—<i>Charles +Buxton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Appetite.</b>—Some people have a foolish way of not minding, or pretending +not to mind, what they eat. For my part, I mind very studiously; for I +look upon it, that he who does not mind this, will hardly mind anything +else.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Here's neither want of appetite nor mouths; pray Heaven we be not scant +of meat or mirth.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>This dish of meat is too good for any but anglers, or very honest +men.—<i>Izaak Walton.</i></p> + +<p>And do as adversaries do in law,—strive mightily, but eat and drink as +friends.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The table is the only place where we do not get weary during the first +hour.—<i>Brillat Savarin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Appreciation.</b>—Contemporaries appreciate the man rather than the merit; +but posterity will regard the merit rather than the man.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>It so falls out that what we have we prize not to the worth while we +enjoy it; but being lacked and lost, why, then we rack the +value.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>A man is known to his dog by the smell—to the tailor by the coat—to +his friend by the smile; each of these know him, but how little or how +much depends on the dignity of the intelligence. That which is truly and +indeed characteristic of man is known only to God.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>He who seems not to himself more than he is, is more than he +seems.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Light is above us, and color surrounds us; but if we have not light and +color in our eyes, we shall not perceive them outside us.—<i>Goethe.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p> + +<p>When a nation gives birth to a man who is able to produce a great +thought, another is born who is able to understand and admire +it.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>No story is the same to us after a lapse of time; or rather we who read +it are no longer the same interpreters.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Next to invention is the power of interpreting invention; next to beauty +the power of appreciating beauty.—<i>Margaret Fuller.</i></p> + +<p>You will find poetry nowhere unless you bring some with you.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p><b>Architecture.</b>—Architecture is the art which so disposes and adorns the +edifices raised by man, for whatsoever uses, that the sight of them may +contribute to his mental health, power, and pleasure.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Argument.</b>—There is no arguing with Johnson; for if his pistol misses +fire he knocks you down with the butt end of it.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>Weak arguments are often thrust before my path; but although they are +most unsubstantial, it is not easy to destroy them. There is not a more +difficult feat known than to cut through a cushion with a +sword.—<i>Bishop Whately.</i></p> + +<p>Treating your adversary with respect is giving him an advantage to which +he is not entitled. The greatest part of men cannot judge of reasoning, +and are impressed by character; so that if you allow your adversary a +respectable character, they will think that, though you differ from him, +you may be in the wrong. Treating your adversary with respect is +striking soft in a battle.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>The soundest argument will produce no more conviction in an empty head +than the most superficial declamation; as a feather and a guinea fall +with equal velocity in a vacuum.—<i>Colton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p> + +<p>An ill argument introduced with deference will procure more credit than +the profoundest science with a rough, insolent, and noisy +management.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>One may say, generally, that no deeply rooted tendency was ever +extirpated by adverse argument. Not having originally been founded on +argument, it cannot be destroyed by logic.—<i>G. H. Lewes.</i></p> + +<p>A reason is often good, not because it is conclusive, but because it is +dramatic,—because it has the stamp of him who urges it, and is drawn +from his own resources. For there are arguments <i>ex homine</i> as well as +<i>ad hominem</i>.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>If I were to deliver up my whole self to the arbitrament of special +pleaders, to-day I might be argued into an atheist, and to-morrow into a +pickpocket.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Aristocracy.</b>—And lords, whose parents were the Lord knows who.—<i>De +Foe.</i></p> + +<p>What can they see in the longest kingly line in Europe, save that it +runs back to a successful soldier?—<i>Walter Scott.</i></p> + +<p>If in an aristocracy the people be virtuous, they will enjoy very nearly +the same happiness as in a popular government, and the state will become +powerful.—<i>Montesquieu.</i></p> + +<p>An aristocracy is the true, the only support of a monarchy. Without it +the State is a vessel without a rudder—a balloon in the air. A true +aristocracy, however, must be ancient. Therein consists its real +force,—its talismanic charm.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>I never could believe that Providence had sent a few men into the world, +ready booted and spurred to ride, and millions ready saddled and bridled +to be ridden.—<i>Richard Rumbold.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Armor.</b>—The best armor is to keep out of gunshot.—<i>Lord Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Our armor all is strong, our cause the best; then reason wills our +hearts should be as good.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Art.</b>—Rules may teach us not to raise the arms above the head; but if +passion carries them, it will be well done: passion knows more than +art.—<i>Baron.</i></p> + +<p>It is a great mortification to the vanity of man that his utmost art and +industry can never equal the meanest of nature's productions, either for +beauty or value. Art is only the underworkman, and is employed to give a +few strokes of embellishment to those pieces which come from the hand of +the master.—<i>Hume.</i></p> + +<p>The mission of art is to represent nature; not to imitate her.—<i>W. M. +Hunt.</i></p> + +<p>True art is not the caprice of this or that individual, it is a solemn +page either of history or prophecy; and when, as always in Dante and +occasionally in Byron, it combines and harmonizes this double mission, +it reaches the highest summit of power.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>Art is the right hand of Nature. The latter has only given us being, the +former has made us men.—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>Art does not imitate nature, but it founds itself on the study of +nature—takes from nature the selections which best accord with its own +intention, and then bestows on them that which nature does not possess, +namely, the mind and the soul of man.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>The mother of useful arts is necessity; that of the fine arts is +luxury.—<i>Schopenhaufer.</i></p> + +<p>He who seeks popularity in art closes the door on his own genius, as he +must needs paint for other minds and not for his own.—<i>Washington +Allston.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span></p> + +<p>In art, form is everything; matter, nothing.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Strange thing art, especially music. Out of an art a man may be so +trivial you would mistake him for an imbecile, at best a grown infant. +Put him into his art, and how high he soars above you! How quietly he +enters into a heaven of which he has become a denizen, and, unlocking +the gates with his golden key, admits you to follow, an humble, reverent +visitor.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Art does not imitate, but interpret.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>The artist is the child in the popular fable, every one of whose tears +was a pearl. Ah! the world, that cruel step-mother, beats the poor child +the harder to make him shed more pearls.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>In art there is a point of perfection, as of goodness or maturity in +nature; he who is able to perceive it, and who loves it, has perfect +taste; he who does not feel it, or loves on this side or that, has an +imperfect taste.—<i>Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p>Never judge a work of art by its defects.—<i>Washington Allston.</i></p> + +<p><b>Asceticism.</b>—I recommend no sour ascetic life. I believe not only in the +thorns on the rosebush, but in the roses which the thorns defend. +Asceticism is the child of sensuality and superstition. She is the +secret mother of many a secret sin. God, when he made man's body, did +not give us a fibre too much, nor a passion too many. I would steal no +violet from the young maiden's bosom; rather would I fill her arms with +more fragrant roses. But a life merely of pleasure, or chiefly of +pleasure, is always a poor and worthless life, not worth the living; +always unsatisfactory in its course, always miserable in its +end.—<i>Theodore Parker.</i></p> + +<p>In hope to merit heaven by making earth a hell.—<i>Byron.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p> + +<p>Three forms of asceticism have existed in this weak world. Religious +asceticism, being the refusal of pleasure and knowledge for the sake—as +supposed—of religion; seen chiefly in the Middle Ages. Military +asceticism, being the refusal of pleasure and knowledge for the sake of +power; seen chiefly in the early days of Sparta and Rome. And monetary +asceticism, consisting in the refusal of pleasure and knowledge for the +sake of money; seen in the present days of London and +Manchester.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Aspiration.</b>—The negro king desired to be portrayed as white. But do not +laugh at the poor African; for every man is but another negro king, and +would like to appear in a color different from that with which Fate has +bedaubed him.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>There is no sorrow I have thought more about than that—to love what is +great, and try to reach it, and yet to fail.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The heart is a small thing, but desireth great matters. It is not +sufficient for a kite's dinner, yet the whole world is not sufficient +for it.—<i>Quarles.</i></p> + +<p>There must be something beyond man in this world. Even on attaining to +his highest possibilities, he is like a bird beating against his cage. +There is something beyond, O deathless soul, like a sea-shell, moaning +for the bosom of the ocean to which you belong!—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>Oh for a muse of fire, that would ascend the brightest heaven of +invention! A kingdom for a stage, princes to act, and monarchs to behold +the swelling scene.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The heavens are as deep as our aspirations are high.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>It seems to me we can never give up longing and wishing while we are +thoroughly alive. There are certain things we feel to be beautiful and +good, and we <i>must</i> hunger after them.—<i>George Eliot.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Associates.</b>—Costly followers are not to be liked; lest while a man +maketh his train longer, he makes his wings shorter.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Be very circumspect in the choice of thy company. In the society of +thine equals thou shall enjoy more pleasure; in the society of thy +superiors thou shalt find more profit. To be the best in the company is +the way to grow worse; the best means to grow better is to be the worst +there.—<i>Quarles.</i></p> + +<p>A man should live with his superiors as he does with his fire: not too +near, lest he burn; nor too far off, lest he freeze.—<i>Diogenes.</i></p> + +<p>As there are some flowers which you should smell but slightly to extract +all that is pleasant in them, and which, if you do otherwise, emit what +is unpleasant and noxious, so there are some men with whom a slight +acquaintance is quite sufficient to draw out all that is agreeable; a +more intimate one would be unsatisfactory and unsafe.—<i>Landor.</i></p> + +<p>Those who are unacquainted with the world take pleasure in the intimacy +of great men; those who are wiser dread the consequences.—<i>Horace.</i></p> + +<p><b>Atheism.</b>—By burning an atheist, you have lent importance to that which +was absurd, interest to that which was forbidding, light to that which +was the essence of darkness. For atheism is a system which can +communicate neither warmth nor illumination except from those fagots +which your mistaken zeal has lighted up for its destruction.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>One of the most daring beings in creation, a contemner of God, who +explodes his laws by denying his existence.—<i>John Foster.</i></p> + +<p><b>Authority.</b>—Reasons of things are rather to be taken by weight than +tale.—<i>Jeremy Collier.</i></p> + +<p>The world is ruled by the subordinates, not by their chiefs.—<i>Charles +Buxton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Authors.</b>—Authors may be divided into falling stars, planets, and fixed +stars: the first have a momentary effect. The second have a much longer +duration. But the third are unchangeable, possess their own light, and +work for all time.—<i>Schopenhaufer.</i></p> + +<p>Satire lies about men of letters during their lives, and eulogy after +their death.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>It is commonly the personal character of a writer which gives him his +public significance. It is not imparted by his genius. Napoleon said of +Corneille, "Were he living I would make him a king;" but he did not read +him. He read Racine, yet he said nothing of the kind of Racine. It is +for the same reason that La Fontaine is held in such high esteem among +the French. It is not for his worth as a poet, but for the greatness of +his character which obtrudes in his writings.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Choose an author as you choose a friend.—<i>Roscommon.</i></p> + +<p>Herder and Schiller both in their youth intended to study as surgeons, +but Destiny said: "No, there are deeper wounds than those of the +body,—heal the deeper!" and they wrote.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>A woman who writes commits two sins: she increases the number of books, +and decreases the number of women.—<i>Alphonse Karr.</i></p> + +<p>Thanks and honor to the glorious masters of the pen.—<i>Hood.</i></p> + +<p>The society of dead authors has this advantage over that of the living: +they never flatter us to our faces, nor slander us behind our backs, nor +intrude upon our privacy, nor quit their shelves until we take them +down.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Clear writers, like clear fountains, do not seem so deep as they are, +the turbid looks most profound.—<i>Landor.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p> + +<p>When we look back upon human records, how the eye settles upon writers +as the main landmarks of the past.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Autumn.</b>—Season of mist and mellow fruitfulness.—<i>Keats.</i></p> + +<p>The Sabbath of the year.—<i>Logan.</i></p> + +<p><b>Avarice.</b>—Though avarice will preserve a man from being necessitously +poor, it generally makes him too timorous to be wealthy.—<i>Thomas +Paine.</i></p> + +<p>Avarice is more unlovely than mischievous.—<i>Landor.</i></p> + +<p>The German poet observes that the Cow of Isis is to some the divine +symbol of knowledge, to others but the milch cow, only regarded for the +pounds of butter she will yield. O tendency of our age, to look on Isis +as the milch cow!—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Worse poison to men's souls, doing more murders in this loathsome world +than any mortal drug.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Avarice is generally the last passion of those lives of which the first +part has been squandered in pleasure, and the second devoted to +ambition. He that sinks under the fatigue of getting wealth, lulls his +age with the milder business of saving it.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + + +<h3>B.</h3> + +<p><b>Babblers.</b>—Who think too little, and who talk too much.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>They always talk who never think.—<i>Prior.</i></p> + +<p>Talkers are no good doers.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Babe.</b>—It is curious to see how a self-willed, haughty girl, who sets +her father and mother and all at defiance, and can't be managed by +anybody, at once finds her master in a baby. Her sister's child will +strike the rock and set all her affections flowing.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Bargain.</b>—What is the disposition which makes men rejoice in good +bargains? There are few people who will not be benefited by pondering +over the morals of shopping.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>A dear bargain is always disagreeable, particularly as it is a +reflection upon the buyer's judgment.—<i>Pliny.</i></p> + +<p><b>Bashfulness.</b>—Bashfulness may sometimes exclude pleasure, but seldom +opens any avenue to sorrow or remorse.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Bashfulness is a great hindrance to a man, both in uttering his +sentiments and in understanding what is proposed to him; 'tis therefore +good to press forward with discretion, both in discourse and company of +the better sort.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p><b>Beauty.</b>—The beautiful is always severe.—<i>Ségur.</i></p> + +<p>For converse among men, beautiful persons have less need of the mind's +commending qualities. Beauty in itself is such a silent orator, that it +is ever pleading for respect and liking, and, by the eyes of others is +ever sending to their hearts for love. Yet even this hath this +inconvenience in it—that it makes its possessor neglect the furnishing +of the mind with nobleness. Nay, it oftentimes is a cause that the mind +is ill.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>Man has still more desire for beauty than knowledge of it; hence the +caprices of the world.—<i>X. Doudan.</i></p> + +<p>No better cosmetics than a severe temperance and purity, modesty and +humility, a gracious temper and calmness of spirit; no true beauty +without the signature of these graces in the very countenance.—<i>John +Ray.</i></p> + +<p>An appearance of delicacy, and even of fragility, is almost essential to +beauty.—<i>Burke.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p> + +<p>I am of opinion that there is nothing so beautiful but that there is +something still more beautiful, of which this is the mere image and +expression,—a something which can neither be perceived by the eyes, the +ears, nor any of the senses; we comprehend it merely in the +imagination.—<i>Cicero.</i></p> + +<p>A lovely girl is above all rank.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>There is more or less of pathos in all true beauty. The delight it +awakens has an indefinable, and, as it were, luxurious sadness, which is +perhaps one element of its might.—<i>Tuckerman.</i></p> + +<p>Beauty is the first present nature gives to women and the first it takes +away.—<i>Méré.</i></p> + +<p>In ourselves, rather than in material nature, lie the true source and +life of the beautiful. The human soul is the sun which diffuses light on +every side, investing creation with its lovely hues, and calling forth +the poetic element that lies hidden in every existing thing.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>Beauty is God's handwriting, a wayside sacrament.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Beauty deceives women in making them establish on an ephemeral power the +pretensions of a whole life.—<i>Bignicout.</i></p> + +<p>If there is a fruit that can be eaten raw, it is beauty.—<i>Alphonse +Karr.</i></p> + +<p>Those critics who, in modern times, have the most thoughtfully analyzed +the laws of æsthetic beauty, concur in maintaining that the real +truthfulness of all works of imagination—sculpture, painting, written +fiction—is so purely in the imagination, that the artist never seeks to +represent the positive truth, but the idealized image of a +truth.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>An outward gift which is seldom despised, except by those to whom it has +been refused.—<i>Gibbon.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is impossible that beauty should ever distinctly apprehend +itself.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p><b>Bed.</b>—The bed is a bundle of paradoxes: we go to it with reluctance, yet +we quit it with regret; we make up our minds every night to leave it +early, but we make up our bodies every morning to keep it +late.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>What a delightful thing rest is! The bed has become a place of luxury to +me! I would not exchange it for all the thrones in the +world.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p><b>Beggars.</b>—He is never out of the fashion, or limpeth awkwardly behind +it. He is not required to put on court mourning. He weareth all colors, +fearing none. His costume hath undergone less change than the Quaker's. +He is the only man in the universe who is not obliged to study +appearances.—<i>Lamb.</i></p> + +<p>Aspiring beggary is wretchedness itself.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Benevolence.</b>—There cannot be a more glorious object in creation than a +human being, replete with benevolence, meditating in what manner he +might render himself most acceptable to his Creator by doing most good +to his creatures.—<i>Fielding.</i></p> + +<p>Genuine benevolence is not stationary but peripatetic. It <i>goeth</i> about +doing good.—<i>Nevins.</i></p> + +<p>It is an argument of a candid, ingenuous mind to delight in the good +name and commendations of others; to pass by their defects and take +notice of their virtues; and to speak or hear willingly of the latter; +for in this indeed you may be little less guilty than the evil speaker, +in taking pleasure in evil, though you speak it not.—<i>Leighton.</i></p> + +<p>The root of all benevolent actions is filial piety and fraternal +love.—<i>Confucius.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p> + +<p>True benevolence is to love all men. Recompense injury with justice, and +kindness with kindness.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>It is in contemplating man at a distance that we become +benevolent.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Bible.</b>—As those wines which flow from the first treading of the grapes +are sweeter and better than those forced out by the press, which gives +them the roughness of the husk and the stone, so are those doctrines +best and sweetest which flow from a gentle crush of the Scriptures and +are not wrung into controversies and commonplaces.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>They who are not induced to believe and live as they ought by those +discoveries which God hath made in Scripture, would stand out against +any evidence whatever; even that of a messenger sent express from the +other world.—<i>Atterbury.</i></p> + +<p>But what is meant, after all, by <i>uneducated</i>, in a time when books have +come into the world—come to be household furniture in every habitation +of the civilized world? In the poorest cottage are books—is one book, +wherein for several thousands of years the spirit of man has found light +and nourishment and an interpreting response to whatever is deepest in +him.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>A stream where alike the elephant may swim and the lamb may +wade.—<i>Gregory the Great.</i></p> + +<p>All human discoveries seem to be made only for the purpose of confirming +more strongly the truths come from on high, and contained in the sacred +writings.—<i>Herschel.</i></p> + +<p>I am heartily glad to witness your veneration for a book which, to say +nothing of its holiness or authority, contains more specimens of genius +and taste than any other volume in existence.—<i>Landor.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Bigotry.</b>—A proud bigot, who is vain enough to think that he can deceive +even God by affected zeal, and throwing the veil of holiness over vices, +damns all mankind by the word of his power.—<i>Boileau.</i></p> + +<p>Persecuting bigots may be compared to those burning lenses which +Lenhenhoeck and others composed from ice; by their chilling apathy they +freeze the suppliant; by their fiery zeal they burn the +sufferer.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>A man must be excessively stupid, as well as uncharitable, who believes +there is no virtue but on his own side.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>The worst of mad men is a saint run mad.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p><b>Biography.</b>—As in the case of painters, who have undertaken to give us a +beautiful and graceful figure, which may have some slight blemishes, we +do not wish them to pass over such blemishes altogether, nor yet to mark +them too prominently. The one would spoil the beauty, and the other +destroy the likeness of the picture.—<i>Plutarch.</i></p> + +<p>Biographies of great, but especially of good men, are most instructive +and useful as helps, guides, and incentives to others. Some of the best +are almost equivalent to gospels—teaching high living, high thinking, +and energetic action for their own and the world's good.—<i>Samuel +Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>It is rarely well executed. They only who live with a man can write his +life with any genuine exactness and discrimination; and few people, who +have lived with a man, know what to remark about him.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>History can be formed from permanent monuments and records; but lives +can only be written from personal knowledge, which is growing every day +less, and in a short time is lost forever.—<i>Johnson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span></p> + +<p>Occasionally a single anecdote opens a character; biography has its +comparative anatomy, and a saying or a sentiment enables the skillful +hand to construct the skeleton.—<i>Willmott.</i></p> + +<p>To be ignorant of the lives of the most celebrated men of antiquity is +to continue in a state of childhood all our days.—<i>Plutarch.</i></p> + +<p><b>Birth.</b>—Noble in appearance, but this is mere outside; many noble born +are base.—<i>Euripides.</i></p> + +<p><b>Blessings.</b>—The good things of life are not to be had singly, but come +to us with a mixture; like a schoolboy's holiday, with a task affixed to +the tail of it.—<i>Charles Lamb.</i></p> + +<p>Blessedness consists in the accomplishment of our desires, and in our +having only regular desires.—<i>St. Augustine.</i></p> + +<p>We mistake the gratuitous blessings of Heaven for the fruits of our own +industry.—<i>L'Estrange.</i></p> + +<p>Health, beauty, vigor, riches, and all the other things called goods, +operate equally as evils to the vicious and unjust as they do as +benefits to the just.—<i>Plato.</i></p> + +<p>How blessings brighten as they take their flight!—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>Reflect upon your present blessings, of which every man has many: not on +your past misfortunes, of which all men have some.—<i>Charles Dickens.</i></p> + +<p><b>Blush.</b>—The ambiguous livery worn alike by modesty and shame.—<i>Mrs. +Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>I have mark'd a thousand blushing apparitions to start into her face; a +thousand innocent shames, in angel whiteness, bear away those +blushes.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The glow of the angel in woman.—<i>Mrs. Balfour.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p> + +<p>Such blushes as adorn the ruddy welkin or the purple morn.—<i>Ovid.</i></p> + +<p>Luminous escapes of thought.—<i>Moore.</i></p> + +<p><b>Blustering.</b>—Because half a dozen grasshoppers under a fern make the +field ring with their importunate chink, whilst thousands of great +cattle, reposing beneath the shadow of the British oak, chew the cud and +are silent, pray do not imagine that those who make the noise are the +only inhabitants of the field—that, of course, they are many in +number,—or, that, after all, they are other than the little, shriveled, +meagre, hopping, though loud and troublesome, insects of the +hour.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>There are braying men in the world as well as braying asses; for what is +loud and senseless talking any other than a way of +braying.—<i>L'Estrange.</i></p> + +<p>Wine and the sun will make vinegar without any shouting to help +them.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Boasting.</b>—Usually the greatest boasters are the smallest workers. The +deep rivers pay a larger tribute to the sea than shallow brooks, and yet +empty themselves with less noise.—<i>W. Secker.</i></p> + +<p>With all his tumid boasts, he's like the sword-fish, who only wears his +weapon in his mouth.—<i>Madden.</i></p> + +<p>Every braggart shall be found an ass.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Self-laudation abounds among the unpolished, but nothing can stamp a man +more sharply as ill-bred.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Boldness.</b>—Who bravely dares must sometimes risk a fall.—<i>Smollett.</i></p> + +<p>Women like brave men exceedingly, but audacious men still +more.—<i>Lemesles.</i></p> + +<p><b>Bondage.</b>—The iron chain and the silken cord, both equally are +bonds.—<i>Schiller.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Books.</b>—If a secret history of books could be written, and the author's +private thoughts and meanings noted down alongside of his story, how +many insipid volumes would become interesting, and dull tales excite the +reader!—<i>Thackeray.</i></p> + +<p>When a new book comes out I read an old one.—<i>Rogers.</i></p> + +<p>Be as careful of the books you read as of the company you keep; for your +habits and character will be as much influenced by the former as the +latter.—<i>Paxton Hood.</i></p> + +<p>Homeliness is almost as great a merit in a book as in a house, if the +reader would abide there. It is next to beauty, and a very high +art.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>A book <i>is</i> good company. It is full of conversation without loquacity. +It comes to your longing with full instruction, but pursues you never. +It is not offended at your absent-mindedness, nor jealous if you turn to +other pleasures. It silently serves the soul without recompense, not +even for the hire of love. And yet more noble,—it seems to pass from +itself, and to enter the memory, and to hover in a silvery +transfiguration there, until the outward book is but a body, and its +soul and spirit are flown to you, and possess your memory like a +spirit.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>If the crowns of all the kingdoms of Europe were laid down at my feet in +exchange for my books and my love of reading, I would spurn them +all.—<i>Fénelon.</i></p> + +<p>We ought to regard books as we do sweetmeats, not wholly to aim at the +pleasantest, but chiefly to respect the wholesomest; not forbidding +either, but approving the latter most.—<i>Plutarch.</i></p> + +<p>To buy books only because they were published by an eminent printer, is +much as if a man should buy clothes that did not fit him, only because +made by some famous tailor.—<i>Pope.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p> + +<p>The medicine of the mind.—<i>Diodorus.</i></p> + +<p>Let every man, if possible, gather some good books under his +roof.—<i>Channing.</i></p> + +<p>Wise books for half the truths they hold are honored tombs.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Bores.</b>—I am constitutionally susceptible of noises. A carpenter's +hammer, in a warm summer's noon, will fret me into more than midsummer +madness. But those unconnected, unset sounds are nothing to the measured +malice of music.—<i>Lamb.</i></p> + +<p>These, wanting wit, affect gravity, and go by the name of solid +men.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>If we engage into a large acquaintance and various familiarities, we set +open our gates to the invaders of most of our time; we expose our life +to a quotidian ague of frigid impertinences which would make a wise man +tremble to think of.—<i>Cowley.</i></p> + +<p>The symptoms of compassion and benevolence, in some people, are like +those minute guns which warn you that you are in deadly peril!—<i>Madame +Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Borrowing.</b>—You should only attempt to borrow from those who have but +few of this world's goods, as their chests are not of iron, and they +are, besides, anxious to appear wealthier than they really +are.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>According to the security you offer to her, Fortune makes her loans easy +or ruinous.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Bravery.</b>—True bravery is shown by performing without witnesses what one +might be capable of doing before all the world.—<i>Rochefoucauld.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis late before the brave despair.—<i>Thompson.</i></p> + +<p>The bravest men are subject most to chance.—<i>Dryden.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p> + +<p>The truly brave are soft of heart and eyes.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>People glorify all sorts of bravery except the bravery they might show +on behalf of their nearest neighbors.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Brevity.</b>—To make pleasures pleasant shorten them.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Was there ever anything written by mere man that was wished longer by +its readers, excepting Don Quixote, Robinson Crusoe, and the Pilgrim's +Progress?—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>A sentence well couched takes both the sense and understanding. I love +not those cart-rope speeches that are longer than the memory of man can +fathom.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>I saw one excellency was within my reach—it was brevity, and I +determined to obtain it.—<i>Jay.</i></p> + +<p>Be brief; for it is with words as with sunbeams—the more they are +condensed, the deeper they burn.—<i>Southey.</i></p> + +<p>Concentration alone conquers.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>The more an idea is developed, the more concise becomes its expression: +the more a tree is pruned, the better is the fruit.—<i>Alfred Bougeart.</i></p> + +<p>Oratory, like the Drama, abhors lengthiness; like the Drama, it must be +kept doing. It avoids, as frigid, prolonged metaphysical soliloquy. +Beauties themselves, if they delay or distract the effect which should +be produced on the audience, become blemishes.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>The fewer words the better prayer.—<i>Luther.</i></p> + +<p><b>Business.</b>—Not because of any extraordinary talents did he succeed, but +because he had a capacity on a level for business and not above +it.—<i>Tacitus.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>C.</h3> + +<p><b>Calumny.</b>—Neglected calumny soon expires; show that you are hurt, and +you give it the appearance of truth.—<i>Tacitus.</i></p> + +<p>Calumny crosses oceans, scales mountains, and traverses deserts with +greater ease than the Scythian Abaris, and, like him, rides upon a +poisoned arrow.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Cant.</b>—The affectation of some late authors to introduce and multiply +cant words is the most ruinous corruption in any language.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p>There is such a thing as a peculiar word or phrase cleaving, as it were, +to the memory of the writer or speaker, and presenting itself to his +utterance at every turn. When we observe this, we call it a cant word or +a cant phrase.—<i>Paley.</i></p> + +<p><b>Caution.</b>—Whenever our neighbor's house is on fire, it cannot be amiss +for the engines to play a little on our own. Better to be despised for +too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a +security.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p><b>Censure.</b>—Censure pardons the ravens, but rebukes the doves.—<i>Juvenal.</i></p> + +<p>We do not like our friends the worse because they sometimes give us an +opportunity to rail at them heartily. Their faults reconcile us to their +virtues.—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p> + +<p>Censure is like the lightning which strikes the highest +mountains.—<i>Balthasar Gracian.</i></p> + +<p><b>Chance.</b>—There must be chance in the midst of design; by which we mean +that events which are not designed necessarily arise from the pursuit of +events which are designed.—<i>Paley.</i></p> + +<p>Chance generally favors the prudent.—<i>Joubert.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is strictly and philosophically true in nature and reason that there +is no such thing as chance or accident; it being evident that these +words do not signify anything really existing, anything that is truly an +agent or the cause of any event; but they signify merely men's ignorance +of the real and immediate cause.—<i>Adam Clarke.</i></p> + +<p>What can be more foolish than to think that all this rare fabric of +heaven and earth could come by chance, when all the skill of art is not +able to make an oyster!—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p>He who distrusts the security of chance takes more pains to effect the +safety which results from labor. To find what you seek in the road of +life, the best proverb of all is that which says: "Leave no stone +unturned."—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Change.</b>—The great world spins forever down the ringing grooves of +change.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>A change came o'er the spirit of my dream.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>In this world of change, naught which comes stays, and naught which goes +is lost.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Character.</b>—As there is much beast and some devil in man, so is there +some angel and some God in him. The beast and the devil may be +conquered, but in this life never destroyed.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>Character is not cut in marble—it is not something solid and +unalterable. It is something living and changing, and may become +diseased as our bodies do.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Grit is the grain of character. It may generally be described as heroism +materialized,—spirit and will thrust into heart, brain, and backbone, +so as to form part of the physical substance of the man.—<i>Whipple.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span></p> + +<p>Depend upon it, you would gain unspeakably if you would learn with me to +see some of the poetry and the pathos, the tragedy and the comedy, lying +in the experience of a human soul that looks out through dull gray eyes, +and that speaks in a voice of quite ordinary tones.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Character is the diamond that scratches every other stone—<i>Bartol.</i></p> + +<p>Character is human nature in its best form. It is moral order embodied +in the individual. Men of character are not only the conscience of +society, but in every well-governed state they are its best motive +power; for it is moral qualities in the main which rule the +world.—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>He whose life seems fair, if all his errors and follies were articled +against him would seem vicious and miserable.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p>In common discourse we denominate persons and things according to the +major part of their character: he is to be called a wise man who has but +few follies.—<i>Watts.</i></p> + +<p>Never does a man portray his own character more vividly than in his +manner of portraying another.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>We are not that we are, nor do we treat or esteem each other for such, +but for that we are capable of being.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p><b>Charity.</b>—Charity is a principle of prevailing love to God and good-will +to men, which effectually inclines one endued with it to glorify God, +and to do good to others.—<i>Cruden.</i></p> + +<p>The highest exercise of charity is charity towards the +uncharitable.—<i>Buckminster.</i></p> + +<p>The charities that soothe, and heat, and bless, lie scattered at the +feet of men like flowers.—<i>Wordsworth.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p> + +<p>Prayer carries us half way to God, fasting brings us to the door of his +palace, and alms-giving procures us admission.—<i>Koran.</i></p> + +<p>Shall we repine at a little misplaced charity, we who could no way +foresee the effect,—when an all-knowing, all-wise Being showers down +every day his benefits on the unthankful and undeserving?—<i>Atterbury.</i></p> + +<p>As the purse is emptied the heart is filled.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p>What we employ in charitable uses during our lives is given away from +ourselves: what we bequeath at our death is given from others only, as +our nearest relations.—<i>Atterbury.</i></p> + +<p>Goodness answers to the theological virtue of charity, and admits no +excess but error; the desire of power in excess caused the angels to +fall; the desire of knowledge in excess caused man to fall; but in +charity there is no excess: neither can angel or man come into danger by +it.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Poplicola's doors were opened on the outside, to save the people even +the common civility of asking entrance; where misfortune was a powerful +recommendation, and where want itself was a powerful +mediator.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>When thy brother has lost all that he ever had, and lies languishing, +and even gasping under the utmost extremities of poverty and distress, +dost thou think to lick him whole again only with thy tongue?—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p>What we frankly give, forever is our own.—<i>Granville.</i></p> + +<p>Faith and hope themselves shall die, while deathless charity +remains.—<i>Prior.</i></p> + +<p>The place of charity, like that of God, is everywhere.—<i>Professor +Vinet.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p> + +<p>People do not care to give alms without some security for their money; +and a wooden leg or a withered arm is a sort of draftment upon heaven +for those who choose to have their money placed to account +there.—<i>Mackenzie.</i></p> + +<p><b>Chastity.</b>—Chastity enables the soul to breathe a pure air in the +foulest places; continence makes her strong, no matter in what condition +the body may be; her sway over the senses makes her queenly; her light +and peace render her beautiful.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p><b>Cheerfulness.</b>—Cheerfulness is also an excellent wearing quality. It has +been called the bright weather of the heart.—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>There is no Christian duty that is not to be seasoned and set off with +cheerishness,—which in a thousand outward and intermitting crosses may +yet be done well, as in this vale of tears.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Such a man, truly wise, creams of nature, leaving the sour and the dregs +for philosophy and reason to lap up.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p>Be thou like the bird perched upon some frail thing, although he feels +the branch bending beneath him, yet loudly sings, knowing full well that +he has wings.—<i>Mme. de Gasparin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Children.</b>—With children we must mix gentleness with firmness; they must +not always have their own way, but they must not always be thwarted. If +we never have headaches through rebuking them, we shall have plenty of +heartaches when they grow up. Be obeyed at all costs. If you yield up +your authority once, you will hardly ever get it again.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>The smallest children are nearest to God, as the smallest planets are +nearest the sun.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>The death of a child occasions a passion of grief and frantic tears, +such as your end, brother reader, will never inspire.—<i>Thackeray.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p> + +<p>Childhood has no forebodings; but then, it is soothed by no memories of +outlived sorrow.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Children are excellent physiognomists and soon discover their real +friends. Luttrell calls them all lunatics, and so in fact they are. What +is childhood but a series of happy delusions?—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>The clew of our destiny, wander where we will, lies at the cradle +foot.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>A house is never perfectly furnished for enjoyment unless there is a +child in it rising three years old, and a kitten rising three +weeks.—<i>Southey.</i></p> + +<p>Children have more need of models than of critics.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>The bearing and training of a child is woman's wisdom.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>One of the greatest pleasures of childhood is found in the mysteries +which it hides from the skepticism of the elders, and works up into +small mythologies of its own.—<i>Holmes.</i></p> + +<p>Do not shorten the beautiful veil of mist covering childhood's futurity, +by too hastily drawing away; but permit that joy to be of early +commencement and of long duration, which lights up life so beautifully. +The longer the morning dew remains hanging in the blossoms of flowers, +the more beautiful the day.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Where children are there is the golden age.—<i>Novalis.</i></p> + +<p>In the man whose childhood has known caresses there is always a fibre of +memory that can be touched to gentle issues.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The first duty towards children is to make them happy. If you have not +made them happy, you have wronged them; no other good they may get can +make up for that.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Christ.</b>—Our religion sets before us, not the example of a stupid stoic +who had by obstinate principles hardened himself against all sense of +pain beyond the common measures of humanity, but an example of a man +like ourselves, that had a tender sense of the least suffering, and yet +patiently endured the greatest.—<i>Tillotson.</i></p> + +<p>However consonant to reason his precepts appeared, nothing could have +tempted men to acknowledge him as their God and Saviour but their being +firmly persuaded of the miracles he wrought.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Imitate Jesus Christ.—<i>Franklin.</i></p> + +<p>The history of Christ is as surely poetry as it is history, and in +general, only that history is history which might also be +fable.—<i>Novalis.</i></p> + +<p><b>Christianity.</b>—Christianity is within a man, even as he is gifted with +reason; it is associated with your mother's chair, and with the first +remembered tones of her blessed voice.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>There was never law, or sect, or opinion, did so much magnify goodness +as the Christian religion doth.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>No religion ever appeared in the world whose natural tendency was so +much directed to promote the peace and happiness of mankind. It makes +right reason a law in every possible definition of the word. And +therefore, even supposing it to have been purely a human invention, it +had been the most amiable and the most useful invention that was ever +imposed on mankind for their good.—<i>Lord Bolingbroke.</i></p> + +<p>Far beyond all other political powers of Christianity is the demiurgic +power of this religion over the kingdoms of human opinion.—<i>De +Quincey.</i></p> + +<p>Christianity is the companion of liberty in all its conflicts,—the +cradle of its infancy and the divine source of its claims.—<i>De +Tocqueville.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p> + +<p>Nature never gives to a living thing capacities not particularly meant +for its benefit and use. If nature gives to us capacities to believe +that we have a Creator whom we never saw, of whom we have no direct +proof, who is kind and good and tender beyond all that we know of +kindness and goodness and tenderness on earth, it is because the +endowment of capacities to conceive a Being must be for our benefit and +use; it would not be for our benefit and use if it were a +lie.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>A man can no more be a Christian without facing evil and conquering it +than he can be a soldier without going to battle, facing the cannon's +mouth, and encountering the enemy in the field.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>There was never found in any age of the world, either philosophy, or +sect or religion, or law or discipline, which did so highly exalt the +good of communion, and depress good private and particular, as the holy +Christian faith: hence it clearly appears that it was one and the same +God that gave the Christian law to men who gave those laws of nature to +the creatures.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Christianity is intensely practical. She has no trait more striking than +her common sense.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Christianity ruined emperors, but saved peoples. It opened the palaces +of Constantinople to the barbarians, but it opened the doors of cottages +to the consoling angels of the Saviour.—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i></p> + +<p>Always put the best interpretation on a tenet. Why not on Christianity, +wholesome, sweet, and poetic? It is the record of a pure and holy soul, +humble, absolutely disinterested, a truth-speaker, and bent on serving, +teaching, and uplifting men. Christianity taught the capacity, the +element, to love the All-perfect without a stingy bargain for personal +happiness. It taught that to love him was happiness,—to love him in +others' virtues.—<i>Emerson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p> + +<p>Christian faith is a grand cathedral with divinely pictured windows. +Standing without, you see no glory nor can possibly imagine any; +standing within, every ray of light reveals a harmony of unspeakable +splendors.—<i>Hawthorne.</i></p> + +<p>Christians are like the several flowers in a garden, that have each of +them the dew of heaven, which, being shaken with the wind, they let fall +at each other's roots, whereby they are jointly nourished, and become +nourishers of each other.—<i>Bunyan.</i></p> + +<p><b>Church.</b>—The Church is a union of men arising from the fellowship of +religious life; a union essentially independent of, and differing from, +all other forms of human association.—<i>Rev. Dr. Neander.</i></p> + +<p>A place where misdevotion frames a thousand prayers to saints.—<i>Donne.</i></p> + +<p>She may still exist in undiminished vigor, when some traveler from New +Zealand shall, in the midst of a vast solitude, take his stand on a +broken arch of London bridge, to sketch the ruins of St. +Paul's.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>Surely the church is a place where one day's truce ought to be allowed +to the dissensions and animosities of mankind.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>God never had a house of prayer but Satan had a chapel there.—<i>De Foe.</i></p> + +<p>The church is a sort of hospital for men's souls, and as full of +quackery as the hospital for their bodies. Those who are taken into it +live like pensioners in their Retreat or Sailors' Snug Harbor, where you +may see a row of religious cripples sitting outside in sunny +weather.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p><b>Circumstances.</b>—Circumstances are the rulers of the weak; they are but +the instruments of the wise.—<i>Samuel Lover.</i></p> + +<p>What saves the virtue of many a woman is that protecting god, the +impossible.—<i>Balzac.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Civilization.</b>—Mankind's struggle upwards, in which millions are +trampled to death, that thousands may mount on their bodies.—<i>Mrs. +Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>The old Hindoo saw, in his dream, the human race led out to its various +fortunes. First men were in chains which went back to an iron hand. Then +he saw them led by threads from the brain, which went upward to an +unseen hand. The first was despotism, iron and ruling by force. The last +was civilization, ruling by ideas.—<i>Wendell Phillips.</i></p> + +<p>Nations, like individuals, live and die; but civilization cannot +die.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p><b>Clergymen.</b>—The life of a conscientious clergyman is not easy. I have +always considered a clergyman as the father of a larger family than he +is able to maintain. I would rather have Chancery suits upon my hands +than the cure of souls. I do not envy a clergyman's life as an easy +life, nor do I envy the clergyman who makes it an easy life.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Clergymen consider this world only as a diligence in which they can +travel to another.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>The clergy are as like as peas.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Commander.</b>—The right of commanding is no longer an advantage +transmitted by nature like an inheritance; it is the fruit of labors, +the price of courage.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>The trident of Neptune is the sceptre of the world.—<i>Antoine Lemierre.</i></p> + +<p>He who rules must humor full as much as he commands.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Commerce.</b>—She may well be termed the younger sister, for, in all +emergencies, she looks to agriculture both for defense and for +supply.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Commerce defies every wind, outrides every tempest, and invades every +zone.—<i>Bancroft.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Common Sense.</b>—If common sense has not the brilliancy of the sun it has +the fixity of the stars.—<i>Fernan Caballero.</i></p> + +<p><b>Communists.</b>—One who has yearnings for equal division of unequal +earnings. Idler or bungler, he is willing to fork out his penny and +pocket your shilling.—<i>Ebenezer Elliott.</i></p> + +<p>Your leaders wish to level down as far as themselves; but they cannot +bear leveling up to themselves. They would all have some people under +them; why not then have some people above them.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Communism possesses a language which every people can understand. Its +elements are hunger, envy, death.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Comparison.</b>—All comparisons are odious.—<i>Cervantes.</i></p> + +<p>If we rightly estimate what we call good and evil, we shall find it lies +much in comparison.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p><b>Compassion.</b>—The dew of compassion is a tear.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p><b>Compensation.</b>—Cloud and rainbow appear together. There is wisdom in the +saying of Feltham, that the whole creation is kept in order by discord, +and that vicissitude maintains the world. Many evils bring many +blessings. Manna drops in the wilderness—corn grows in +Canaan.—<i>Willmott.</i></p> + +<p>It is some compensation for great evils that they enforce great +lessons.—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p><b>Complaining.</b>—We do not wisely when we vent complaint and censure. Human +nature is more sensible of smart in suffering than of pleasure in +rejoicing, and the present endurances easily take up our thoughts. We +cry out for a little pain, when we do but smile for a great deal of +contentment.—<i>Feltham.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p> + +<p>Our condition never satisfies us; the present is always the worst. +Though Jupiter should grant his request to each, we should continue to +importune him.—<i>Fontaine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Conceit.</b>—Wind puffs up empty bladders; opinion, fools.—<i>Socrates.</i></p> + +<p>Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? there is more hope of a fool +than of him.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>Nature has sometimes made a fool, but a coxcomb is always of a man's own +making.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Everything without tells the individual that he is nothing; everything +within persuades him that he is everything.—<i>X. Doudan.</i></p> + +<p>Apes look down on men as degenerate specimens of their own race, just as +Hollanders regard the German language as a corruption of the +Dutch.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>If its colors were but fast colors, self-conceit would be a most +comfortable quality. But life is so humbling, mortifying, disappointing +to vanity, that a man's great idea of himself gets washed out of him by +the time he is forty.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>One's self-satisfaction is an untaxed kind of property which it is very +unpleasant to find depreciated.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The pious vanity of man makes him adore his own qualities under the +pretense of worshiping those of God.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Confidence.</b>—Confidence imparts a wondrous inspiration to its possessor. +It bears him on in security, either to meet no danger, or to find matter +of glorious trial.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Society is built upon trust, and trust upon confidence of one another's +integrity.—<i>South.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Conscience.</b>—Conscience is not law; no, God and reason made the law, and +have placed conscience within you to determine.—<i>Sterne.</i></p> + +<p>There are moments when the pale and modest star, kindled by God in +simple hearts, which men call conscience, illumines our path with truer +light than the flaming comet of genius on its magnificent +course.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>No thralls like them that inward bondage have.—<i>Sir P. Sidney.</i></p> + +<p>Some people have no perspective in their conscience. Their moral +convictions are the same on all subjects. They are like a reader who +speaks every word with equal emphasis.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>Conscience enables us not merely to learn the right by experiment and +induction, but intuitively and in advance of experiment; so, in addition +to the experimental way whereby we learn justice from the facts of human +history, we have a transcendental way, and learn it from the facts of +human nature, and from immediate consciousness.—<i>Theodore Parker.</i></p> + +<p>A man's own conscience is his sole tribunal; and he should care no more +for that phantom "opinion" than he should fear meeting a ghost if he +cross the churchyard at dark.—<i>Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Conscience is a coward, and those faults it has not strength enough to +prevent it seldom has justice enough to accuse.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>To say that we have a clear conscience is to utter a solecism: had we +never sinned we should have had no conscience.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>The most miserable pettifogging in the world is that of a man in the +court of his own conscience.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>Conscience serves us especially to judge of the actions of others.—<i>J. +Petit Senn.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is astonishing how soon the whole conscience begins to unravel if a +single stitch drops; one single sin indulged in makes a hole you could +put your head through.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>A still small voice.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p><b>Constancy.</b>—A good man it is not mine to see; could I see a man +possessed of constancy, that would satisfy me.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>Constancy is the chimera of love.—<i>Vauvenargues.</i></p> + +<p>Constancy is the complement of all the other human virtues.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p><b>Contempt.</b>—No sacred fane requires us to submit to contempt.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>There is not in human nature a more odious disposition than a proneness +to contempt, which is a mixture of pride and ill-nature. Nor is there +any which more certainly denotes a bad mind; for in a good and benign +temper there can be no room for this sensation.—<i>Fielding.</i></p> + +<p><b>Contentment.</b>—That happy state of mind, so rarely possessed, in which we +can say, "I have enough," is the highest attainment of philosophy. +Happiness consists, not in possessing much, but in being content with +what we possess. He who wants little always has enough.—<i>Zimmermann.</i></p> + +<p>It is both the curse and blessing of our American life that we are never +quite content. We all expect to go somewhere before we die, and have a +better time when we get there than we can have at home. The bane of our +life is discontent. We say we will work so long, and then we will enjoy +ourselves. But we find it just as Thackeray has expressed it. "When I +was a boy," he said, "I wanted some taffy—it was a shilling—I hadn't +one. When I was a man, I had a shilling, but I didn't want any +taffy."—<i>Robert Collyer.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p> + +<p>Submission is the only reasoning between a creature and its Maker; and +contentment in his will is the best remedy we can apply to +misfortunes.—<i>Sir W. Temple.</i></p> + +<p>Where God hath put exquisite tinge upon the shell washed in the surf, +and planted a paradise of bloom in a child's cheek, let us leave it to +the owl to hoot, and the frog to croak, and the fault-finder to +complain.—<i>De Witt Talmage.</i></p> + +<p><b>Contrast.</b>—The lustre of diamonds is invigorated by the interposition of +darker bodies; the lights of a picture are created by the shades. The +highest pleasure which nature has indulged to sensitive perception is +that of rest after fatigue.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Controversy.</b>—He that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves and +sharpens our skill. Our antagonist is our helper.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>What Tully says of war may be applied to disputing,—it should be always +so managed as to remember that the only true end of it is peace: but +generally true disputants are like true sportsmen,—their whole delight +is in the pursuit; and a disputant no more cares for the truth than the +sportsman for the hare.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>I am yet apt to think that men find their simple ideas agree, though in +discourse they confound one another with different names.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>A man takes contradiction much more easily than people think, only he +will not bear it when violently given, even though it be well-founded. +Hearts are flowers; they remain open to the softly-falling dew, but shut +up in the violent down-pour of rain.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p><b>Conversation.</b>—They who have the true taste of conversation enjoy +themselves in a communication of each other's excellences, and not in a +triumph over their imperfections.—<i>Addison.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is good to rub and polish our brain against that of +others.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>Your reasons at dinner have been sharp and sententious; pleasant without +scurrility, witty without affectation, audacious without impudency, +learned without opinion, and strange without heresy.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>No one will ever shine in conversation who thinks of saying fine things; +to please one must say many things indifferent, and many very +bad.—<i>Francis Lockier.</i></p> + +<p>Conversation warms the mind, enlivens the imagination, and is +continually starting fresh game that is immediately pursued and taken, +and which would never have occurred in the duller intercourse of +epistolary correspondence.—<i>Franklin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Coquetry.</b>—The most effective coquetry is innocence.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p>God created the coquette as soon as he had made the fool.—<i>Victor +Hugo.</i></p> + +<p>Affecting to seem unaffected.—<i>Congreve.</i></p> + +<p>Though 'tis pleasant weaving nets, 'tis wiser to make cages.—<i>Moore.</i></p> + +<p>Beautiful tyrant! Fiend angelical!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>New vows to plight, and plighted vows to break.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p><b>Courage.</b>—God holds with the strong.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>Courage is generosity of the highest order, for the brave are prodigal +of the most precious things.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Courage that grows from constitution often forsakes the man when he has +occasion for it; courage which arises from a sense of duty acts in a +uniform manner.—<i>Addison.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span></p> + +<p>Courage from hearts, and not from numbers, grows.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>As to moral courage, I have very rarely met with <i>the two o'clock in the +morning courage</i>. I mean unprepared courage, that which is necessary on +an unexpected occasion, and which, in spite of the most unforeseen +events, leaves full freedom of judgment and decision.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>Courage our greatest failings does supply.—<i>Waller.</i></p> + +<p>To bear is to conquer our fate.—<i>Campbell.</i></p> + +<p>Moral courage is more worth having than physical; not only because it is +a higher virtue, but because the demand for it is more constant. +Physical courage is a virtue which is almost always put away in the +lumber room. Moral courage is wanted day by day.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>It is only in little matters that men are cowards.—<i>William Henry +Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Any coward can fight a battle when he's sure of winning; but give me the +man who has pluck to fight when he's sure of losing.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>He who would arrive at fairy land must face the +phantoms.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Courtier.</b>—The court is like a palace built of marble; I mean that it is +made up of very hard and very polished people.—<i>La Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p>With the people of court the tongue is the artery of their withered +life, the spiral-spring and flag-feather of their souls.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p><b>Covetousness.</b>—Desire of having is the sin of +covetousness.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The character of covetousness is what a man generally acquires more +through some niggardness or ill grace, in little and inconsiderable +things, than in expenses of any consequence.—<i>Pope.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></p> + +<p>The world itself is too small for the covetous.—<i>Seneca.</i></p> + +<p><b>Cowardice.</b>—At the bottom of a good deal of the bravery that appears in +the world there lurks a miserable cowardice. Men will face powder and +steel because they cannot face public opinion.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Credulity.</b>—Quick believers need broad shoulders.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Let us believe what we can and hope for the rest.—<i>De Finod.</i></p> + +<p>When credulity comes from the heart it does no harm to the +intellect.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>What believer sees a disturbing omission or infelicity? The text, +whether of prophet or of poet, expands for whatever we can put into it, +and even his bad grammar is sublime.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Observe your enemies for they first find out your faults.—<i>Antishenes.</i></p> + +<p>Action is generally defective, and proves an abortion without previous +contemplation. Contemplation generates, action propagates.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p><b>Crime.</b>—If poverty is the mother of crimes, want of sense is the father +of them.—<i>Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p>Crimes lead into one another. They who are capable of being forgers are +capable of being incendiaries.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p><b>Criticism.</b>—Solomon says rightly: "The wounds made by a friend are worth +more than the caresses of a flatterer." Nevertheless, it is better that +the friend wound not at all.—<i>Joseph de Maistre.</i></p> + +<p>The rule in carving holds good as to criticism,—never cut with a knife +what you can cut with a spoon.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p> + +<p>The critic eye, that microscope of wit.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Men have commonly more pleasure in the criticism which hurts, than in +that which is innocuous; and are more tolerant of the severity which +breaks hearts and ruins fortunes, than of that which falls impotently on +the grave.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>Certain critics resemble closely those people who when they would laugh +show ugly teeth.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Every one is eagle-eyed to see another's faults and his +deformity.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>For I am nothing if not critical.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>He who stabs you in the dark with a pen would do the same with a +penknife, were he equally safe from detection and the +law.—<i>Quintilian.</i></p> + +<p>Silence is the severest criticism.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>All the other powers of literature are coy and haughty, they must be +long courted, and at last are not always gained; but criticism is a +goddess easy of access and forward of advance, she will meet the slow +and encourage the timorous. The want of meaning she supplies with words, +and the want of spirit she recompenses with malignity.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>It is a barren kind of criticism which tells you what a thing is +not.—<i>Rufus Griswold.</i></p> + +<p>The legitimate aim of criticism is to direct attention to the excellent. +The bad will dig its own grave, and the imperfect may be safely left to +that final neglect from which no amount of present undeserved popularity +can rescue it.—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p>There are some critics who change everything that comes under their +hands to gold, but to this privilege of Midas they join sometimes his +ears!—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p><b>Cruelty.</b>—Cruelty, the sign of currish kind.—<i>Spenser.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p> + +<p>One of the ill effects of cruelty is that it makes the by-standers +cruel. How hard the English people grew in the time of Henry VIII. and +Bloody Mary.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Man's inhumanity to man makes countless thousands mourn.—<i>Burns.</i></p> + +<p>Cruelty, like every other vice, requires no motive outside of itself; it +only requires opportunity.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Cultivation.</b>—Cultivation is the economy of force.—<i>Liebig.</i></p> + +<p>The highest purpose of intellectual cultivation is to give a man a +perfect knowledge and mastery of his own inner self; to render our +consciousness its own light and its own mirror. Hence there is the less +reason to be surprised at our inability to enter fully into the feelings +and characters of others. No one who has not a complete knowledge of +himself will ever have a true understanding of another.—<i>Novalis.</i></p> + +<p>Neither the naked hand, nor the understanding, left to itself, can do +much; the work is accomplished by instruments and helps of which the +need is not less for the understanding than the hand.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>... Without art, a nation is a soulless body; without science, a +straying wanderer. Without warmth and light, nature cannot thrive, nor +humanity increase: the light and warmth of humanity is "art and +science."—<i>Kozlay.</i></p> + +<p><b>Cunning.</b>—Cunning has effect from the credulity of others, rather than +from the abilities of those who are cunning. It requires no +extraordinary talents to lie and deceive.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Cleverness and cunning are incompatible. I never saw them united. The +latter is the resource of the weak, and is only natural to them; +children and fools are always cunning, but clever people +never.—<i>Byron.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span></p> + +<p>Discourage cunning in a child; cunning is the ape of wisdom.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>Cunning signifies especially a habit or gift of overreaching, +accompanied with enjoyment and a sense of superiority. It is associated +with small and dull conceit, and with an absolute want of sympathy or +affection. It is the intensest rendering of vulgarity, absolute and +utter.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Curiosity.</b>—A person who is too nice an observer of the business of the +crowd, like one who is too curious in observing the labor of the bees, +will often be stung for his curiosity.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>The gratification of curiosity rather frees us from uneasiness than +confers pleasure; we are more pained by ignorance than delighted by +instruction. Curiosity is the thirst of the soul.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Custom.</b>—The despotism of custom is on the wane; we are not content to +know that things are; we ask whether they ought to be.—<i>John Stuart +Mill.</i></p> + +<p>Immemorial custom is transcendent law.—<i>Menu.</i></p> + +<p>In this great society wide lying around us, a critical analysis would +find very few spontaneous actions. It is almost all custom and gross +sense.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>Custom doth make dotards of us all.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p><b>Cynics.</b>—It will be very generally found that those who sneer habitually +at human nature, and affect to despise it, are among its worst and least +pleasant samples.—<i>Dickens.</i></p> + +<p>Cynicism is old at twenty.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>D.</h3> + +<p><b>Dandy.</b>—A dandy is a clothes-wearing man,—a man whose trade, office, +and existence consist in the wearing of clothes. Every faculty of his +soul, spirit, person, and purse is heroically consecrated to this one +object,—the wearing of clothes wisely and well; so that as others dress +to live, he lives to dress.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>A fool may have his coat embroidered with gold, but it is a fool's coat +still.—<i>Rivarol.</i></p> + +<p><b>Danger.</b>—It is better to meet danger than to wait for it. He that is on +a lee shore, and foresees a hurricane, stands out to sea, and encounters +a storm to avoid a shipwreck.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Death.</b>—It is not death, it is dying, that alarms me.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>What is death? To go out like a light, and in a sweet trance to forget +ourselves and all the passing phenomena of the day, as we forget the +phantoms of a fleeting dream; to form, as in a dream, new connections +with God's world; to enter into a more exalted sphere, and to make a new +step up man's graduated ascent of creation.—<i>Zschokke.</i></p> + +<p>Heaven gives its favorites early death.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Our respect for the dead, when they are <i>just</i> dead, is something +wonderful, and the way we show it more wonderful still. We show it with +black feathers and black horses; we show it with black dresses and black +heraldries; we show it with costly obelisks and sculptures of sorrow, +which spoil half of our beautiful cathedrals. We show it with frightful +gratings and vaults, and lids of dismal stone, in the midst of the quiet +grass; and last, and not least, we show it by permitting ourselves to +tell any number of falsehoods we think amiable or credible in the +epitaph.—<i>Ruskin.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p> + +<p>There are remedies for all things but death.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>We understand death for the first time when he puts his hand upon one +whom we love.—<i>Mme. de Staël.</i></p> + +<p>Too early fitted for a better state.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Death, the dry pedant, spares neither the rose nor the thistle, nor does +he forget the solitary blade of grass in the distant waste. He destroys +thoroughly and unceasingly. Everywhere we may see how he crushes to dust +plants and beasts, men and their works. Even the Egyptian pyramids, that +would seem to defy him, are trophies of his power,—monuments of decay, +graves of primeval kings.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>There is no fireside, howsoe'er defended, but has one vacant +chair!—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>And though mine arm should conquer twenty worlds, there's a lean fellow +beats all conquerors.—<i>Thomas Dekker.</i></p> + +<p>Death is a commingling of eternity with time.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>To the Christian, whose life has been dark with brooding cares that +would not lift themselves, and on whom chilling rains of sorrow have +fallen at intervals through all his years, death is but the clearing-up +shower; and just behind it are the songs of angels, and the serenity and +glory of heaven.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>That golden key that opes the palace of eternity.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>When death gives us a long lease of life, it takes as hostages all those +whom we have loved.—<i>Madame Necker.</i></p> + +<p>Man makes a death which nature never made.—<i>Young.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p> + +<p>The golden ripple on the wall came back again, and nothing else stirred +in the room. The old, old fashion! The fashion that came in with our +first garments, and will last unchanged until our race has run its +course, and the wide firmament is rolled up like a scroll. The old, old +fashion—Death! Oh, thank God, all who see it, for that older fashion +yet—of Immortality!—<i>Dickens.</i></p> + +<p>God's finger touched him, and he slept.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was, and the spirit shall +return unto God who gave it.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>Nature intends that, at fixed periods, men should succeed each other by +the instrumentality of death. We shall never outwit Nature; we shall die +as usual.—<i>Fontenelle.</i></p> + +<p>After life's fitful fever he sleeps well.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Flesh is but the glass which holds the dust that measures all our time, +which also shall be crumbled into dust.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Death expecteth thee everywhere; be wise, therefore, and expect death +everywhere.—<i>Quarles.</i></p> + +<p>The world. Oh, the world is so sweet to the dying!—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>The world is full of resurrections. Every night that folds us up in +darkness is a death; and those of you that have been out early, and have +seen the first of the dawn, will know it,—the day rises out of the +night like a being that has burst its tomb and escaped into +life.—<i>George MacDonald.</i></p> + +<p>The dissolution of forms is no loss in the mass of matter.—<i>Pliny.</i></p> + +<p>Faith builds a bridge across the gulf of death.—<i>Young.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Debt.</b>—He that dies pays all debts.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Poverty is hard, but debt is horrible; a man might as well have a smoky +house and a scolding wife, which are said to be the two worst evils of +our life.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>The first step in debt is like the first step in falsehood, almost +involving the necessity of proceeding in the same course, debt following +debt as lie follows lie. Haydon, the painter, dated his decline from the +day on which he first borrowed money.—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>Do not accustom yourself to consider debt only as an inconvenience; you +will find it a calamity.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>That swamp [of debt] which tempts men towards it with such a pretty +covering of flowers and verdure. It is wonderful how soon a man gets up +to his chin there,—in a condition in which, spite of himself, he is +forced to think chiefly of release, though he had a scheme of the +universe in his soul.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Youth is in danger until it learns to look upon debts as +furies.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Deceit.</b>—No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to +himself and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered +as to which may be true.—<i>Hawthorne.</i></p> + +<p>Idiots only may be cozened twice.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>It is a double pleasure to deceive the deceiver.—<i>Fontaine.</i></p> + +<p>There is less misery in being cheated than in that kind of wisdom which +perceives, or thinks it perceives, that all mankind are +cheats.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>Like unto golden hooks that from the foolish fish their baits do +hide.—<i>Spenser.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span></p> + +<p>Libertines are hideous spiders that often catch pretty +butterflies.—<i>Diderot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Decency.</b>—As beauty of body, with an agreeable carriage, pleases the +eye, and that pleasure consists in that we observe all the parts with a +certain elegance are proportioned to each other; so does decency of +behavior which appears in our lives obtain the approbation of all with +whom we converse, from the order, consistency, and moderation of our +words and actions.—<i>Steele.</i></p> + +<p>Virtue and decency are so nearly related that it is difficult to +separate them from each other but in our imagination.—<i>Tully.</i></p> + +<p><b>Declamation.</b>—Fine declamation does not consist in flowery periods, +delicate allusions, or musical cadences, but in a plain, open, loose +style, where the periods are long and obvious; where the same thought is +often exhibited in several points of view.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>The art of declamation has been sinking in value from the moment that +speakers were foolish enough to publish, and hearers wise enough to +read.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Deeds.</b>—A word that has been said may be unsaid: it is but air. But when +a deed is done, it cannot be undone, nor can our thoughts reach out to +all the mischiefs that may follow.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>How oft the sight of means to do ill deeds makes deeds ill +done!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Legal deeds were invented to remind men of their promises, or to convict +them of having broken them,—a stigma on the human race.—<i>Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p>Good actions ennoble us, and we are the sons of our own +deeds.—<i>Cervantes.</i></p> + +<p>We should believe only in works; words are sold for nothing +everywhere.—<i>Rojas.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Delay.</b>—We do not directly go about the execution of the purpose that +thrills us, but shut our doors behind us, and ramble with prepared +minds, as if the half were already done. Our resolution is taking root +or hold on the earth then, as seeds first send a shoot downward, which +is fed by their own albumen, ere they send one upwards to the +light.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>Time drinketh up the essence of every great and noble action, which +ought to be performed! and is delayed in the execution.—<i>Veeshnoo +Sarma.</i></p> + +<p><b>Democracy.</b>—Democracy will itself accomplish the salutary universal +change from delusive to real, and make a new blessed world of us by and +by.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>The love of democracy is that of equality.—<i>Montesquieu.</i></p> + +<p><b>Dependence.</b>—The beautiful must ever rest in the arms of the sublime. +The gentle needs the strong to sustain it, as much as the rock-flowers +need rocks to grow on, or the ivy the rugged wall which it +embraces.—<i>Mrs. Stowe.</i></p> + +<p>Thou shalt know by experience how salt the savor is of other's bread, +and how sad a path it is to climb and descend another's +stairs.—<i>Dante.</i></p> + +<p>How beautifully is it ordered, that as many thousands work for one, so +must every individual bring his labor to make the whole! The highest is +not to despise the lowest, nor the lowest to envy the highest; each must +live in all and by all. Who will not work, neither shall he eat. So God +has ordered that men, being in need of each other, should learn to love +each other and bear each other's burdens.—<i>G. A. Sala.</i></p> + +<p>We are never without a pilot. When we know not how to steer, and dare +not hoist a sail, we can drift. The current knows the way, though we do +not. The ship of heaven guides itself, and will not accept a wooden +rudder.—<i>Emerson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Desire.</b>—It is easier to suppress the first desire than to satisfy all +that follow it.—<i>Franklin.</i></p> + +<p>Lack of desire is the greatest riches.—<i>Seneca.</i></p> + +<p>Where necessity ends, curiosity begins; and no sooner are we supplied +with everything that nature can demand, than we sit down to contrive +artificial appetites.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>The thirst of desire is never filled, nor fully satisfied.—<i>Cicero.</i></p> + +<p>The man's desire is for the woman; but the woman's desire is rarely +other than for the desire of the man.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>Desires are the pulse of the soul.—<i>Manton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Despair.</b>—Considering the unforeseen events of this world, we should be +taught that no human condition should inspire men with absolute +despair.—<i>Fielding.</i></p> + +<p>Leaden-eyed despair.—<i>Keats.</i></p> + +<p>In the lottery of life there are more prizes drawn than blanks, and to +one misfortune there are fifty advantages. Despondency is the most +unprofitable feeling a man can indulge in.—<i>De Witt Talmage.</i></p> + +<p>He that despairs limits infinite power to finite +apprehensions.—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p>It is impossible for that man to despair who remembers that his helper +is omnipotent.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p>He that despairs measures Providence by his own little contracted +model.—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p>Juliet was a fool to kill herself, for in three months she'd have +married again, and been glad to be quit of Romeo.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>What we call our despair is often only the painful eagerness of unfed +hope.—<i>George Eliot.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Despotism.</b>—It is difficult for power to avoid despotism. The possessors +of rude health; the individualities cut out by a few strokes, solid for +the very reason that they are all of a piece; the complete characters +whose fibres have never been strained by a doubt; the minds that no +questions disturb and no aspirations put out of breath,—these, the +strong, are also the tyrants.—<i>Countess de Gasparin.</i></p> + +<p>There is something among men more capable of shaking despotic power than +lightning, whirlwind, or earthquake; that is, the threatened indignation +of the whole civilized world.—<i>Daniel Webster.</i></p> + +<p><b>Destiny.</b>—The scape-goat which we make responsible for all our crimes +and follies; a necessity which we set down for invincible, when we have +no wish to strive against it.—<i>Mrs. Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>Our deeds determine us, as much as we determine our deeds.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + + +<p><b>Detention.</b>—Never hold any one by the button or the hand, in order to be +heard out; for if people are unwilling to hear you, you had better hold +your tongue than them.—<i>Chesterfield.</i></p> + +<p><b>Detraction.</b>—Happy are they that hear their detractions, and can put +them to mending.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>In some unlucky dispositions there is such an envious kind of pride that +they cannot endure that any but themselves should be set forth for +excellent; so that when they hear one justly praised they will either +seek to dismount his virtues, or, if they be like a clear light, they +will stab him with a <i>but</i> of detraction; as if there were something yet +so foul as did obnubilate even his brightest glory. When their tongue +cannot justly condemn him, they will leave him suspected by their +silence.—<i>Feltham.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Dew.</b>—That same dew, which sometimes withers buds, was wont to swell, +like round and orient pearls, stood now within the pretty flow'rets' +eyes, like tears, that did their own disgrace bewail.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Earth's liquid jewelry, wrought of air.—<i>P. J. Bailey.</i></p> + +<p><b>Diet.</b>—Regimen is better than physic. Every one should be his own +physician. We ought to assist, and not to force nature: but more +especially we should learn to suffer, grow old, and die. Some things are +salutary, and others hurtful. Eat with moderation what you know by +experience agrees with your constitution. Nothing is good for the body +but what we can digest. What medicine can procure digestion? Exercise. +What will recruit strength? Sleep. What will alleviate incurable evils? +Patience.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>Free-livers on a small scale, who are prodigal within the compass of a +guinea.—<i>Washington Irving.</i></p> + +<p><b>Difficulties.</b>—The greatest difficulties lie where we are not looking +for them.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>The weak sinews become strong by their conflict with difficulties. Hope +is born in the long night of watching and tears. Faith visits us in +defeat and disappointment, amid the consciousness of earthly frailty and +the crumbling tombstones of mortality.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>How strangely easy difficult things are!—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Diffidence.</b>—Nothing sinks a young man into low company, both of women +and men, so surely as timidity and diffidence of himself. If he thinks +that he shall not, he may depend upon it he will not, please. But with +proper endeavors to please, and a degree of persuasion that he shall, it +is almost certain that he will.—<i>Chesterfield.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p> + +<p>No congress, nor mob, nor guillotine, nor fire, nor all together, can +avail, to cut out, burn, or destroy the offense of superiority in +persons. The superiority in him is inferiority in me.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Dignity.</b>—It is at once the thinnest and most effective of all the +coverings under which duncedom sneaks and skulks. Most of the men of +dignity, who awe or bore their more genial brethren, are simply men who +possess the art of passing off their insensibility for wisdom, their +dullness for depth, and of concealing imbecility of intellect under +haughtiness of manner.—<i>Whipple.</i></p> + +<p><b>Dirt.</b>—"Ignorance," says Ajax, "is a painless evil;" so, I should think, +is dirt, considering the merry faces that go along with it.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Martin, if dirt was trumps, what hands you would hold.—<i>Lamb.</i></p> + +<p><b>Disappointment.</b>—Life often seems like a long shipwreck, of which the +débris are friendship, glory, and love: the shores of existence are +strewn with them.—<i>Mme. de Staël.</i></p> + +<p>O world! how many hopes thou dost engulf!—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i></p> + +<p>Thirsting for the golden fountain of the fable, from how many streams +have we turned away, weary and in disgust!—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>We mortals, men and women, devour many a disappointment between +breakfast and dinner-time; keep back the tears and look a little pale +about the lips, and in answer to inquiries say, "Oh, nothing!" Pride +helps us; and pride is not a bad thing when it only urges us to hide our +own hurts—not to hurt others.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Ah! what seeds for a paradise I bore in my heart, of which birds of prey +have robbed me.—<i>Richter.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Discourtesy.</b>—Discourtesy does not spring merely from one bad quality, +but from several,—from foolish vanity, from ignorance of what is due to +others, from indolence, from stupidity, from distraction of thought, +from contempt of others, from jealousy.—<i>La Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p><b>Discovery.</b>—Through every rift of discovery some seeming anomaly drops +out of the darkness, and falls as a golden link in the great chain of +order.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Discretion.</b>—Be discreet in all things, and go render it unnecessary to +be mysterious about any.—<i>Wellington.</i></p> + +<p>Though a man has all other perfections and wants discretion, he will be +of no great consequence in the world; but if he has this single talent +in perfection, and but a common share of others, he may do what he +pleases in his particular station of life.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p><b>Dishonesty.</b>—So grasping is dishonesty that it is no respecter of +persons: it will cheat friends as well as foes; and, were it possible, +even God himself!—<i>Bancroft.</i></p> + +<p><b>Dispatch.</b>—Use dispatch. Remember that the world only took six days to +create. Ask me for whatever you please except <i>time</i>: that is the only +thing which is beyond my power.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>True dispatch is a rich thing; for time is the measure of business, as +money is of wares, and business is bought at a dear hand where there is +small dispatch.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p><b>Disposition.</b>—A tender-hearted and compassionate disposition, which +inclines men to pity and feel the misfortunes of others, and which is +even for its own sake incapable of involving any man in ruin and misery, +is of all tempers of mind the most amiable; and, though it seldom +receives much honor, is worthy of the highest.—<i>Fielding.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p> + +<p>A good disposition is more valuable than gold; for the latter is the +gift of fortune, but the former is the dower of nature.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p><b>Distrust.</b>—As health lies in labor, and there is no royal road to it but +through toil, so there is no republican road to safety but in constant +distrust.—<i>Wendell Phillips.</i></p> + +<p>What loneliness is more lonely than distrust?—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>When desperate ills demand a speedy cure, distrust is cowardice, and +prudence folly.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Doubt.</b>—Remember Talleyrand's advice, "If you are in doubt whether to +write a letter or not—don't!" The advice applies to many doubts in life +besides that of letter writing.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Doubt is hell in the human soul.—<i>Gasparin.</i></p> + +<p>Doubt springs from the mind; faith is the daughter of the soul.—<i>J. +Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>Modest doubt is called the beacon of the wise.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The doubts of an honest man contain more moral truth than the profession +of faith of people under a worldly yoke.—<i>X. Doudan.</i></p> + +<p>There lives more faith in honest doubt, believe me, than in half the +creeds.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Every body drags its shadow, and every mind its doubt.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p><b>Dreams.</b>—Children of night, of indigestion bred.—<i>Churchill.</i></p> + +<p>A world of the dead in the hues of life.—<i>Mrs. Hemans.</i></p> + +<p>The fickle pensioners of Morpheus' train.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Dreams always go by contraries, my dear.—<i>Samuel Lover.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span></p> + +<p>We are somewhat more than ourselves in our sleeps, and the slumber of +the body seems to be but the waking of the soul. It is the litigation of +sense, but the liberty of reason; and our waking conceptions do not +match the fancies of our sleeps.—<i>Sir T. Browne.</i></p> + +<p>The mockery of unquiet slumbers.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Like a dog, he hunts in dreams.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Dress.</b>—It is well known that a loose and easy dress contributes much to +give to both sexes those fine proportions of body that are observable in +the Grecian statues, and which serve as models to our present +artists.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p><b>Duty.</b>—Stern daughter of the voice of God.—<i>Wordsworth.</i></p> + +<p>Duty is a power which rises with us in the morning and goes to rest with +us at night. It is coextensive with the action of our intelligence. It +is the shadow which cleaves to us, go where we will, and which only +leaves us when we leave the light of life.—<i>Gladstone.</i></p> + +<p>Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God and keep his +commandments; for this is the whole duty of man.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>The idea of duty, that recognition of something to be lived for beyond +the mere satisfaction of self, is to the moral life what the addition of +a great central ganglion is to animal life.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Do the duty which lies nearest to thee.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Those who do it always would as soon think of being conceited of eating +their dinner as of doing their duty. What honest boy would pride himself +on not picking a pocket? A thief who was trying to reform +would.—<i>George MacDonald.</i></p> + +<p>To what gulfs a single deviation from the track of human duties +leads!—<i>Byron.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p> + +<p>The duty of man is not a wilderness of turnpike gates, through which he +is to pass by tickets from one to the other. It is plain and simple, and +consists but of two points: his duty to God, which every man must feel; +and, with respect to his neighbor, to do as he would be done +by.—<i>Thomas Paine.</i></p> + +<p>There is not a moment without some duty.—<i>Cicero.</i></p> + +<p>If doing what ought to be done be made the first business, and success a +secondary consideration,—is not this the way to exalt +virtue?—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>The path of duty lies in what is near, and men seek for it in what is +remote; the work of duty lies in what is easy, and men seek for it in +what is difficult.—<i>Mencius.</i></p> + +<p>Duty does not consist in suffering everything, but in suffering +everything for duty. Sometimes, indeed, it is our duty not to +suffer.—<i>Dr. Vinet.</i></p> + +<p>He who is false to present duty breaks a thread in the loom, and will +find the flaw when he may have forgotten its cause.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>The primal duties shine aloft, like stars; the charities that soothe, +and heal, and bless, are scattered at the feet of man, like +flowers.—<i>Wordsworth.</i></p> + +<p>Can man or woman choose duties? No more than they can choose their +birthplace, or their father and mother.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + + +<h3>E.</h3> + +<p><b>Ear.</b>—A side intelligencer.—<i>Lamb.</i></p> + +<p>Eyes and ears, two traded pilots 'twixt the dangerous shores of will and +judgment.—<i>Shakespeare.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></p> + +<p>The wicket of the soul.—<i>Sir J. Davies.</i></p> + +<p>The road to the heart.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p><b>Early-rising.</b>—Early-rising not only gives us more life in the same +number of our years, but adds likewise to their number; and not only +enables us to enjoy more of existence in the same measure of time, but +increases also the measure.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>The famous Apollonius being very early at Vespasian's gate, and finding +him stirring, from thence conjectured that he was worthy to govern an +empire, and said to his companion, "This man surely will be emperor, he +is so early."—<i>Caussin.</i></p> + +<p>When one begins to turn in bed, it is time to get up.—<i>Wellington.</i></p> + +<p>The difference between rising at five and seven o'clock in the morning, +for the space of forty years, supposing a man to go to bed at the same +hour at night, is nearly equivalent to the addition of ten years to a +man's life.—<i>Doddridge.</i></p> + +<p>Whoever has tasted the breath of morning knows that the most +invigorating and most delightful hours of the day are commonly spent in +bed; though it is the evident intention of nature that we should enjoy +and profit by them.—<i>Southey.</i></p> + +<p><b>Economy.</b>—Economy is half the battle of life; it is not so hard to earn +money as to spend it well.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>Ere fancy you consult, consult your purse.—<i>Franklin.</i></p> + +<p>I can get no remedy against this consumption of the purse; borrowing +only lingers and lingers it out; but the disease is +incurable.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The back-door robs the house.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>The world abhors closeness, and all but admires extravagance. Yet a +slack hand shows weakness, a tight hand, strength.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Education.</b>—Education gives fecundity of thought, copiousness of +illustration, quickness, vigor, fancy, words, images, and illustrations; +it decorates every common thing, and gives the power of trifling without +being undignified and absurd.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Still I am learning.—<i>Motto of Michael Angelo.</i></p> + +<p>If we work upon marble, it will perish; if we work upon brass, time will +efface it; if we rear temples, they will crumble into dust; but if we +work upon immortal minds, if we imbue them with principles, with the +just fear of God and love of our fellow-men, we engrave on those tablets +something which will brighten to all eternity.—<i>Daniel Webster.</i></p> + +<p>The education of life perfects the thinking mind, but depraves the +frivolous.—<i>Mme. de Staël.</i></p> + +<p>What sculpture is to a block of marble, education is to a human soul. +The philosopher, the saint, and the hero,—the wise, the good, and the +great man, very often lie hid and concealed in a plebeian, which a +proper education might have disinterred and brought to +light.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Very few men are wise by their own counsel, or learned by their own +teaching; for he that was only taught by himself had a fool to his +master.—<i>Ben Jonson.</i></p> + +<p>I am always for getting a boy forward in his learning, for that is sure +good. I would let him at first read <i>any</i> English book which happens to +engage his attention; because you have done a great deal when you have +brought him to have entertainment from a book. He'll get better books +afterwards.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>The essential difference between a good and a bad education is this, +that the former draws on the child to learn by making it sweet to him; +the latter drives the child to learn, by making it sour to him if he +does not.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p> + +<p>Nothing so good as a university education, nor worse than a university +without its education.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Education is all paint: it does not alter the nature of the wood that is +under it, it only improves its appearance a little. Why I dislike +education so much is that it makes all people alike, until you have +examined into them; and it is sometimes so long before you get to see +under the varnish!—<i>Lady Hester Stanhope.</i></p> + +<p><b>Eloquence.</b>—The poetry of speech.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>This is that eloquence the ancients represented as lightning, bearing +down every opposer; this the power which has turned whole assemblies +into astonishment, admiration, and awe; that is described by the +torrent, the flame, and every other instance of irresistible +impetuosity.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Eminence.</b>—I do not hesitate to say that the road to eminence and power +from an obscure condition ought not to be made too easy, nor a thing too +much of course. If rare merit be the rarest of all things, it ought to +pass through some sort of probation. The Temple of Honor ought to be +seated on an eminence. If it be open through virtue, let it be +remembered, too, that virtue is never tried but by some difficulty and +some struggle.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p><b>Emotions.</b>—All loving emotions, like plants, shoot up most rapidly in +the tempestuous atmosphere of life.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Emotion has no value in the Christian system save as it stands connected +with right conduct as the cause of it. Emotion is the bud, not the +flower, and never is it of value until it expands into a flower. Every +religious sentiment; every act of devotion which does not produce a +corresponding elevation of life, is worse than useless; it is absolutely +pernicious, because it ministers to self-deception and tends to lower +the line of personal morals.—<i>W. H. H. Murray.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p> + +<p>There are three orders of emotions: those of pleasure, which refer to +the senses; those of harmony, which refer to the mind; and those of +happiness, which are the natural result of a union between harmony and +pleasure.—<i>Chapone.</i></p> + +<p>Emotion, whether of ridicule, anger, or sorrow; whether raised at a +puppet-show, a funeral, or a battle, is your grandest of levelers. The +man who would be always superior should be always +apathetic.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Employment.</b>—The wise prove, and the foolish confess, by their conduct, +that a life of employment is the only life worth leading.—<i>Paley.</i></p> + +<p>Life will frequently languish, even in the hands of the busy, if they +have not some employment subsidiary to that which forms their main +pursuit.—<i>Blair.</i></p> + +<p><b>Emulation.</b>—Emulation embalms the dead; envy, the vampire, blasts the +living.—<i>Fuseli.</i></p> + +<p><b>Enemies.</b>—It is the enemy whom we do not suspect who is the most +dangerous.—<i>Rojas.</i></p> + +<p><b>Energy.</b>—The longer I live, the more deeply am I convinced that that +which makes the difference between one man and another—between the weak +and powerful, the great and insignificant—is energy, invincible +determination; a purpose once formed, and then death or victory. This +quality will do anything that is to be done in the world; and no +two-legged creature can become a man without it.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>The truest wisdom is a resolute determination.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>To think we are able is almost to be so; to determine upon attainment is +frequently attainment itself. Thus earnest resolution has often seemed +to have about it almost a savor of omnipotence.—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></p> + +<p>Oh! for a forty parson power.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Daniel Webster struck me much like a steam-engine in trousers.—<i>Sydney +Smith.</i></p> + +<p>This world belongs to the energetic.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Enjoyment.</b>—Whatever advantage we snatch beyond the certain portion +allotted us by nature is like money spent before it is due, which at the +time of regular payment will be missed and regretted.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ennui.</b>—I have also seen the world, and after long experience have +discovered that ennui is our greatest enemy, and remunerative labor our +most lasting friend.—<i>Möser.</i></p> + +<p>I am wrapped in dismal thinking.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Enthusiasm.</b>—Enthusiasts soon understand each other.—<i>Washington +Irving.</i></p> + +<p>Enthusiasm is an evil much less to be dreaded than superstition. +Superstition is the disease of nations; enthusiasm, that of individuals: +the former grows inveterate by time, the latter is cured by it.—<i>Robert +Hall.</i></p> + +<p>Enthusiasm is that temper of mind in which the imagination has got the +better of the judgment.—<i>Warburton.</i></p> + +<p>Great designs are not accomplished without enthusiasm of some sort. It +is the inspiration of everything great. Without it, no man is to be +feared, and with it none despised.—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p>Enthusiasm is supernatural serenity.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>A man conscious of enthusiasm for worthy aims is sustained under petty +hostilities by the memory of great workers who had to fight their way +not without wounds, and who hover in his mind as patron saints, +invisibly helping.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The insufficient passions of a soul expanding to celestial +limits.—<i>Sydney Dobell.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Envy.</b>—A man who hath no virtue in himself ever envieth virtue in +others; for men's minds will either feed upon their own good, or upon +others' evil; and who wanteth the one will prey upon the other.—<i>Lord +Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Pining and sickening at another's joy.—<i>Ovid.</i></p> + +<p>Many passions dispose us to depress and vilify the merit of one rising +in the esteem of mankind.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>He who surpasses or subdues mankind must look down on the hate of those +below.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>An envious fever of pale and bloodless emulation.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Equality.</b>—Whether I be the grandest genius on earth in a single thing, +and that single thing earthy, or the poor peasant who, behind his plow, +whistles for want of thought, I strongly suspect it will be all one when +I pass to the Competitive Examination yonder! On the other side of the +grave a Raffael's occupation may be gone as well as a +plowman's.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>All the religions known in the world are founded, so far as they relate +to man, or the unity of man, as being all of one degree. Whether in +heaven or in hell, or in whatever state man may be supposed to exist +hereafter, the good and the bad are the only distinctions.—<i>Thomas +Paine.</i></p> + +<p>By the law of God, given by him to humanity, all men are free, are +brothers, and are equals.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>The circle of life is cut up into segments. All lines are equal if they +are drawn from the centre and touch the circumference.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Liberty and equality, lovely and sacred words!—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>Society is a more level surface than we imagine. Wise men or absolute +fools are hard to be met with, as there are few giants or +dwarfs.—<i>Hazlitt.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Equanimity.</b>—A thing often lost, but seldom found.—<i>Mrs. Balfour.</i></p> + +<p><b>Error.</b>—If those alone who "sowed the wind did reap the whirlwind," it +would be well. But the mischief is that the blindness of bigotry, the +madness of ambition, and the miscalculations of diplomacy seek their +victims principally amongst the innocent and the unoffending. The +cottage is sure to suffer for every error of the court, the cabinet, or +the camp. When error sits in the seat of power and of authority, and is +generated in high places, it may be compared to that torrent which +originates indeed in the mountain, but commits its devastation in the +vale.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>There is a brotherhood of error as close as the brotherhood of +truth.—<i>Argyll.</i></p> + +<p>Errors look so very ugly in persons of small means, one feels they are +taking quite a liberty in going astray; whereas people of fortune may +naturally indulge in a few delinquencies.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Our follies and errors are the soiled steps to the Grecian temple of our +perfection.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>But for my part, my lord, I then thought, and am still of the same +opinion, that error, and not truth of any kind, is dangerous; that ill +conclusions can only flow from false propositions; and that, to know +whether any proposition be true or false, it is a preposterous method to +examine it by its apparent consequences.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>Error in itself is always invisible; its nature is the absence of +light.—<i>Jacobi.</i></p> + +<p>There is no place where weeds do not grow, and there is no heart where +errors are not to be found.—<i>J. S. Knowles.</i></p> + +<p>Our understandings are always liable to error; nature and certainty is +very hard to come at, and infallibility is mere vanity and +pretense.—<i>Marcus Antoninus.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p> + +<p>Let error be an infirmity and not a crime.—<i>Castelar.</i></p> + +<p>Errors such as are but acorns in our younger brows grow oaks in our +older heads, and become inflexible.—<i>Sir Thomas Browne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Erudition.</b>—'Tis of great importance to the honor of learning that men +of business should know erudition is not like a lark, which flies high, +and delights in nothing but singing; but that 't is rather like a hawk, +which soars aloft indeed, but can stoop when she finds it convenient, +and seize her prey.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p><b>Estimation.</b>—A life spent worthily should be measured by a nobler +line,—by deeds, not years.—<i>Sheridan.</i></p> + +<p>To judge of the real importance of an individual, one should think of +the effect his death would produce.—<i>Léves.</i></p> + +<p><b>Eternity.</b>—Upon laying a weight in one of the scales, inscribed +eternity, though I threw in that of time, prosperity, affliction, +wealth, and poverty, which seemed very ponderous, they were not able to +stir the opposite balance.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Eternity is a negative idea clothed with a positive name. It supposes in +that to which it is applied a present existence; and is the negation of +a beginning or of an end of that existence.—<i>Paley.</i></p> + +<p><b>Etiquette.</b>—Whoever pays a visit that is not desired, or talks longer +than the listener is willing to attend, is guilty of an injury that he +cannot repair, and takes away that which he cannot give.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>The forms required by good breeding, or prescribed by authority, are to +be observed in social or official life.—<i>Prescott.</i></p> + +<p>Good taste rejects excessive nicety; it treats little things as little +things, and is not hurt by them.—<i>Fénelon.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p> + +<p>The law of the table is beauty, a respect to the common soul of the +guests. Everything is unreasonable which is private to two or three, or +any portion of the company. Tact never violates for a moment this law; +never intrudes the orders of the house, the vices of the absent, or a +tariff of expenses, or professional privacies; as we say, we never "talk +shop" before company. Lovers abstain from caresses, and haters from +insults, while they sit in one parlor with common friends.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Events.</b>—Man reconciles himself to almost any event however trying, if +it happens in the ordinary course of nature. It is the extraordinary +alone that he rebels against. There is a moral idea associated with this +feeling; for the extraordinary appears to be something like an injustice +of Heaven.—<i>Humboldt.</i></p> + +<p>There can be no peace in human life without the contempt of all events. +He that troubles his head with drawing consequences from mere +contingencies shall never be at rest.—<i>L'Estrange.</i></p> + +<p><b>Evil.</b>—Evil is in antagonism with the entire creation.—<i>Zschokke.</i></p> + +<p>Even in evil, that dark cloud which hangs over the creation, we discern +rays of light and hope; and gradually come to see in suffering and +temptation proofs and instruments of the sublimest purposes of wisdom +and love.—<i>Channing.</i></p> + +<p>Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>If we will rightly estimate what we call good and evil, we shall find it +lies much in comparison.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>Not one false man but does uncountable evil.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>This is the course of every evil deed, that, propagating still, it +brings forth evil.—<i>Coleridge.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p> + +<p>The truly virtuous do not easily credit evil that is told them of their +neighbors; for if others may do amiss, then may these also speak amiss: +man is frail, and prone to evil, and therefore may soon fail in +words.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p>Physical evils destroy themselves, or they destroy us.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p>"One soweth, and another reapeth," is a verity that applies to evil as +well as good.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>If you believe in evil, you have done evil.—<i>A. de Musset.</i></p> + +<p><b>Example.</b>—We are all of us more or less echoes, repeating involuntarily +the virtues, the defects, the movements, and the characters of those +among whom we live.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>How far that little candle throws its beams! So shines a good deed in a +naughty world.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Every great example takes hold of us with the authority of a miracle, +and says to us: "If ye had but faith, ye could also be able to do the +things which I do."—<i>Jacobi.</i></p> + +<p><b>Excellence.</b>—Nothing is such an obstacle to the production of excellence +as the power of producing what is good with ease and rapidity.—<i>Aikin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Excelsior.</b>—Man's life is in the impulse of elevation to something +higher.—<i>Jacobi.</i></p> + +<p><b>Excess.</b>—Too much noise deafens us; too much light blinds us; too great +a distance or too much of proximity equally prevents us from being able +to see; too long and too short a discourse obscures our knowledge of a +subject; too much of truth stuns us.—<i>Pascal.</i></p> + +<p>O fleeting joys of Paradise, dear bought with lasting woes.—<i>Milton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p> + +<p>Excess generally causes reaction, and produces a change in the opposite +direction, whether it be in the seasons, or in individuals, or in +governments.—<i>Plato.</i></p> + +<p><b>Excitement.</b>—There is always something interesting and beautiful about a +universal popular excitement of a generous character, let the object of +it be what it may. The great desiring heart of man, surging with one +strong, sympathetic swell, even though it be to break on the beach of +life and fall backwards, leaving the sands as barren as before, has yet +a meaning and a power in its restlessness with which I must deeply +sympathize.—<i>Mrs. Stowe.</i></p> + +<p>Violent excitement exhausts the mind, and leaves it withered and +sterile.—<i>Fénelon.</i></p> + +<p>The language of excitement is at best but picturesque merely. You must +be calm before you can utter oracles.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>This is so engraven on our nature that it may be regarded as an +appetite. Like all other appetites, it is not sinful, unless indulged +unlawfully, or to excess.—<i>Dr. Guthrie.</i></p> + +<p><b>Excuse.</b>—Of vain things, excuses are the vainest.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Expectation.</b>—'Tis expectation makes a blessing dear; heaven were not +heaven, if we knew what it were.—<i>Suckling.</i></p> + +<p>It may be proper for all to remember that they ought not to raise +expectations which it is not in their power to satisfy; and that it is +more pleasing to see smoke brightening into flame, than flame sinking +into smoke.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Expediency.</b>—When private virtue is hazarded upon the perilous cast of +expediency, the pillars of the republic, however apparent their +stability, are infected with decay at the very centre.—<i>Chapin.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p> + +<p>Men in responsible situations cannot, like those in private life, be +governed solely by the dictates of their own inclinations, or by such +motives as can only affect themselves.—<i>Washington.</i></p> + +<p><b>Experience.</b>—Life consists in the alternate process of learning and +unlearning; but it is often wiser to unlearn than to +learn.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Experience, the shroud of illusions.—<i>De Finod.</i></p> + +<p>To have a true idea of man, or of life, one must have stood himself on +the brink of suicide, or on the door-sill of insanity, at least +once.—<i>Taine.</i></p> + +<p>What we learn with pleasure we never forget.—<i>Alfred Mercier.</i></p> + +<p>Who would venture upon the journey of life, if compelled to begin it at +the end?—<i>Mme. de Maintenon.</i></p> + +<p>Experience is the extract of suffering.—<i>Arthur Helps.</i></p> + +<p>Every generous illusion adds a wrinkle in vanishing. Experience is the +successive disenchantment of the things of life. It is reason enriched +by the spoils of the heart.—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p><b>Extravagance.</b>—Expenses are not rectilinear, but circular. Every inch +you add to the diameter adds three to the circumference.—<i>Charles +Buxton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Extremes.</b>—Extremes are dangerous; a middle estate is safest; as a +middle temper of the sea, between a still calm and a violent tempest, is +most helpful to convey the mariner to his haven.—<i>Swinnock.</i></p> + +<p>Superlatives are diminutives, and weaken.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>Extremes are for us as if they were not, and as if we were not in regard +to them; they escape from us, or we from them.—<i>Pascal.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Eye.</b>—Stabbed with a white wench's black eye.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The eyes of a man are of no use without the observing power. Telescopes +and microscopes are cunning contrivances, but they cannot see of +themselves.—<i>Paxton Hood.</i></p> + +<p>Ladies, whose bright eyes rain influence.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Where is any author in the world teaches such beauty as a woman's +eye?—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Let every eye negotiate for itself and trust no agent.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Her eyes are homes of silent prayer.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>The eyes have one language everywhere.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Glances are the first billets-doux of love.—<i>Ninon de L'Enclos.</i></p> + + +<h3>F.</h3> + +<p><b>Face.</b>—A February face, so full of frost, of storms, and +cloudiness.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Demons in act, but gods at least in face.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>A girl of eighteen imagines the feelings behind the face that has moved +her with its sympathetic youth, as easily as primitive people imagined +the humors of the gods in fair weather: what is she to believe in, if +not in this vision woven from within?—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The worst of faces still is a human face.—<i>Lavater.</i></p> + +<p><b>Fact.</b>—There should always be some foundation of fact for the most airy +fabric, and pure invention is but the talent of a deceiver.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Every day of my life makes me feel more and more how seldom a fact is +accurately stated; how almost invariably when a story has passed through +the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> mind of a third person it becomes, so far as regards the impression +that it makes in further repetitions, little better than a falsehood; +and this, too, though the narrator be the most truth-seeking person in +existence.—<i>Hawthorne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Faction.</b>—A feeble government produces more factions than an oppressive +one.—<i>Fisher Ames.</i></p> + +<p>It is the demon of discord armed with the power to do endless mischief, +and intent alone on destroying whatever opposes its progress.—<i>Crabbe.</i></p> + +<p><b>Failure.</b>—But screw your courage to the sticking-place, and we'll not +fail!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Albeit failure in any cause produces a correspondent misery in the soul, +yet it is, in a sense, the highway to success, inasmuch as every +discovery of what is false leads us to seek earnestly after what is +true, and every fresh experience points out some form of error which we +shall afterward carefully eschew.—<i>Keats.</i></p> + +<p>Every failure is a step to success; every detection of what is false +directs us toward what is true; every trial exhausts some tempting form +of error. Not only so, but scarcely any attempt is entirely a failure; +scarcely any theory, the result of steady thought, is altogether false; +no tempting form of error is without some latent charm derived from +truth.—<i>Whewell.</i></p> + +<p><b>Faith.</b>—In affairs of this world men are saved not by faith but by the +want of it.—<i>Fielding.</i></p> + +<p>All the scholastic scaffolding falls, as a ruined edifice, before one +single word,—<i>faith</i>.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>O welcome pure-eyed Faith, white-handed Hope, thou hovering angel, girt +with golden wings!—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Life grows dark as we go on, till only one clear light is left shining +on it, and that is faith.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span></p> + +<p>When my reason is afloat, my faith cannot long remain in suspense, and I +believe in God as firmly as in any other truth whatever; in short, a +thousand motives draw me to the consolatory side, and add the weight of +hope to the equilibrium of reason.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p>Flatter not thyself in thy faith to God, if thou wantest charity for thy +neighbor; and think not thou hast charity for thy neighbor, if thou +wantest faith to God: where they are not both together, they are both +wanting; they are both dead if once divided.—<i>Quarles.</i></p> + +<p>We cannot live on probabilities. The faith in which we can live bravely +and die in peace must be a certainty, so far as it professes to be a +faith at all, or it is nothing.—<i>Froude.</i></p> + +<p>The great desire of this age is for a doctrine which may serve to +condense our knowledge, guide our researches, and shape our lives, so +that conduct may really be the consequence of belief.—<i>G. H. Lewes.</i></p> + +<p><b>Falsehood.</b>—Falsehood, like a drawing in perspective, will not bear to +be examined in every point of view, because it is a good imitation of +truth, as a perspective is of the reality.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Do not let us lie at all. Do not think of one falsity as harmless, and +another as slight, and another as unintended. Cast them all aside: they +may be light and accidental, but they are ugly soot from the smoke of +the pit, for all that: and it is better that our hearts should be swept +clean of them, without one care as to which is largest or +blackest.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>It is more from carelessness about the truth, than from intentional +lying, that there is so much falsehood in the world.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Falsehood and fraud shoot up in every soil, the product of all +climes.—<i>Addison.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p> + +<p>Round dealing is the honor of man's nature; and a mixture of falsehood +is like alloy in gold and silver, which may make the metal work the +better, but it embaseth it.—<i>Lord Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>To lapse in fullness is sorer than to lie for need: and falsehood is +worse in king than beggar.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>A liar would be brave toward God, while he is a coward toward men; for a +lie faces God, and shrinks from man.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>The dull flat falsehood serves for policy, and in the cunning, truth's +itself a lie.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>No falsehood can endure touch of celestial temper but returns of force +to its own likeness.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Figures themselves, in their symmetrical and inexorable order, have +their mistakes like words and speeches. An hour of pleasure and an hour +of pain are alike only on the dial in their numerical arrangement. +Outside the dial they lie sixty times.—<i>Méry.</i></p> + +<p><b>Fame.</b>—Fame, as a river, is narrowest where it is bred, and broadest +afar off; so exemplary writers depend not upon the gratitude of the +world.—<i>Davenant.</i></p> + +<p>Grant me honest fame, or grant me none.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Much of reputation depends on the period in which it rises. The Italians +proverbially observe that one half of fame depends on that cause. In +dark periods, when talents appear they shine like the sun through a +small hole in the window-shutter. The strong beam dazzles amid the +surrounding gloom. Open the shutter, and the general diffusion of light +attracts no notice.—<i>Walpole.</i></p> + +<p>Fame confers a rank above that of gentleman and of kings. As soon as she +issues her patent of nobility, it matters not a straw whether the +recipient be the son of a Bourbon or of a +tallow-chandler.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p> + +<p>One Cæsar lives,—a thousand are forgot!—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>Few people make much noise after their deaths who did not do so while +they were living. Posterity could not be supposed to rake into the +records of past times for the illustrious obscure, and only ratify or +annul the lists of great names handed down to them by the voice of +common fame. Few people recover from the neglect or obloquy of their +contemporaries. The public will hardly be at the pains to try the same +cause twice over, or does not like to reverse its own sentence, at least +when on the unfavorable side.—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p> + +<p>Celebrity sells dearly what we think she gives.—<i>Emile Souvestre.</i></p> + +<p>Fame has no necessary conjunction with praise; it may exist without the +breath of a word: it is a recognition of excellence which must be felt, +but need not be spoken. Even the envious must feel it; feel it, and hate +in silence.—<i>Washington Allston.</i></p> + +<p>Many have lived on a pedestal who will never have a statue when +dead.—<i>Béranger.</i></p> + +<p>I hope the day will never arrive when I shall neither be the object of +calumny nor ridicule, for then I shall be neglected and +forgotten.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>A man who cannot win fame in his own age will have a very small chance +of winning it from posterity. True there are some half dozen exceptions +to this truth among millions of myriads that attest it; but what man of +common sense would invest any large amount of hope in so unpromising a +lottery.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Fame is the thirst of youth.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Our admiration of a famous man lessens upon our nearer acquaintance with +him; and we seldom hear of a celebrated person without a catalogue of +some notorious weaknesses and infirmities.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Even the best things are not equal to their fame.—<i>Thoreau.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Fanaticism.</b>—Fanaticism, to which men are so much inclined, has always +served not only to render them more brutalized but more +wicked.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>Painful and corporeal punishments should never be applied to fanaticism; +for, being founded on pride, it glories in persecution.—<i>Beccaria.</i></p> + +<p>The false fire of an overheated mind.—<i>Cowper.</i></p> + +<p>Fanaticism is the child of false zeal and of superstition, the father of +intolerance and of persecution.—<i>J. Fletcher.</i></p> + +<p><b>Fashion.</b>—Fashion is the great governor of this world. It presides not +only in matters of dress and amusement, but in law, physic, politics, +religion, and all other things of the gravest kind. Indeed, the wisest +of men would be puzzled to give any better reason why particular forms +in all these have been at certain times universally received, and at +other times universally rejected, than that they were in or out of +fashion.—<i>Fielding.</i></p> + +<p>Fancy and pride seek things at vast expense.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>A beautiful envelope for mortality, presenting a glittering and polished +exterior, the appearance of which gives no certain indication of the +real value of what is contained therein.—<i>Mrs. Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>Beauty too often sacrifices to fashion. The spirit of fashion is not the +beautiful, but the willful; not the graceful, but the fantastic; not the +superior in the abstract, but the superior in the worst of all +concretes,—the vulgar.—<i>Leigh Hunt.</i></p> + +<p><b>Faults.</b>—To acknowledge our faults when we are blamed is modesty; to +discover them to one's friends, in ingenuousness, is confidence; but to +preach them to all the world, if one does not take care, is +pride.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>The first fault is the child of simplicity, but every other the +offspring of guilt.—<i>Goldsmith.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Fear.</b>—It is no ways congruous that God should be frightening men into +truth who were made to be wrought upon by calm evidence and gentle +methods of persuasion.—<i>Atterbury.</i></p> + +<p>Fear is far more painful to cowardice than death to true courage.—<i>Sir +P. Sidney.</i></p> + +<p>Fear is the tax that conscience pays to guilt.—<i>George Sewell.</i></p> + +<p>Fear invites danger; concealed cowards insult known +ones.—<i>Chesterfield.</i></p> + +<p><b>Felicity.</b>—The world produces for every pint of honey a gallon of gall; +for every dram of pleasure a pound of pain; for every inch of mirth an +ell of moan; and as the ivy twines around the oak, so does misery and +misfortune encompass the happy man. Felicity, pure and unalloyed +felicity, is not a plant of earthly growth; her gardens are the +skies.—<i>Burton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Fickleness.</b>—Everything by starts, and nothing long.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>It will be found that they are the weakest-minded and the +hardest-hearted men that most love change.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Fiction.</b>—Truth severe, by fairy fiction drest.—<i>Gray.</i></p> + +<p>Every fiction since Homer has taught friendship, patriotism, generosity, +contempt of death. These are the highest virtues; and the fictions which +taught them were therefore of the highest, though not of unmixed, +utility.—<i>Sir J. Mackintosh.</i></p> + +<p>I have often maintained that fiction may be much more instructive than +real history.—<i>Rev. John Foster.</i></p> + +<p>Fiction is of the essence of poetry as well as of painting: there is a +resemblance in one of human bodies, things, and actions which are not +real, and in the other of a true story by fiction.—<i>Dryden.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p> + +<p>Fiction is no longer a mere amusement; but transcendent genius, +accommodating itself to the character of the age, has seized upon this +province of literature, and turned fiction from a toy into a mighty +engine.—<i>Channing.</i></p> + +<p>The best portraits are those in which there is a slight mixture of +caricature; and we are not aware that the best histories are not those +in which a little of the exaggeration of fictitious narrative is +judiciously employed. Something is lost in accuracy; but much is gained +in effect. The fainter lines are neglected; but the great characteristic +features are imprinted on the mind forever.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>Those who delight in the study of human nature may improve in the +knowledge of it, and in the profitable application of that knowledge, by +the perusal of such fictions as those before us [Jane Austen's +Novels].—<i>Archbishop Whately.</i></p> + +<p><b>Firmness.</b>—The greatest firmness is the greatest mercy.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>Stand firm and immovable as an anvil when it is beaten upon.—<i>St. +Ignatius.</i></p> + +<p><b>Flattery.</b>—The art of flatterers is to take advantage of the foibles of +the great, to foster their errors, and never to give advice which may +annoy.—<i>Molière.</i></p> + +<p>He does me double wrong that wounds me with the flatteries of his +tongue.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Flattery is often a traffic of mutual meanness, where, although both +parties intend deception, neither are deceived, since words that cost +little are exchanged for hopes that cost less.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>The most dangerous of all flattery is the inferiority of those about +us.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>Though flattery blossoms like friendship, yet there is a great +difference in the fruit.—<i>Socrates.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p> + +<p>The coin that is most current among mankind is flattery; the only +benefit of which is that by hearing what we are not we may be instructed +what we ought to be.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p>Blinded as they are to their true character by self-love, every man is +his own first and chiefest flatterer, prepared, therefore, to welcome +the flatterer from the outside, who only comes confirming the verdict of +the flatterer within.—<i>Plutarch.</i></p> + +<p>Flattery is an ensnaring quality, and leaves a very dangerous +impression. It swells a man's imagination, entertains his fancy, and +drives him to a doting upon his own person.—<i>Jeremy Collier.</i></p> + +<p>Because all men are apt to flatter themselves, to entertain the addition +of other men's praises is most perilous.—<i>Sir W. Raleigh.</i></p> + +<p>Out of the pulpit, I trust none can accuse me of too much plainness of +speech; but there, madame [Queen Mary], I am not my own master, but must +speak that which I am commanded by the King of kings, and dare not, on +my soul, flatter any one on the face of all the earth—<i>John Knox.</i></p> + +<p><b>Flowers.</b>—Luther always kept a flower in a glass on his writing-table; +and when he was waging his great public controversy with Eckius he kept +a flower in his hand. Lord Bacon has a beautiful passage about flowers. +As to Shakspeare, he is a perfect Alpine valley,—he is full of flowers; +they spring, and blossom, and wave in every cleft of his mind. Even +Milton, cold, serene, and stately as he is, breaks forth into exquisite +gushes of tenderness and fancy when he marshals the flowers.—<i>Mrs. +Stowe.</i></p> + +<p>Flowers, leaves, fruit, are the air-woven children of +light.—<i>Moleschott.</i></p> + +<p>Ye pretty daughters of the Earth and Sun.—<i>Sir Walter Raleigh.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p> + +<p>I always think the flowers can see us and know what we are thinking +about.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>What a desolate place would be a world without a flower! It would be a +face without a smile,—a feast without a welcome! Are not flowers the +stars of the earth? and are not our stars the flowers of heaven?—<i>Mrs. +Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>What a pity flowers can utter no sound! A singing rose, a whispering +violet, a murmuring honeysuckle,—oh, what a rare and exquisite miracle +would these be!—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>The bright mosaic, that with storied beauty, the floor of nature's +temple tessellate.—<i>Horace Smith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Fools.</b>—You pity a man who is lame or blind, but you never pity him for +being a fool, which is often a much greater misfortune.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>A learned fool is more foolish than an ignorant fool.—<i>Molière.</i></p> + +<p>Of all thieves fools are the worst; they rob you of time and +temper.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Fortune makes folly her peculiar care.—<i>Churchill.</i></p> + +<p>It would be easier to endow a fool with intellect than to persuade him +that he had none.—<i>Babinet.</i></p> + +<p>There are many more fools in the world than there are knaves, otherwise +the knaves could not exist.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>There are more fools than sages, and among sages there is more folly +than wisdom.—<i>Chamfort.</i></p> + +<p><b>Foppery.</b>—Foppery is never cured; it is the bad stamina of the mind, +which, like those of the body, are never rectified; once a coxcomb and +always a coxcomb.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Foppery is the egotism of clothes.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p>Nature has sometimes made a fool; but a coxcomb is always of a man's own +making.—<i>Addison.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Forbearance.</b>—The little I have seen of the world teaches me to look +upon the errors of others in sorrow, not in anger. When I take the +history of one poor heart that has sinned and suffered, and represent to +myself the struggles and temptations it has passed through, the brief +pulsations of joy, the feverish inquietude of hope and fear, the +pressure of want, the desertion of friends, I would fain leave the +erring soul of my fellow-man with Him from whose hand it +came.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p><b>Forethought.</b>—Human foresight often leaves its proudest possessor only a +choice of evils.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Whoever fails to turn aside the ills of life by prudent forethought, +must submit to fulfill the course of destiny.—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>In life, as in chess, forethought wins.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>If a man take no thought about what is distant, he will find sorrow near +at hand.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>Those old stories of visions and dreams guiding men have their truth: we +are saved by making the future present to ourselves.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Forgetfulness.</b>—There is nothing, no, nothing, innocent or good that +dies and is forgotten: let us hold to that faith or none. An infant, a +prattling child, dying in the cradle, will live again in the better +thoughts of those that loved it, and play its part through them in the +redeeming actions of the world, though its body be burnt to ashes, or +drowned in the deep sea. Forgotten! Oh, if the deeds of human creatures +could be traced to their source, how beautiful would even death appear! +for how much charity, mercy, and purified affection would be seen to +have their growth in dusty graves!—<i>Dickens.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Forgiveness.</b>—It is more easy to forgive the weak who have injured us, +than the powerful whom we have injured. That conduct will be continued +by our fears which commenced in our resentment. He that has gone so far +as to cut the claws of the lion will not feel himself quite secure until +he has also drawn his teeth.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>They never pardon who commit the wrong.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>May I tell you why it seems to me a good thing for us to remember wrong +that has been done us? That we may forgive it.—<i>Dickens.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis easier for the generous to forgive than for offense to ask +it.—<i>Thomson.</i></p> + +<p>Life, that ever needs forgiveness, has, for its first duty, to +forgive.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>It is easy enough to forgive your enemies, if you have not the means to +harm them.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>More bounteous run rivers when the ice that locked their flow melts into +their waters. And when fine natures relent, their kindness is swelled by +the thaw.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Fortitude.</b>—White men should exhibit the same insensibility to moral +tortures that red men do to physical torments.—<i>Théophile Gautier.</i></p> + +<p>There is a strength of quiet endurance as significant of courage as the +most daring feats of prowess.—<i>Tuckerman.</i></p> + +<p>Fortitude is the guard and support of the other virtues.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p><b>Fortune.</b>—Fortune loves only the young.—<i>Charles V.</i></p> + +<p>Ill fortune never crushed that man whom good fortune deceived not.—<i>Ben +Jonson.</i></p> + +<p>It is often the easiest move that completes the game. Fortune is like +the lady whom a lover carried off from all his rivals by putting an +additional lace upon his liveries.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p> + +<p>The use we make of our fortune determines its sufficiency. A little is +enough if used wisely, and too much if expended foolishly.—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p>The fortunate circumstances of our lives are generally found at last to +be of our own producing.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>Fortune has been considered the guardian divinity of fools; and, on this +score, she has been accused of blindness; but it should rather be +adduced as a proof of her sagacity, when she helps those who certainly +cannot help themselves.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Fortunes made in no time are like shirts made in no time; it's ten to +one if they hang long together.—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i></p> + +<p>There is some help for all the defects of fortune; for if a man cannot +attain to the length of his wishes, he may have his remedy by cutting of +them shorter.—<i>Cowley.</i></p> + +<p>Fortune, to show us her power in all things, and to abate our +presumption, seeing she could not make fools wise, she has made them +fortunate.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>See'st thou not what various fortunes the Divinity makes man to pass +through, changing and turning them from day to day?—<i>Euripides.</i></p> + +<p>Fortune is but a synonymous word for nature and necessity.—<i>Bentley.</i></p> + +<p>Foolish I deem him who, thinking that his state is blest, rejoices in +security; for Fortune, like a man distempered in his senses, leaps now +this way, now that, and no man is always fortunate.—<i>Euripides.</i></p> + +<p>They say Fortune is a woman and capricious. But sometimes she is a good +woman, and gives to those who merit.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>If Fortune has fairly sat on a man, he takes it for granted that life +consists in being sat upon. But to be coddled on Fortune's knee, and +then have his ears boxed, that is aggravating.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Fraud.</b>—The more gross the fraud the more glibly will it go down, and +the more greedily will it be swallowed; since folly will always find +faith wherever impostors will find impudence.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Friendship.</b>—Friendship has steps which lead up to the throne of God, +though all spirits come to the Infinite; only Love is satiable, and like +Truth, admits of no three degrees of comparison; and a simple being +fills the heart.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Very pleasant hast thou been unto me: thy love to me was wonderful, +passing the love of women.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>Fix yourself upon the wealthy. In a word, take this for a golden rule +through life: Never, never have a friend that is poorer than +yourself.—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i></p> + +<p>Experience has taught me that the only friends we can call our own, who +can have no change, are those over whom the grave has closed; the seal +of death is the only seal of friendship.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>What is commonly called friendship even is only a little more honor +among rogues.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>So great a happiness do I esteem it to be loved, that I fancy every +blessing both from gods and men ready to descend spontaneously upon him +who is loved.—<i>Xenophon.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing makes the earth seem so spacious as to have friends at a +distance; they make the latitudes and longitudes.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>The friendship between great men is rarely intimate or permanent. It is +a Boswell that most appreciates a Johnson. Genius has no brother, no +co-mate; the love it inspires is that of a pupil or a +son.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>The firmest friendships have been formed in mutual adversity; as iron is +most strongly united by the fiercest flame.—<i>Colton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span></p> + +<p>Never contract a friendship with a man that is not better than +thyself.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>There are three friendships which are advantageous, and three which are +injurious. Friendship with the upright, friendship with the sincere, and +friendship with the man of much information,—these are advantageous. +Friendship with the man of specious airs, friendship with the +insinuatingly soft, friendship with the glib-tongued,—these are +injurious.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>Friendship survives death better than absence.—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>This communicating of a man's self to his friend works two contrary +effects, for it redoubleth joys and cutteth griefs in half: for there is +no man that imparteth his joys to his friend, but he joyeth the more; +and no man that imparteth his griefs to his friend, but he grieveth the +less.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Sweet is the memory of distant friends! Like the mellow rays of the +declining sun, it falls tenderly, yet sadly, on the heart.—<i>Washington +Irving.</i></p> + +<p>It may be worth noticing as a curious circumstance, when persons past +forty before they were at all acquainted form together a very close +intimacy of friendship. For grafts of <i>old</i> wood to <i>take</i>, there must +be a wonderful congeniality between the trees.—<i>Whately.</i></p> + +<p>An old friend is not always the person whom it is easiest to make a +confidant of.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Fun.</b>—There is nothing like fun, is there? I haven't any myself, and I +do like it in others. Oh, we need it,—we need all the counter-weights +we can muster to balance the sad relations of life. God has made sunny +spots in the heart; why should we exclude the light from +them?—<i>Haliburton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Futurity.</b>—The best preparation for the future is the present well seen +to, the last duty done.—<i>George MacDonald.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p> + +<p>We always live prospectively, never retrospectively, and there is no +abiding moment.—<i>Jacobi.</i></p> + +<p>Another life, if it were not better than this, would be less a promise +than a threat.—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>The spirit of man, which God inspired, cannot together perish with this +corporeal clod.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + + +<h3>G.</h3> + +<p><b>Gambling.</b>—Gaming is a kind of tacit confession that the company engaged +therein do, in general, exceed the bounds of their respective fortunes, +and therefore they cast lots to determine upon whom the ruin shall at +present fall, that the rest may be saved a little longer.—<i>Blackstone.</i></p> + +<p>A mode of transferring property without producing any intermediate +good.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Gems.</b>—How very beautiful these gems are! It is strange how deeply +colors seem to penetrate one, like scent. I suppose that is the reason +why gems are used as spiritual emblems in the Revelation of St. John. +They look like fragments of heaven.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Generosity.</b>—A friend to everybody is often a friend to nobody, or else +in his simplicity he robs his family to help strangers, and becomes +brother to a beggar. There is wisdom in generosity as in everything +else.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>Generosity is the accompaniment of high birth; pity and gratitude are +its attendants.—<i>Corneille.</i></p> + +<p>It is good to be unselfish and generous; but don't carry that too far. +It will not do to give yourself to be melted down for the benefit of the +tallow-trade; you must know where to find yourself.—<i>George Eliot.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p> + +<p>If cruelty has its expiations and its remorses, generosity has its +chances and its turns of good fortune; as if Providence reserved them +for fitting occasions, that noble hearts may not be +discouraged.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Genius.</b>—Genius is rarely found without some mixture of eccentricity, as +the strength of spirit is proved by the bubbles on its surface.—<i>Mrs. +Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>All great men are in some degree inspired.—<i>Cicero.</i></p> + +<p>This is the highest miracle of genius: that things which are not should +be as though they were; that the imaginations of one mind should become +the personal recollections of another.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>The path of genius is not less obstructed with disappointment than that +of ambition.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>One misfortune of extraordinary geniuses is that their very friends are +more apt to admire than love them.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Genius speaks only to genius.—<i>Stanislaus.</i></p> + +<p>A nation does wisely, if not well, in starving her men of genius. Fatten +them, and they are done for.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Genius has no brother.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Genius never grows old; young to-day, mature yesterday, vigorous +to-morrow: always immortal. It is peculiar to no sex or condition, and +is the divine gift to woman no less than to man.—<i>Juan Lewis.</i></p> + +<p><b>Gentleman.</b>—A gentleman's first characteristic is that fineness of +structure in the body which renders it capable of the most delicate +sensation; and of structure in the mind which renders it capable of the +most delicate sympathies; one may say, simply, "fineness of nature." +This is of course compatible with heroic bodily strength and mental<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span> +firmness; in fact, heroic strength is not conceivable without such +delicacy.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>It is a grand old name, that of gentleman, and has been recognized as a +rank and power in all stages of society. To possess this character is a +dignity of itself, commanding the instinctive homage of every generous +mind, and those who will not bow to titular rank will yet do homage to +the gentleman. His qualities depend not upon fashion or manners, but +upon moral worth; not on personal possessions, but on personal +qualities. The Psalmist briefly describes him as one "that walketh +uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his +heart."—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>There is no man that can teach us to be gentlemen better than Joseph +Addison.—<i>Thackeray.</i></p> + +<p><b>Gentleness.</b>—Fearless gentleness is the most beautiful of feminine +attractions, born of modesty and love.—<i>Mrs. Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>Gentleness is far more successful in all its enterprises than violence; +indeed, violence generally frustrates its own purpose, while gentleness +scarcely ever fails.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>Sweet speaking oft a currish heart reclaims.—<i>Sidney.</i></p> + +<p>The golden beams of truth and the silken cords of love, twisted +together, will draw men on with a sweet violence, whether they will or +not.—<i>Cudworth.</i></p> + +<p><b>Gifts.</b>—One must be poor to know the luxury of giving!—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Riches, understanding, beauty, are fair gifts of God.—<i>Luther.</i></p> + +<p>And with them words of so sweet breath composed as made the things more +rich.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>How can that gift leave a trace which has left no void?—<i>Madame +Swetchine.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p> + +<p>The best thing to give to your enemy is forgiveness; to an opponent, +tolerance; to a friend, your heart; to your child, a good example; to a +father, deference; to your mother, conduct that will make her proud of +you; to yourself, respect; to all men, charity.—<i>Mrs. Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>Examples are few of men ruined by giving. Men are heroes in spending, +very cravens in what they give.—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p>When a friend asks, there is no to-morrow.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Strange designs lurk under a gift. "Give the horse to his Holiness," +said the cardinal. "I cannot serve you!"—<i>Zimmermann.</i></p> + +<p><b>Glory.</b>—To a father who loves his children victory has no charms. When +the heart speaks, glory itself is an illusion.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>Those who start for human glory, like the mettled hounds of Actæon, must +pursue the game not only where there is a path, but where there is none. +They must be able to simulate and dissimulate, to leap and to creep; to +conquer the earth like Cæsar, or to fall down and kiss it like Brutus; +to throw their sword like Brennus into the trembling scale; or, like +Nelson, to snatch the laurels from the doubtful hand of Victory, while +she is hesitating where to bestow them.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Obloquy is a necessary ingredient in the composition of all true +glory.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>The best kind of glory is that which is reflected from honesty,—such as +was the glory of Cato and Aristides; but it was harmful to them both, +and is seldom beneficial to any man whilst he lives; what it is to him +after his death I cannot say, because I love not philosophy merely +notional and conjectural, and no man who has made the experiment has +been so kind as to come back to inform us.—<i>Cowley.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p> + +<p>Nothing is so expensive as glory.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>The love of glory can only create a hero, the contempt of it creates a +wise man.—<i>Talleyrand.</i></p> + +<p><b>Gluttony.</b>—Whose god is their belly, and whose glory is in their +shame.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>The kitchen is their shrine, the cook their priest, the table their +altar, and their belly their god.—<i>Buck.</i></p> + +<p><b>God.</b>—He that doth the ravens feed, yea, providentially caters for the +sparrow, be comfort to my age!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>To escape from evil, we must be made as far as possible like God; and +this resemblance consists in becoming just and holy and wise.—<i>Plato.</i></p> + +<p>Whenever I think of God I can only conceive him as a Being infinitely +great and infinitely good. This last quality of the divine nature +inspires me with such confidence and joy that I could have written even +a <i>miserere</i> in <i>tempo allegro</i>.—<i>Haydn.</i></p> + +<p>All flows out from the Deity, and all must be absorbed in him +again.—<i>Zoroaster.</i></p> + +<p>It were better to have no opinion of God at all than such an opinion as +is unworthy of him; for the one is unbelief, and the other is contumely; +and certainly superstition is the reproach of the Deity.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>I have seen two miracles lately. I looked up, and saw the clouds above +me in the noontide; and they looked like the sea that was hanging over +me, and I could see no cord on which they were suspended, and yet they +never fell. And then when the noontide had gone, and the midnight came, +I looked again, and there was the dome of heaven, and it was spangled +with stars, and I could see no pillars that held up the skies, and yet +they never fell. Now He that holds the stars up and moves the clouds in +their course can do all things, and I trust Him in the sight of these +miracles.—<i>Luther.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p> + +<p>This avenging God, rancorous torturer who burns his creatures in a slow +fire! When they tell me that God made himself a man, I prefer to +recognize a man who made himself a god.—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i></p> + +<p>This is one of the names which we give to that eternal, infinite, and +incomprehensible being, the Creator of all things, who preserves and +governs everything by his almighty power and wisdom, and is the only +object of our worship.—<i>Cruden.</i></p> + +<p><b>Gold.</b>—Midas longed for gold. He got gold so that whatever he touched +became gold, and he, with his long ears, was little the better for +it.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>A mask of gold hides all deformities.—<i>Dekker.</i></p> + +<p>There are two metals, one of which is omnipotent in the cabinet, and the +other in the camp,—gold and iron. He that knows how to apply them both +may indeed attain the highest station, but he must know something more +to keep it.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Thou true magnetic pole, to which all hearts point duly north, like +trembling needles!—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Judges and senates have been bought for gold.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Gold is, in its last analysis, the sweat of the poor, and the blood of +the brave.—<i>Joseph Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>Gold all is not that doth golden seem.—<i>Spenser.</i></p> + +<p>There is no place so high that an ass laden with gold cannot reach +it.—<i>Rojas.</i></p> + +<p><b>Good.</b>—When what is good comes of age and is likely to live, there is +reason for rejoicing.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>How indestructibly the good grows, and propagates itself, even among the +weedy entanglements of evil!—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>Good, the more communicated, more abundant grows.—<i>Milton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span></p> + +<p>Whatever mitigates the woes or increases the happiness of others is a +just criterion of goodness; and whatever injures society at large, or +any individual in it, is a criterion of iniquity. One should not quarrel +with a dog without a reason sufficient to vindicate one through all the +courts of morality.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>The true and good resemble gold. Gold seldom appears obvious and solid, +but it pervades invisibly the bodies that contain it.—<i>Jacobi.</i></p> + +<p>He is good that does good to others. If he suffers for the good he does, +he is better still; and if he suffers from them to whom he did good, he +is arrived to that height of goodness that nothing but an increase of +his sufferings can add to it; if it proves his death, his virtue is at +its summit,—it is heroism complete.—<i>Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p>That is good which doth good.—<i>Venning.</i></p> + +<p>The Pythagoreans make good to be certain and finite, and evil infinite +and uncertain. There are a thousand ways to miss the white; there is +only one to hit it.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Good-humor.</b>—Honest good-humor is the oil and wine of a merry meeting, +and there is no jovial companionship equal to that where the jokes are +rather small and the laughter abundant.—<i>Washington Irving.</i></p> + +<p>Affability, mildness, tenderness, and a word which I would fain bring +back to its original signification of virtue,—I mean good-nature,—are +of daily use: they are the bread of mankind and staff of +life.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>This portable quality of good-humor seasons all the parts and +occurrences we meet with, in such a manner that there are no moments +lost, but they all pass with so much satisfaction that the heaviest of +loads (when it is a load), that of time, is never felt by +us.—<i>Steele.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></p> + +<p>Gayety is to good-humor as perfumes to vegetable fragrance: the one +overpowers weak spirits, the other recreates and revives +them.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>That inexhaustible good-nature, which is the most precious gift of +Heaven, spreading itself like oil over the troubled sea of thought, and +keeping the mind smooth and equable in the roughest +weather.—<i>Washington Irving.</i></p> + +<p><b>Goodness.</b>—Nothing rarer than real goodness.—<i>Rochefoucauld.</i></p> + +<p>True goodness is like the glow-worm in this, that it shines most when no +eyes except those of Heaven are upon it.—<i>Archdeacon Hare.</i></p> + +<p>Do good by stealth, and blush to find it fame.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Goodness thinks no ill where no ill seems.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Gossip.</b>—A long-tongued babbling gossip.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>He sits at home until he has accumulated an insupportable load of ennui, +and then he sallies forth to distribute it amongst his +acquaintance.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>As to people saying a few idle words about us, we must not mind that, +any more than the old church-steeple minds the rooks cawing about +it.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Government.</b>—The proper function of a government is to make it easy for +people to do good and difficult for them to do evil.—<i>Gladstone.</i></p> + +<p>Society cannot exist unless a controlling power upon will and appetite +be placed somewhere; and the less of it there is within, the more there +must be without. It is ordained in the eternal constitution of things +that men of intemperate minds cannot be free. Their passions forge their +fetters.—<i>Burke.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span></p> + +<p>Government is a contrivance of human wisdom to provide for human +wants.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>Government owes its birth to the necessity of preventing and repressing +the injuries which the associated individuals had to fear from one +another. It is the sentinel who watches, in order that the common +laborer be not disturbed.—<i>Abbé Raynal.</i></p> + +<p>But I say to you, and to our whole country, and to all the crowned heads +and aristocratic powers and feudal systems that exist, that it is to +self-government, the great principle of popular representation and +administration, the system that lets in all to participate in the +counsels that are to assign the good or evil to all, that we may owe +what we are and what we hope to be.—<i>Daniel Webster.</i></p> + +<p>The culminating point of administration is to know well how much power, +great or small, we ought to use in all circumstances.—<i>Montesquieu.</i></p> + +<p>Of governments, that of the mob is the most sanguinary, that of soldiers +the most expensive, and that of civilians the most vexatious.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Government, like dress, is the badge of lost innocence; the palaces of +kings are built on the ruins of the bowers of paradise. For were the +impulses of conscience clear, uniform, and irresistibly obeyed, man +would need no other lawgiver; but that not being the case, he finds it +necessary to surrender up a part of his property to furnish means for +the protection of the rest, and this he is induced to do by the same +prudence which in every other case advises him out of two evils to +choose the least.—<i>Thomas Paine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Grace.</b>—As amber attracts a straw, so does beauty admiration, which only +lasts while the warmth continues; but virtue, wisdom, goodness, and real +worth, like the loadstone, never lose their power. These are the true +graces, which, as Homer feigns, are linked and tied hand in hand, +because it is by their influence that human hearts are so firmly united +to each other.—<i>Burton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p> + +<p>The king-becoming graces—devotion, patience, courage, +fortitude.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Know you not, master, to some kind of men their graces serve them but as +enemies? No more do yours; your virtues, gentle master, are sanctified +and holy traitors to you. Oh, what a world is this, when what is comely +envenoms him that bears it!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>How inimitably graceful children are before they learn to +dance!—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>That word, grace, in an ungracious mouth, is but +profane.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Grace comes as oft clad in the dusky robe of desolation as in white +attire.—<i>Sir J. Beaumont.</i></p> + +<p><b>Gratitude.</b>—Gratitude is a fruit of great cultivation; you do not find +it among gross people.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>God is pleased with no music below so much as the thanksgiving songs of +relieved widows and supported orphans; of rejoicing, comforted, and +thankful persons.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p>No metaphysician ever felt the deficiency of language so much as the +grateful.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Thus love is the most easy and agreeable, and gratitude the most +humiliating, affection of the mind: we never reflect on the man we love +without exulting in our choice, while he who has bound us to him by +benefits alone rises to our ideas as a person to whom we have in some +measure forfeited our freedom.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>Gratitude is the virtue most deified and most deserted. It is the +ornament of rhetoric and the libel of practical life.—<i>J. W. Forney.</i></p> + +<p><b>Grave.</b>—Since the silent shore awaits at last even those who longest +miss the old Archer's arrow, perhaps the early grave which men weep over +may be meant to save.—<i>Byron.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p> + +<p>The grave is, I suspect, the sole commonwealth which attains that dead +flat of social equality that life in its every principle so heartily +abhors; and that equality the grave will perpetuate to the end of +time.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>The reconciling grave.—<i>Southern.</i></p> + +<p>The grave where even the great find rest.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Oh, how small a portion of earth will hold us when we are dead, who +ambitiously seek after the whole world while we are living!—<i>Philip, +King of Macedon.</i></p> + +<p>The cradle of transformation.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>The graves of those we have loved and lost distress and console +us.—<i>Arsène Houssaye.</i></p> + +<p><b>Gravity.</b>—The very essence of gravity is design, and consequently +deceit; a taught trick to gain credit with the world for more sense and +knowledge than a man is worth.—<i>Sterne.</i></p> + +<p>Gravity is but the rind of wisdom; but it is a preservative +rind.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Gravity must be natural and simple. There must be urbanity and +tenderness in it. A man must not formalize on everything. He who +formalizes on everything is a fool, and a grave fool is perhaps more +injurious than a light fool.—<i>Cecil.</i></p> + +<p><b>Greatness.</b>—There is but one method, and that is hard labor; and a man +who will not pay that price for greatness had better at once dedicate +himself to the pursuit of the fox, or sport with the tangles of Neæra's +hair, or talk of bullocks, and glory in the goad!—<i>Sidney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>A really great man is known by three signs,—generosity in the design, +humanity in the execution, and moderation in success.—<i>Bismarck.</i></p> + +<p>The great men of the earth are but the marking stones on the road of +humanity; they are the priests of its religion.—<i>Mazzini.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span></p> + +<p>A multitude of eyes will narrowly inspect every part of an eminent man, +consider him nicely in all views, and not be a little pleased when they +have taken him in the worst and most disadvantageous lights.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>What you can manufacture, or communicate, you can lower the price of, +but this mental supremacy is incommunicable; you will never multiply its +quantity, nor lower its price; and nearly the best thing that men can +generally do is—to set themselves, not to the attainment, but the +discovery of this; learning to know gold, when we see it, from +iron-glance, and diamond from flint-sand, being for most of us a more +profitable employment than trying to make diamonds out of our own +charcoal.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>Men in great place are thrice servants: servants of the sovereign or +state, servants of fame, and servants of business; so as they have no +freedom, neither in their persons, nor in their actions, nor in their +times. It is a strange desire to seek power over others, and to lose +power over a man's self.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>The difference between one man and another is by no means so great as +the superstitious crowd supposes. But the same feelings which in ancient +Rome produced the apotheosis of a popular emperor, and in modern times +the canonization of a devout prelate, lead men to cherish an illusion +which furnishes them with something to adore.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>Great men never make a bad use of their superiority; they see it, they +feel it, and are not less modest. The more they have, the more they know +their own deficiencies.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p>He who is great when he falls is great in his prostration, and is no +more an object of contempt than when men tread on the ruins of sacred +buildings, which men of piety venerate no less than if they +stood.—<i>Seneca.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p> + +<p>Greatness lies not in being strong, but in the right using of +strength.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>Greatness seems in her [Madame de Maintenon] to take its noblest form, +that of simplicity.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Grief.</b>—Why destroy present happiness by a distant misery, which may +never come at all, or you may never live to see it? for every +substantial grief has twenty shadows, and most of them shadows of your +own making.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Some griefs are medicinable; and this is one.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>While grief is fresh, every attempt to divert only irritates. You must +wait till grief be <i>digested</i>. And then amusement will dissipate the +remains of it.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Grief hallows hearts, even while it ages heads.—<i>P. J. Bailey.</i></p> + +<p>All the joys of earth will not assuage our thirst for happiness, while a +single grief suffices to shroud life in a sombre veil, and smite it with +nothingness at all points.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>Grief has been compared to a hydra, for every one that dies two are +born.—<i>Calderon.</i></p> + +<p>Grief, like night, is salutary. It cools down the soul by putting out +its feverish fires; and if it oppresses her, it also compresses her +energies. The load once gone, she will go forth with greater buoyancy to +new pleasures.—<i>Dr. Pulsford.</i></p> + +<p>What's gone, and what's past help, should be past grief.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Guilt.</b>—All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little +hand.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Think not that guilt requires the burning torches of the Furies to +agitate and torment it. Frauds, crimes, remembrances of the past, +terrors of the future,—these are the domestic Furies that are ever +present to the mind of the impious.—<i>Cicero.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p> + +<p>Guiltiness will speak though tongues were out of use.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Despair alone makes guilty men be bold.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>The sin lessens in human estimation only as the guilt +increases.—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>There are no greater prudes than those women who have some secret to +hide.—<i>George Sand.</i></p> + +<p><b>Gunpowder.</b>—If we contrast the rapid progress of this mischievous +discovery with the slow and laborious advances of reason, science, and +the arts of peace, a philosopher, according to his temper, will laugh or +weep at the folly of mankind.—<i>Gibbon.</i></p> + +<p>A coarse-grained powder, used by cross-grained people, playing at +cross-grained purposes.—<i>Marryatt.</i></p> + +<p>Gunpowder is the emblem of politic revenge, for it biteth first, and +barketh afterwards; the bullet being at the mark before the report is +heard, so that it maketh a noise, not by way of warning, but of +triumph.—<i>Fuller.</i></p> + + +<h3>H.</h3> + +<p><b>Habits.</b>—Habits are soon assumed; but when we strive to strip them off, +'tis being flayed alive.—<i>Cowper.</i></p> + +<p>Vicious habits are so odious and degrading that they transform the +individual who practices them into an incarnate demon.—<i>Cicero.</i></p> + +<p>Unless the habit leads to happiness, the best habit is to contract +none.—<i>Zimmerman.</i></p> + +<p>The law of the harvest is to reap more than you sow. Sow an act and you +reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a character; sow a character and +you reap a destiny.—<i>George D. Boardman.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p> + +<p>Habit, if wisely and skillfully formed, becomes truly a second nature, +as the common saying is; but unskillfully and unmethodically directed, +it will be as it were the ape of nature, which imitates nothing to the +life, but only clumsily and awkwardly.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>That beneficent harness of routine which enables silly men to live +respectably and unhappy men to live calmly.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Habits are the daughters of action, but they nurse their mothers, and +give birth to daughters after her image, more lovely and +prosperous.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p><b>Hair.</b>—The hair is the finest ornament women have. Of old, virgins used +to wear it loose, except when they were in mourning.—<i>Luther.</i></p> + +<p>Her head was bare, but for her native ornament of hair, which in a +simple knot was tied above; sweet negligence, unheeded bait of +love!—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>The robe which curious nature weaves to hang upon the head.—<i>Dekker.</i></p> + +<p>Robed in the long night of her deep hair.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Hand.</b>—Other parts of the body assist the speaker, but these speak +themselves. By them we ask, we promise, we invoke, we dismiss, we +threaten, we entreat, we deprecate; we express fear, joy, grief, our +doubts, our assent, our penitence; we show moderation, profusion; we +mark number and time.—<i>Quintilian.</i></p> + +<p>The Greeks adored their gods by the simple compliment of kissing their +hands; and the Romans were treated as atheists if they would not perform +the same act when they entered a temple. This custom, however, as a +religious ceremony, declined with Paganism; but was continued as a +salutation by infe<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>riors to their superiors, or as a token of esteem +among friends. At present it is only practiced as a mark of obedience +from the subject to the sovereign, and by lovers, who are solicitous to +preserve this ancient usage in its full power.—<i>Disraeli.</i></p> + +<p><b>Handsome.</b>—They are as heaven made them, handsome enough if they be good +enough; for handsome is that handsome does.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Happiness.</b>—The foundation of domestic happiness is faith in the virtue +of woman; the foundation of political happiness is confidence in the +integrity of man; the foundation of all happiness, temporal and eternal, +is reliance on the goodness of God.—<i>Landor.</i></p> + +<p>To remember happiness which cannot be restored is pain, but of a +softened kind. Our recollections are unfortunately mingled with much +that we deplore, and with many actions that we bitterly repent; still, +in the most checkered life, I firmly think there are so many little rays +of sunshine to look back upon that I do not believe any mortal would +deliberately drain a goblet of the waters of Lethe if he had it in his +power.—<i>Dickens.</i></p> + +<p>That man is never happy for the present is so true that all his relief +from unhappiness is only forgetting himself for a little while. Life is +a progress from want to want, not from enjoyment to +enjoyment.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>It is a lucky eel that escapes skinning. The best happiness will be to +escape the worst misery.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>That all who are happy are equally happy is not true. A peasant and a +philosopher may be equally <i>satisfied</i>, but not equally <i>happy</i>. +Happiness consists in the multiplicity of agreeable consciousness. A +peasant has not capacity for having equal happiness with a +philosopher.—<i>Johnson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p> + +<p>Happiness doats on her work, and is prodigal to her favorite. As one +drop of water hath an attraction for another, so do felicities run into +felicities.—<i>Landor.</i></p> + +<p>Sensations sweet, felt in the blood, and felt along the +heart.—<i>Wordsworth.</i></p> + +<p>Great happiness is the fire ordeal of mankind, great misfortune only the +trial by water; for the former opens a large extent of futurity, whereas +the latter circumscribes or closes it.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Prospective happiness is perhaps the only real happiness in the +world.—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i></p> + +<p>Nature and individuals are generally best when they are happiest, and +deserve heaven most when they have learnt rightly to enjoy it. Tears of +sorrow are only pearls of inferior value, but tears of joy are pearls or +diamonds of the first water.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>How many people I have seen who would have plucked cannon-balls out of +the muzzles of guns with their bare hands, and yet had not courage +enough to be happy.—<i>Théophile Gautier.</i></p> + +<p>All mankind are happier for having been happy, so that, if you make them +happy now, you make them happy twenty years hence by the memory of +it.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>We are no longer happy so soon as we wish to be happier.—<i>Lamotte.</i></p> + +<p>I have now reigned above fifty years in victory or peace, beloved by my +subjects, dreaded by my enemies, and respected by my allies. Riches and +honors, power and pleasure, have waited on my call, nor does any earthly +blessing appear to have been wanting to my felicity. In this situation, +I have diligently numbered the days of pure and genuine happiness which +have fallen to my lot: they amount to <i>fourteen</i>. O man, place not thy +confidence in this present world!—<i>The Caliph Abdalrahman.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span></p> + +<p>If I may speak of myself (the only person of whom I can speak with +certainty), <i>my</i> happy hours have far exceeded, and far exceed, the +scanty numbers of the caliph of Spain; and I shall not scruple to add +that many of them are due to the pleasing labor of the present +composition.—<i>Gibbon.</i></p> + +<p>For which we bear to live, or dare to die.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>We buy wisdom with happiness, and who would purchase it at such a price? +To be happy we must forget the past, and think not of the future; and +who that has a soul or mind can do this? No one; and this proves that +those who have either know no happiness on this earth. Memory precludes +happiness, whatever Rogers may say or write to the contrary, for it +borrows from the past to embitter the present, bringing back to us all +the grief that has most wounded, or the happiness that has most charmed +us.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>The happiness you wot of is not a hundredth part of what you +enjoy.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Every human soul has the germ of some flowers within; and they would +open if they could only find sunshine and free air to expand in. I +always told you that not having enough of sunshine was what ailed the +world. Make people happy, and there will not be half the quarreling, or +a tenth part of the wickedness there is.—<i>Mrs. L. M. Child.</i></p> + +<p>Comparison, more than reality, makes men happy, and can make them +wretched.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>Happiness and misery are the names of two extremes, the utmost bounds +whereof we know not.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>There comes forever something between us and what we deem our +happiness.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Philosophical happiness is to want little; civil or vulgar happiness is +to want much, and to enjoy much.—<i>Burke.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span></p> + +<p>How sad a sight is human happiness to those whose thoughts can pierce +beyond an hour.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>Plenteous joys, wanton in fullness.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Happiness is always the inaccessible castle which sinks in ruin when we +set foot on it.—<i>Arsène Houssaye.</i></p> + +<p>For ages happiness has been represented as a huge precious stone, +impossible to find, which people seek for hopelessly. It is not so; +happiness is a mosaic, composed of a thousand little stones, which +separately and of themselves have little value, but which united with +art form a graceful design.—<i>Mme. de Girardin.</i></p> + +<p>The happiest women, like the happiest nations, have no history.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The way to bliss lies not on beds of down.—<i>Quarles.</i></p> + +<p>The use we make of happiness gives us an eternal sentiment of +satisfaction or repentance.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p>Happiness is where we find it, but rarely where we seek it.—<i>J. Petit +Senn.</i></p> + +<p>In regard to the affairs of mortals, there is nothing happy +throughout.—<i>Euripides.</i></p> + +<p><b>Hardship.</b>—The beginning of hardship is like the first taste of bitter +food,—it seems for a moment unbearable; yet, if there is nothing else +to satisfy our hunger, we take another bite and find it possible to go +on.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Haste.</b>—Let your haste commend your duty.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The more haste ever the worst speed.—<i>Churchill.</i></p> + +<p>Hurry and cunning are the two apprentices of dispatch and skill; but +neither of them ever learn their master's trade.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>All haste implies weakness.—<i>George MacDonald.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Hatred.</b>—We hate some persons because we do not know them; and we will +not know them because we hate them.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Were one to ask me in which direction I think man strongest, I should +say, his capacity to hate.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>Love is rarely a hypocrite. But hate! how detect, and how guard against +it. It lurks where you least expect it; it is created by causes that you +can the least foresee; and civilization multiplies its varieties whilst +it favors its disguise; for civilization increases the number of +contending interests, and refinement renders more susceptible to the +least irritation the cuticle of self-love.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Hatred is like fire—it makes even light rubbish deadly.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Health.</b>—Be it remembered that man subsists upon the air more than upon +his meat and drink; but no one can exist for an hour without a copious +supply of air. The atmosphere which some breathe is contaminated and +adulterated, and with its vital principles so diminished, that it cannot +fully decarbonize the blood, nor fully excite the nervous +system.—<i>Thackeray.</i></p> + +<p>Those hypochondriacs, who, like Herodius, give up their whole time and +thoughts to the care of their health, sacrifice unto life every noble +purpose of living; striving to support a frail and feverish being here, +they neglect an hereafter; they continue to patch up and repair their +mouldering tenement of clay, regardless of the immortal tenant that must +survive it; agitated by greater fears than the Apostle, and supported by +none of his hopes, they "die daily."—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Refuse to be ill. Never tell people you are ill; never own it to +yourself. Illness is one of those things which a man should resist on +principle at the onset.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span></p> + +<p>Health is so necessary to all the duties, as well as pleasures, of life, +that the crime of squandering it is equal to the folly.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>There are two things in life that a sage must preserve at every +sacrifice, the coats of his stomach and the enamel of his teeth. Some +evils admit of consolations: there are no comforters for dyspepsia and +the toothache.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Heart.</b>—The heart is like the tree that gives balm for the wounds of man +only when the iron has pierced it.—<i>Chauteaubriand.</i></p> + +<p>The heart is an astrologer that always divines the truth.—<i>Calderon.</i></p> + +<p>There are treasures laid up in the heart,—treasures of charity, piety, +temperance, and soberness. These treasures a man takes with him beyond +death when he leaves this world.—<i>Buddhist Scriptures.</i></p> + +<p>In aught that tries the heart, how few withstand the proof!—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>The hearts of pretty women are like bonbons, wrapped up in enigmas.—<i>J. +Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>A loving heart is the truest wisdom.—<i>Dickens.</i></p> + +<p>To judge human character rightly, a man may sometimes have very small +experience, provided he has a very large heart.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>The heart has reasons that reason does not understand.—<i>Bossuet.</i></p> + +<p>There are chords in the human heart, strange, varying strings, which are +only struck by accident; which will remain mute and senseless to appeals +the most passionate and earnest, and respond at last to the slightest +casual touch. In the most insensible or childish minds there is some +train of reflection which art can seldom lead, or skill assist, but +which will reveal itself, as great truths have done, by chance, and when +the discoverer has the plainest and simplest end in view.—<i>Dickens.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span></p> + +<p>A willing heart adds feathers to the heel, and makes the clown a winged +Mercury.—<i>Joanna Baillie.</i></p> + +<p>Some people's hearts are shrunk in them like dried nuts. You can hear +'em rattle as they walk.—<i>Douglas</i> <i>Jerrold.</i></p> + +<p><b>Heaven.</b>—The love of heaven makes one heavenly.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Where is heaven? I cannot tell. Even to the eye of faith, heaven looks +much like a star to the eye of flesh. Set there on the brow of night, it +shines most bright, most beautiful; but it is separated from us by so +great a distance as to be raised almost as high above our investigations +as above the storms and clouds of earth.—<i>Rev. Dr. Guthrie.</i></p> + +<p>When at eve at the bounding of the landscape the heavens appear to +recline so slowly on the earth, imagination pictures beyond the horizon +an asylum of hope,—a native land of love; and nature seems silently to +repeat that man is immortal.—<i>Madame de Staël.</i></p> + +<p>Few, without the hope of another life, would think it worth their while +to live above the allurements of sense.—<i>Atterbury.</i></p> + +<p>Heaven is a place of restless activity, the abode of never-tiring +thought. David and Isaiah will sweep nobler and loftier strains in +eternity, and the minds of the saints, unclogged by cumbersome clay, +will forever feast on the banquet of rich and glorious +thought.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p><b>Heroes.</b>—A light supper, a good night's sleep, and a fine morning have +often made a hero of the same man who, by indigestion, a restless night, +and a rainy morning would have proved a coward.—<i>Chesterfield.</i></p> + +<p>In analyzing the character of heroes it is hardly possible to separate +altogether the share of Fortune from their own.—<i>Hallam.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mankind is not disposed to look narrowly into the conduct of great +victors when their victory is on the right side.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>No one is a hero to his valet.—<i>Madame de Sévigné.</i></p> + +<p><b>History.</b>—The Grecian history is a poem, Latin history a picture, modern +history a chronicle.—<i>Chauteaubriand.</i></p> + +<p>If men could learn from history, what lessons it might teach us! But +passion and party blind our eyes, and the light which experience gives +is a lantern on the stern, which shines only on the waves behind +us!—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>History, which is, indeed, little more than the register of the crimes, +follies, and misfortunes of mankind.—<i>Gibbon.</i></p> + +<p>We must consider how very little history there is; I mean real, +authentic history. That certain kings reigned and certain battles were +fought we can depend upon as true; but all the coloring, all the +philosophy of history, is conjecture.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>History needs distance, perspective. Facts and events which are too well +attested cease, in some sort, to be malleable.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>To be entirely just in our estimate of other ages is not only +difficult,—it is impossible. Even what is passing in our presence we +see but through a glass darkly. The mind as well as the eye adds +something of its own before an image, even of the clearest object, can +be painted upon it; and in historical inquiries the most instructed +thinkers have but a limited advantage over the most illiterate. Those +who know the most approach least to agreement.—<i>Froude.</i></p> + +<p>The impartiality of history is not that of the mirror which merely +reflects objects, but of the judge who sees, listens, and +decides.—<i>Lamartine.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span></p> + +<p>In every human character and transaction there is a mixture of good and +evil: a little exaggeration, a little suppression, a judicious use of +epithets, a watchful and searching skepticism with respect to the +evidence on one side, a convenient credulity with respect to every +report or tradition on the other, may easily make a saint of Laud, or a +tyrant of Henry the Fourth.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>History is but a kind of Newgate calendar, a register of the crimes and +miseries that man has inflicted on his fellow-man.—<i>Washington Irving.</i></p> + +<p>History has its foreground and its background, and it is principally in +the management of its perspective that one artist differs from another. +Some events must be represented on a large scale, others diminished; the +great majority will be lost in the dimness of the horizon, and a general +idea of their joint effect will be given by a few slight +touches.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>Violent natures make history. The instruments they use almost always +kill. Religion and philosophy have their vestments covered with innocent +blood.—<i>X. Doudan.</i></p> + +<p>Each generation gathers together the imperishable children of the past, +and increases them by new sons of light, alike radiant with +immortality.—<i>Bancroft.</i></p> + +<p>What history is not richer, does not contain far more, than they by whom +it is enacted, the present witnesses! What mortal understandeth his +way?—<i>Jacobi.</i></p> + +<p>He alone reads history aright, who, observing how powerfully +circumstances influence the feelings and opinions of men, how often +vices pass into virtues, and paradoxes into axioms, learns to +distinguish what is accidental and transitory in human nature from what +is essential and immutable.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p><b>Home.</b>—Home is the grandest of all institutions.—<i>Spurgeon.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p> + +<p>The first sure symptom of a mind in health is rest of heart, and +pleasure felt at home.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>To most men their early home is no more than a memory of their early +years, and I'm not sure but they have the best of it. The image is never +marred. There's no disappointment in memory, and one's exaggerations are +always on the good side.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home.—<i>Payne.</i></p> + +<p>Stint yourself, as you think good, in other things; but don't scruple +freedom in brightening home. Gay furniture and a brilliant garden are a +sight day by day, and make life blither.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Home is the seminary of all other institutions.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Honesty.</b>—If he does really think that there is no distinction between +virtue and vice, why, sir, when he leaves our houses let us count our +spoons.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Persons lightly dipped, not grained, in generous honesty, are but pale +in goodness.—<i>Sir T. Browne.</i></p> + +<p>Refined policy has ever been the parent of confusion, and ever will be +so, as long as the world endures. Plain good intention, which is as +easily discovered at the first view as fraud is surely detected at last, +is, let me say, of no mean force in the government of mankind. Genuine +simplicity of heart is a healing and cementing principle.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>Money dishonestly acquired is never worth its cost, while a good +conscience never costs as much as it is worth.—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>The honest man is a rare variety of the human species.—<i>Chamfort.</i></p> + +<p><b>Honor.</b>—Keep unscathed the good name, keep out of peril the honor, +without which even your battered old soldier, who is hobbling into his +grave on half pay and a wooden leg, would not change with +Achilles.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Hope.</b>—Hope warps judgment in council, but quickens energy in +action.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>"I have a fine lot of hopes here in my basket," remarked the New Year; +"they are a sweet-smelling flower—a species of roses."—<i>Hawthorne.</i></p> + +<p>Hope is the most beneficial of all the affections, and doth much to the +prolongation of life, if it be not too often frustrated; but +entertaineth the fancy with an expectation of good.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>The mighty hopes that make us men.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Thou captive's freedom, and thou sick man's health.—<i>Cowley.</i></p> + +<p>I have a knack of hoping, which is as good as an estate in reversion, if +one can keep from the temptation of turning it into certainty, which may +spoil all.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Hope, folding her wings, looked backward and became regret.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Hope is always liberal, and they that trust her promises make little +scruple of reveling to-day on the profits of to-morrow.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>It is necessary to hope, though hope should be always deluded; for hope +itself is happiness and its frustrations, however frequent, are yet less +dreadful than its extinction.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Hope is a delusion; no hand can grasp a wave or a shadow.—<i>Victor +Hugo.</i></p> + +<p><b>Humanity.</b>—A man's nature runs either to herbs or weeds: therefore let +him seasonably water the one and destroy the other.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>I own that there is a haughtiness and fierceness in human nature which +will cause innumerable broils, place men in what situation you +please.—<i>Burke.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p> + +<p>Human nature is not so much depraved as to hinder us from respecting +goodness in others, though we ourselves want it. This is the reason why +we are so much charmed with the pretty prattle of children, and even the +expressions of pleasure or uneasiness in some parts of the brute +creation. They are without artifice or malice; and we love truth too +well to resist the charms of sincerity.—<i>Steele.</i></p> + +<p>I do not know what comfort other people find in considering the weakness +of great men, but 'tis always a mortification to me to observe that +there is no perfection in humanity.—<i>Montagu.</i></p> + +<p>The true proof of the inherent nobleness of our common nature is in the +sympathy it betrays with what is noble wherever crowds are collected. +Never believe the world is base; if it were so, no society could hold +together for a day.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Humility.</b>—It is from out the depths of our humility that the height of +our destiny looks grandest. Let me truly feel that in myself I am +nothing, and at once, through every inlet of my soul, God comes in, and +is everything in me.—<i>Mountford.</i></p> + +<p>Should any ask me, What is the first thing in religion? I would reply, +The first, second, and third thing therein, nay all, is humility.—<i>St. +Augustine.</i></p> + +<p>Epaminondas, that heathen captain, finding himself lifted up in the day +of his public triumph, the next day went drooping and hanging down his +head; but being asked what was the reason of his so great dejection, +made answer: "Yesterday I felt myself transported with vainglory, +therefore I chastise myself for it to-day."—<i>Plutarch.</i></p> + +<p>In humility imitate Jesus and Socrates.—<i>Franklin.</i></p> + +<p>Believe me, the much-praised lambs of humility would not bear themselves +so meekly if they but possessed tigers' claws.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p> + +<p>Trees that, like the poplar, lift upwards all their boughs, give no +shade and no shelter, whatever their height. Trees the most lovingly +shelter and shade us when, like the willow, the higher soar their +summits, the lowlier droop their bows.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>If thou wouldst find much favor and peace with God and man, be very low +in thine own eyes. Forgive thyself little and others much.—<i>Archbishop +Leighton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Humor.</b>—The genius of the Spanish people is exquisitely subtile, without +being at all acute: hence there is so much humor and so little wit in +their literature. The genius of the Italians, on the contrary, is acute, +profound, and sensual, but not subtile; hence what they think to be +humorous is merely witty.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>The oil and wine of merry meeting.—<i>Washington Irving.</i></p> + +<p>These poor gentlemen endeavor to gain themselves the reputation of wits +and humorists, by such monstrous conceits as almost qualify them for +bedlam; not considering that humor should always lie under the check of +reason, and that it requires the direction of the nicest judgment, by so +much the more as it indulges itself in the most boundless +freedoms.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p><b>Hyperbole.</b>—Sprightly natures, full of fire, and whom a boundless +imagination carries beyond all rules, and even what is reasonable, +cannot rest satisfied with hyperbole.—<i>Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p>Let us have done with reproaching; for we may throw out so many +reproachful words on one another that a ship of a hundred oars would not +be able to carry the load.—<i>Homer.</i></p> + +<p><b>Hypocrisy.</b>—Whoever is a hypocrite in his religion mocks God, presenting +to him the outside, and reserving the inward for his enemy.—<i>Jeremy +Taylor.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p> + +<p>Hypocrisy has become a fashionable vice, and all fashionable vices pass +for virtue.—<i>Molière.</i></p> + +<p>Hypocrisy is much more eligible than open infidelity and vice: it wears +the livery of religion, and is cautious of giving scandal.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p>Sin is not so sinful as hypocrisy.—<i>Mme. de Maintenon.</i></p> + +<p>As a man loves gold, in that proportion he hates to be imposed upon by +counterfeits; and in proportion as a man has regard for that which is +above price and better than gold, he abhors that hypocrisy which is but +its counterfeit.—<i>Cecil.</i></p> + +<p>Hypocrisy, the only evil that walks invisible, except to God +alone.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Hypocrisy, detest her as we may, and no man's hatred ever wronged her +yet, may claim this merit still: that she admits the worth of what she +mimics with such care.—<i>Cowper.</i></p> + +<p>I hate hypocrites, who put on their virtues with their white +gloves.—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i></p> + +<p>Such a man will omit neither family worship, nor a sneer at his +neighbor. He will neither milk his cows on the first day of the week +without a Sabbath mask on his face, nor remove it while he waters the +milk for his customers.—<i>George Mac Donald.</i></p> + +<p>The fatal fact in the case of a hypocrite is that he is a +hypocrite.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis a cowardly and servile humor to hide and disguise a man's self +under a vizor, and not to dare to show himself what he is. By that our +followers are train'd up to treachery. Being brought up to speak what is +not true, they make no conscience of a lie.—<i>Montaigne.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>I.</h3> + +<p><b>Ideas.</b>—After all has been said that can be said about the widening +influence of ideas, it remains true that they would hardly be such +strong agents unless they were taken in a solvent of feeling. The great +world-struggle of developing thought is continually foreshadowed in the +struggle of the affections, seeking a justification for love and +hope.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Our ideas are transformed sensations.—<i>Condillac.</i></p> + +<p>In these days we fight for ideas, and newspapers are our +fortresses.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Many ideas grow better when transplanted into another mind than in the +one where they sprung up. That which was a weed in one intelligence +becomes a flower in the other, and a flower again dwindles down to a +mere weed by the same change. Healthy growths may become poisonous by +falling upon the wrong mental soil, and what seemed a night-shade in one +mind unfolds as a morning-glory in the other.—<i>Holmes.</i></p> + +<p>A fixed idea is like the iron rod which sculptors put in their statues. +It impales and sustains.—<i>Taine.</i></p> + +<p>Old ideas are prejudices, and new ones caprices.—<i>X. Doudan.</i></p> + +<p>We live in an age in which superfluous ideas abound and essential ideas +are lacking.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Ideas are like beards; men do not have them until they grow +up.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>Our ideas, like orange-plants, spread out in proportion to the size of +the box which imprisons the roots.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Idleness.</b>—If idleness do not produce vice or malevolence, it commonly +produces melancholy.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p> + +<p>Idleness is the key of beggary, and the root of all evil.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>In idleness there is perpetual despair.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>Doing nothing with a deal of skill.—<i>Cowper.</i></p> + +<p>From its very inaction, idleness ultimately becomes the most active +cause of evil; as a palsy is more to be dreaded than a fever. The Turks +have a proverb, which says, that the devil tempts all other men, but +that idle men tempt the devil.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>The first external revelations of the dry-rot in men is a tendency to +lurk and lounge; to be at street corners without intelligible reason; to +be going anywhere when met; to be about many places rather than any; to +do nothing tangible but to have an intention of performing a number of +tangible duties to-morrow or the day after.—<i>Dickens.</i></p> + +<p>Idleness is only the refuge of weak minds, and the holiday of +fools.—<i>Chesterfield.</i></p> + +<p>So long as idleness is quite shut out from our lives, all the sins of +wantonness, softness, and effeminacy are prevented; and there is but +little room for temptation.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p>Let but the hours of idleness cease, and the bow of Cupid will become +broken and his torch extinguished.—<i>Ovid.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ignorance.</b>—Have the <i>courage</i> to be ignorant of a great number of +things, in order to avoid the calamity of being ignorant of +everything.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>There is no calamity like ignorance.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis sad work to be at that pass, that the best trial of truth must be +the multitude of believers, in a crowd where the number of fools so much +exceeds that of the wise. As if anything were so common as +ignorance!—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>Ignorance, which in behavior mitigates a fault, is, in literature, a +capital offense.—<i>Joubert.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span></p> + +<p>There is no slight danger from general ignorance; and the only choice +which Providence has graciously left to a vicious government is either +to fall <i>by</i> the people, if they are suffered to become enlightened, or +<i>with</i> them, if they are kept enslaved and ignorant.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>To be ignorant of one's ignorance is the malady of ignorance.—<i>Alcott.</i></p> + +<p>The true instrument of man's degradation is his ignorance.—<i>Lady +Morgan.</i></p> + +<p>Ignorance is not so damnable as humbug, but when it prescribes pills it +may happen to do more harm.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The ignorant hath an eagle's wings and an owl's eyes.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Ignorance is mere privation, by which nothing can be produced; it is a +vacuity in which the soul sits motionless and torpid for want of +attraction.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Illusion.</b>—In youth we feel richer for every new illusion; in maturer +years, for every one we lose.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>Illusion is the first of all pleasures.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p><b>Imagination.</b>—We are all of us imaginative in some form or other, for +images are the brood of desire.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>A vile imagination, once indulged, gets the key of our minds, and can +get in again very easily, whether we will or no, and can so return as to +bring seven other spirits with it more wicked than itself; and what may +follow no one knows.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>He who has imagination without learning has wings and no +feet.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>No man will be found in whose mind airy notions do not sometimes +tyrannize, and force him to hope or fear beyond the limits of sober +probability.—<i>Johnson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Imitation.</b>—Imitators are a servile race.—<i>Fontaine.</i></p> + +<p>Imitation causes us to leave natural ways to enter into artificial ones; +it therefore makes slaves.—<i>Dr. Vinet.</i></p> + +<p>"Name to me an animal, though never so skillful, that I cannot imitate!" +So bragged the ape to the fox. But the fox replied, "And do thou name to +me an animal so humble as to think of imitating thee."—<i>Lessing.</i></p> + +<p><b>Immortality.</b>—When I consider the wonderful activity of the mind, so +great a memory of what is past, and such a capacity of penetrating into +the future; when I behold such a number of arts and sciences, and such a +multitude of discoveries thence arising; I believe and am firmly +persuaded that a nature which contains so many things within itself +cannot be mortal.—<i>Cicero.</i></p> + +<p>Whatsoever that be within us that feels, thinks, desires, and animates, +is something celestial, divine, and consequently +imperishable.—<i>Aristotle.</i></p> + +<p>The spirit of man, which God inspired, cannot together perish with this +corporeal clod.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>All men's souls are immortal, but the souls of the righteous are +immortal and divine.—<i>Socrates.</i></p> + +<p>What springs from earth dissolves to earth again, and heaven-born things +fly to their native seat.—<i>Marcus Antoninus.</i></p> + +<p>The seed dies into a new life, and so does man.—<i>George MacDonald.</i></p> + +<p><b>Impatience.</b>—Impatience turns an ague into a fever, a fever to the +plague, fear into despair, anger into rage, loss into madness, and +sorrow to amazement.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p><b>Impossibility.</b>—One great difference between a wise man and a fool is, +the former only<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span> wishes for what he may possibly obtain; the latter +desires impossibilities.—<i>Democritus.</i></p> + +<p><b>Improvement.</b>—Slumber not in the tents of your fathers. The world is +advancing. Advance with it.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>People seldom improve when they have no other model but themselves to +copy after.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Improvidence.</b>—How full or how empty our lives, depends, we say, on +Providence. Suppose we say, more or less on improvidence.—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p><b>Income.</b>—Our incomes are like our shoes; if too small, they gall and +pinch us; but if too large, they cause us to stumble and to +trip.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Inconsistency.</b>—Men talk as if they believed in God, but they live as if +they thought there was none: their vows and promises are no more than +words of course.—<i>L'Estrange.</i></p> + +<p>People are so ridiculous with their illusions, carrying their fool's +caps unawares, thinking their own lies opaque while everybody else's are +transparent, making themselves exceptions to everything, as if when all +the world looked yellow under a lamp they alone were rosy.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Inconstancy.</b>—The catching court disease.—<i>Otway.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing that is not a real crime makes a man appear so contemptible and +little in the eyes of the world as inconstancy.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p><b>Indifference.</b>—Nothing for preserving the body like having no +heart.—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>Indifference is the invincible giant of the world.—<i>Ouida.</i></p> + +<p><b>Indigestion.</b>—Old friendships are destroyed by toasted cheese, and hard +salted meat has led to suicide. Unpleasant feelings of the body produce +correspondent sensations in the mind, and a great<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> scene of wretchedness +is sketched out by a morsel of indigestible and misguided food.—<i>Sydney +Smith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Individuality.</b>—There are men of convictions whose very faces will light +up an era, and there are believing women in whose eyes you may almost +read the whole plan of salvation.—<i>T. Fields.</i></p> + +<p>Individuality is everywhere to be spared and respected as the root of +everything good.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>The epoch of individuality is concluded, and it is the duty of reformers +to initiate the epoch of association. Collective man is omnipotent upon +the earth he treads.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p><b>Indolence.</b>—I look upon indolence as a sort of suicide; for the man is +effectually destroyed, though the appetite of the brute may +survive.—<i>Chesterfield.</i></p> + +<p>Lives spent in indolence, and therefore sad.—<i>Cowper.</i></p> + +<p>Days of respite are golden days.—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p>So long as he must fight his way, the man of genius pushes forward, +conquering and to conquer. But how often is he at last overcome by a +Capua! Ease and fame bring sloth and slumber.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing ages like laziness.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Indulgence.</b>—One wishes to be happy before becoming wise.—<i>Mme. +Necker.</i></p> + +<p><b>Industry.</b>—Mankind are more indebted to industry than ingenuity; the +gods set up their favors at a price, and industry is the +purchaser.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Application is the price to be paid for mental acquisition. To have the +harvest we must sow the seed.—<i>Bailey.</i></p> + +<p><b>Infidelity.</b>—There is but one thing without honor; smitten with eternal +barrenness, inability to do or to be,—insincerity, unbelief. He who +be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>lieves no <i>thing</i>, who believes only the shows of things, is not in +relation with nature and fact at all.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>I would rather dwell in the dim fog of superstition than in air rarefied +to nothing by the air-pump of unbelief; in which the panting breast +expires, vainly and convulsively gasping for breath.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>If on one side there are fair proofs, and no pretense of proof on the +other, and that the difficulties are more pressing on that side which is +destitute of proof, I desire to know whether this be not upon the matter +as satisfactory to a wise man as a demonstration.—<i>Tillotson.</i></p> + +<p>The nurse of infidelity is sensuality.—<i>Cecil.</i></p> + +<p>Men always grow vicious before they become unbelievers; but if you would +once convince profligates by topics drawn from the view of their own +quiet, reputation, and health, their infidelity would soon drop +off.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p>Infidelity gives nothing in return for what it takes away. What, then, +is it worth? Everything valuable has a compensating power. Not a blade +of grass that withers, or the ugliest weed that is flung away to rot and +die, but reproduces something.—<i>Dr. Chalmers.</i></p> + +<p><b>Infirmities.</b>—Never mind what a man's virtues are; waste no time in +learning them. Fasten at once on his infirmities.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Influence.</b>—He who wishes to exert a useful influence must be careful to +insult nothing. Let him not be troubled by what seems absurd, but let +him consecrate his energies to the creation of what is good. He must not +demolish, but build. He must raise temples where mankind may come and +partake of the purest pleasures.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>If I can put one touch of a rosy sunset into the life of any man or +woman, I shall feel that I have worked with God.—<i>George MacDonald.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span></p> + +<p>The city reveals the moral ends of being, and sets the awful problem of +life. The country soothes us, refreshes us, lifts us up with religious +suggestion.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>It is the age that forms the man, not the man that forms the age. Great +minds do indeed react on the society which has made them what they are, +but they only pay with interest what they have received.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>In families well ordered there is always one firm, sweet temper, which +controls without seeming to dictate. The Greeks represented Persuasion +as crowned.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ingratitude.</b>—The great bulk of mankind resemble the swine, which in +harvest gather and fatten upon the acorns beneath the oak, but show to +the tree which bore them no other thanks than rubbing off its bark, and +tearing up the sod around it.—<i>Scriver.</i></p> + +<p>One great cause of our insensibility to the goodness of our Creator is +the very extensiveness of his bounty.—<i>Paley.</i></p> + +<p><b>Injustice.</b>—The injustice of men subserves the justice of God, and often +his mercy.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ink.</b>—A drop of ink may make a million think.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Let there be gall enough in thy ink; though thou write with a goose-pen, +no matter.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The colored slave that waits upon thought.—<i>Mrs. Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>Oh, she is fallen into a pit of ink, that the wide sea hath drops too +few to wash her clean again!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>My ways are as broad as the king's high road, and my means lie in an +inkstand.—<i>Southey.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Innocence.</b>—He's armed without that's innocent within.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>There is no courage but in innocence.—<i>Southern.</i></p> + +<p>There is no man so good who, were he to submit all his thoughts and +actions to the law, would not deserve hanging ten times in his +life.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Innovation.</b>—The ridiculous rage for innovation, which only increases +the weight of the chains it cannot break, shall never fire my +blood!—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>Dislike of innovation proceeds sometimes from the disgust excited by +false humanity, canting hypocrisy, and silly enthusiasm.—<i>Sydney +Smith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Insanity.</b>—Insanity is not a distinct and separate empire; our ordinary +life borders upon it, and we cross the frontier in some part of our +nature.—<i>Taine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Inspiration.</b>—Do we not all agree to call rapid thought and noble +impulse by the name of inspiration? After our subtlest analysis of the +mental process, we must still say that our highest thoughts and our best +deeds are all given to us.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Contagious enthusiasm.—<i>Mrs. Balfour.</i></p> + +<p><b>Instinct.</b>—The instinct of brutes and insects can be the effect of +nothing else than the wisdom and skill of a powerful ever-living +agent.—<i>Newton.</i></p> + +<p>Instinct harmonizes the interior of animals as religion does the +interior of men.—<i>Jacobi.</i></p> + +<p>All our first movements are good, generous, heroical; reflection weakens +and kills them.—<i>Aimé Martin.</i></p> + +<p>An instinct is a propensity prior to experience, and independent of +instruction.—<i>Paley.</i></p> + +<p><b>Insult.</b>—It is only the vulgar who are always fancying themselves +insulted. If a man treads on another's toe in good society do you think +it is taken as an insult?—<i>Lady Hester Stanhope.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p> + +<p>I once met a man who had forgiven an injury. I hope some day to meet the +man who has forgiven an insult.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Insurrection.</b>—Insurrection unusually gains little; usually wastes how +much! One of its worst kind of wastes, to say nothing of the rest, is +that of irritating and exasperating men against each other by violence +done; which is always sure to be injustice done, for violence does even +justice unjustly.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p><b>Intellect.</b>—The commerce of intellect loves distant shores. The small +retail dealer trades only with his neighbor; when the great merchant +trades, he links the four quarters of the globe.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Intelligence.</b>—The higher feelings, when acting in harmonious +combination, and directed by enlightened intellect, have a boundless +scope for gratification; their least indulgence is delightful, and their +highest activity is bliss.—<i>Combe.</i></p> + +<p>Some men of a secluded and studious life have sent forth from their +closet or their cloister, rays of intellectual light that have agitated +courts and revolutionized kingdoms; like the moon which, though far +removed from the ocean, and shining upon it with a serene and sober +light, is the chief cause of all those ebbings and flowings which +incessantly disturb that restless world of waters.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Light has spread, and even bayonets think.—<i>Kossuth.</i></p> + +<p>Intelligence is a luxury, sometimes useless, sometimes fatal. It is a +torch or a fire-brand according to the use one makes of it.—<i>Fernan +Caballero.</i></p> + +<p><b>Intemperance.</b>—The body, overcharged with the excess of yesterday, +weighs down the mind together with itself, and fixes to the earth that +particle of the divine spirit.—<i>Horace.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span></p> + +<p>Intemperance is a great decayer of beauty.—<i>Junius.</i></p> + +<p><b>Intolerance.</b>—Nothing dies so hard, and rallies so often, as +intolerance.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>Intolerance is the curse of every age and state.—<i>Dr. Davies.</i></p> + +<p><b>Invective.</b>—Invective may be a sharp weapon, but over-use blunts its +edge. Even when the denunciation is just and true, it is an error of art +to indulge in it too long.—<i>Tyndall.</i></p> + +<p><b>Invention.</b>—Invention is a kind of muse, which, being possessed of the +other advantages common to her sisters, and being warmed by the fire of +Apollo, is raised higher than the rest.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Invention, strictly speaking, is little more than a new combination of +those images which have been previously gathered and deposited in the +memory. Nothing can be made of nothing: he who has laid up no materials +can produce no combinations.—<i>Sir J. Reynolds.</i></p> + +<p><b>Irony.</b>—Irony is to the high-bred what billingsgate is to the vulgar; +and when one gentleman thinks another gentleman an ass, he does not say +it point-blank, he implies it in the politest terms he can +invent.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Irresolution.</b>—Irresolution is a worse vice than rashness. He that +shoots best may sometimes miss the mark; but he that shoots not at all +can never hit it. Irresolution loosens all the joints of a state; like +an ague, it shakes not this nor that limb, but all the body is at once +in a fit. The irresolute man is lifted from one place to another; so +hatcheth nothing, but addles all his actions.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>Irresolution on the schemes of life which offer themselves to our +choice, and inconstancy in pursuing them, are the greatest causes of all +our unhappiness.—<i>Addison.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p> + +<p>Irresolute people let their soup grow cold between the plate and the +mouth.—<i>Cervantes.</i></p> + +<p><b>Irritability.</b>—Irritability urges us to take a step as much too soon as +sloth does too late.—<i>Cecil.</i></p> + +<p>An irritable man lies like a hedgehog rolled up the wrong way, +tormenting himself with his own prickles.—<i>Hood.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ivy.</b>—The stateliest building man can raise is the ivy's food at +last.—<i>Dickens.</i></p> + +<p>The ivy, like the spider, takes hold with her hands in king's palaces, +as every twig is furnished with innumerable little fingers, by which it +draws itself close, as it were, to the very heart of the old rough +stone. Its clinging and beautiful tenacity has given rise to an +abundance of conceits about fidelity, friendship, and woman's love, +which have become commonplace simply from their appropriateness. It +might also symbolize the higher love, unconquerable and unconquered, +which has embraced this ruined world from age to age, silently spreading +its green over the rents and fissures of our fallen nature.—<i>Mrs. +Stowe.</i></p> + + +<h3>J.</h3> + +<p><b>Jealousy.</b>—What frenzy dictates, jealousy believes.—<i>Gay.</i></p> + +<p>Jealousy sees things always with magnifying glasses which make little +things large, of dwarfs giants, suspicions truths.—<i>Cervantes.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis a monster begot upon itself, born on itself.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Women detest a jealous man whom they do not love, but it angers them +when a man they do love is not jealous.—<i>Ninon de L'Enclos.</i></p> + +<p>A jealous man always finds more than he looks for.—<i>Mlle. de Scudéry.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p> + +<p>Jealousy is the sister of love, as the devil is the brother of +angels.—<i>Boufflers.</i></p> + +<p><b>Jesting.</b>—Jests—Brain fleas that jump about among the slumbering +ideas.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>The jest loses its point when the wit is the first to +laugh.—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>And generally, men ought to find the difference between saltness and +bitterness. Certainly, he that hath a satirical vein, as he maketh +others afraid of his wit, so he had need be afraid of other's +memory.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p><b>Jewelry.</b>—Jewels! It's my belief that when woman was made, jewels were +invented only to make her the more mischievous.—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i></p> + +<p><b>Jews.</b>—Talk what you will of the Jews; that they are cursed: they thrive +wherever they come; they are able to oblige the prince of their country +by lending him money; none of them beg; they keep together; and as for +their being hated, why Christians hate one another as much.—<i>Selden.</i></p> + +<p>They are a piece of stubborn antiquity, compared with which Stonehenge +is in its nonage. They date beyond the Pyramids.—<i>Lamb.</i></p> + +<p><b>Joy.</b>—The soul's calm sunshine, and the heartfelt joy.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Worldly joy is like the songs which peasants sing, full of melodies and +sweet airs.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>Redundant joy, like a poor miser, beggar'd by his store.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>We lose the peace of years when we hunt after the rapture of +moments.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Joy is the best of wine.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Joy in this world is like a rainbow, which in the morning only appears +in the west, or towards the evening sky; but in the latter hours of day +casts its triumphal arch over the east, or morning sky.—<i>Richter.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Judgment.</b>—The more one judges, the less one loves.—<i>Balzac.</i></p> + +<p>I mistrust the judgment of every man in a case in which his own wishes +are concerned.—<i>Wellington.</i></p> + +<p>Judgment and reason have been grand jurymen since before Noah was a +sailor.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>A flippant, frivolous man may ridicule others, may controvert them, +scorn them; but he who has any respect for himself seems to have +renounced the right of thinking meanly of others.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>In judging of others a man laboreth in vain, often erreth, and easily +sinneth; but in judging and examining himself, he always laboreth +fruitfully.—<i>Thomas à Kempis.</i></p> + +<p>I have seen, when after execution judgment hath repented o'er his +doom.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Foolish men imagine that because judgment for an evil thing is delayed, +there is no justice, but an accident alone, here below. Judgment for an +evil thing is many times delayed some day or two, some century or two, +but it is sure as life, it is sure as death!—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>Human judgment, like Luther's drunken peasant, when saved from falling +on one side, topples over on the other.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>The contemporary mind may in rare cases be taken by storm; but posterity +never. The tribunal of the present is accessible to influence; that of +the future is incorrupt.—<i>Gladstone.</i></p> + +<p>Upon any given point, contradictory evidence seldom puzzles the man who +has mastered the laws of evidence, but he knows little of the laws of +evidence who has not studied the unwritten law of the human heart; and +without this last knowledge a man of action will not attain to the +practical, nor will a poet achieve the ideal.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p> + +<p>How little do they see what is, who frame their hasty judgment upon that +which seems.—<i>Southey.</i></p> + +<p><b>Justice.</b>—It is the pleasure of the gods—that what is in conformity +with justice shall also be in conformity to the laws.—<i>Socrates.</i></p> + +<p>Justice delayed is justice denied.—<i>Gladstone.</i></p> + +<p>Justice advances with such languid steps that crime often escapes from +its slowness. Its tardy and doubtful course causes too many tears to be +shed.—<i>Corneille.</i></p> + +<p>Justice is truth in action.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>At present we can only reason of the divine justice from what we know of +justice in man. When we are in other scenes we may have truer and nobler +ideas of it; but while we are in this life we can only speak from the +volume that is laid open before us.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Strike if you will, but hear.—<i>Themistocles.</i></p> + +<p>When Infinite Wisdom established the rule of right and honesty, He saw +to it that justice should be always the highest expediency.—<i>Wendell +Phillips.</i></p> + +<p>But Justice shines in smoky cottages, and honors the pious. Leaving with +averted eyes the gorgeous glare obtained by polluted hands, she is wont +to draw nigh to holiness, not reverencing wealth when falsely stamped +with praise, and assigning each deed its righteous doom.—<i>Æschylus.</i></p> + +<p>God's mill grinds slow but sure.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Who shall put his finger on the work of justice, and say, "It is there?" +Justice is like the kingdom of God—it is not without us as a fact, it +is within us as a great yearning.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Justice claims what is due, polity what is seemly; justice weighs and +decides, polity surveys and orders; justice refers to the individual, +polity to the community.—<i>Goethe.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>K.</h3> + +<p><b>Kindness.</b>—Yes! you may find people ready enough to do the Samaritan +without the oil and twopence.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Paradise is open to all kind hearts.—<i>Béranger.</i></p> + +<p>Kind words produce their own image in men's souls; and a beautiful image +it is. They soothe and quiet and comfort the hearer. They shame him out +of his sour, morose, unkind feelings. We have not yet begun to use kind +words in such abundance as they ought to be used.—<i>Pascal.</i></p> + +<p>To cultivate kindness is a valuable part of the business of +life.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>To remind a man of a kindness conferred is little less than a +reproach.—<i>Demosthenes.</i></p> + +<p>Kindness is the only charm permitted to the aged; it is the coquetry of +white hair.—<i>O. Feuillet.</i></p> + +<p>Sow good services; sweet remembrances will grow from them.—<i>Mme. de +Staël.</i></p> + +<p><b>Kings.</b>—Kings wish to be absolute, and they are sometimes told that +their best way to become so is to make themselves beloved by the people. +This maxim is doubtless a very admirable one, and in some respects true; +but unhappily it is laughed at in court.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p>Implements of war and subjugation are the last arguments to which kings +resort.—<i>Patrick Henry.</i></p> + +<p>A king ought not fall from the throne except with the throne itself; +under its lofty ruins he alone finds an honored death and an honored +tomb.—<i>Alfieri.</i></p> + +<p>One of the strongest natural proofs of the folly of hereditary right in +kings is, that nature disapproves it; otherwise she would not so +frequently turn it into ridicule by giving mankind an ass in place of a +lion.—<i>Thomas Paine.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span></p> + +<p>He on whom Heaven confers a sceptre knows not the weight till he bears +it.—<i>Corneille.</i></p> + +<p>Kings' titles commonly begin by force which time wears off, and mellows +into right; and power which in one age is tyranny is ripened in the next +to true succession.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p><b>Kisses.</b>—It is as old as the creation, and yet as young and fresh as +ever. It preëxisted, still exists, and always will exist. Depend upon +it, Eve learned it in Paradise, and was taught its beauties, virtues, +and varieties by an angel, there is something so transcendent in +it.—<i>Haliburton.</i></p> + +<p>Dear as remembered kisses after death.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Or leave a kiss but in the cup, and I'll not look for wine.—<i>Ben +Jonson.</i></p> + +<p>He kissed her and promised. Such beautiful lips! Man's usual fate—he +was lost upon the coral reefs.—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i></p> + +<p>Eden revives in the first kiss of love.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>You would think that, if our lips were made of horn, and stuck out a +foot or two from our faces, kisses at any rate would be done for. Not +so. No creatures kiss each other so much as birds.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>That farewell kiss which resembles greeting, that last glance of love +which becomes the sharpest pang of sorrow.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Stolen kisses are always sweetest.—<i>Leigh Hunt.</i></p> + +<p>Sharp is the kiss of the falcon's beak.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Four sweet lips, two pure souls, and one undying affection,—these are +love's pretty ingredients for a kiss.—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p><b>Knavery.</b>—Unluckily the credulity of dupes is as inexhaustible as the +invention of knaves. They<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span> never give people possession; but they always +keep them in hope.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>After long experience in the world I affirm, before God, I never knew a +rogue who was not unhappy.—<i>Junius.</i></p> + +<p>By fools knaves fatten; by bigots priests are well clothed; every knave +finds a gull.—<i>Zimmerman.</i></p> + +<p><b>Knowledge.</b>—The sure foundations of the state are laid in knowledge, not +in ignorance; and every sneer at education, at culture, at book +learning, which is the recorded wisdom of the experience of mankind, is +the demagogue's sneer at intelligent liberty, inviting national +degeneracy and ruin.—<i>G. W. Curtis.</i></p> + +<p>Knowledge, like religion, must be "experienced," in order to be +known.—<i>Whipple.</i></p> + +<p>The pleasure and delight of knowledge far surpasseth all other in +nature. We see in all other pleasures there is satiety; and after they +be used, their verdure departeth, which showeth well that they be but +deceits of pleasure, and not pleasures; and that it was the novelty +which pleased, not the quality; and therefore we see that voluptuous men +turn friars, and ambitious princes turn melancholy. But of knowledge +there is no satiety, but satisfaction and appetite are perpetually +interchangeable.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>What novelty is worth the sweet monotony where everything is known, and +loved because it is known?—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The truth is, that most men want knowledge, not for itself, but for the +superiority which knowledge confers; and the means they employ to secure +this superiority are as wrong as the ultimate object, for no man can +ever end with being superior who will not begin with being +inferior.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>He who knows much has much to care for.—<i>Lessing.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p> + +<p>Properly, there is no other knowledge but that which is got by working: +the rest is yet all a hypothesis of knowledge; a thing to be argued of +in schools; a thing floating in the clouds, in endless logic-vortices, +till we try and fix it.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>He that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>To know by rote is no knowledge; it is only a retention of what is +intrusted to the memory. That which a man truly knows may be disposed of +without regard to the author, or reference to the book from whence he +had it.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>He who cherishes his old knowledge, so as continually to acquire new, he +may be a teacher of others.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>A taste of every sort of knowledge is necessary to form the mind, and is +the only way to give the understanding its due improvement to the full +extent of its capacity.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>Knowledge has, in our time, triumphed, and is triumphing, over +prejudice, and over bigotry. The civilized and Christian world is fast +learning the great lesson, that difference of nation does not imply +necessary hostility, and that all contact need not be war. The whole +world is becoming a common field for intellect to act in. Energy of +mind, genius, power, wheresoever it exists, may speak out in any tongue, +and the world will hear it.—<i>Daniel Webster.</i></p> + +<p>Knowledge once gained casts a faint light beyond its own immediate +boundaries.—<i>Tyndall.</i></p> + +<p>The shortest and the surest way of arriving at real knowledge is to +unlearn the lessons we have been taught, to remount to first principles, +and take nobody's word about them.—<i>Bolingbroke.</i></p> + +<p>Sorrow is knowledge; they who know the most must mourn the deepest o'er +the fatal truth; the tree of knowledge is not that of life.—<i>Byron.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span></p> + +<p>The seeds of knowledge maybe planted in solitude, but must be cultivated +in public.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Knowledge dwells in heads replete with thoughts of other men; Wisdom, in +minds attentive to their own.—<i>Cowper.</i></p> + +<p>It is the glorious prerogative of the empire of knowledge, that what it +gains it never loses. On the contrary, it increases by the multiple of +its own power; all its ends become means; all its attainments helps to +new conquests.—<i>Daniel Webster.</i></p> + +<p>The love of knowledge in a young mind is almost a warrant against the +infirm excitement of passions and vices.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>There is nothing so minute, or inconsiderable, that I would not rather +know it than not.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>We always know everything when it serves no purpose, and when the seal +of the irreparable has been set upon events.—<i>Théophile Gautier.</i></p> + +<p>All the knowledge that we mortals can acquire is not knowledge positive, +but knowledge comparative, and subject to the errors and passions of +humanity.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + + +<h3>L.</h3> + +<p><b>Labor.</b>—Labor is the divine law of our existence; repose is desertion +and suicide.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>Labor is life: from the inmost heart of the worker rises his God-given +force, the sacred celestial life-essence breathed into him by Almighty +God!—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>The fact is nothing comes; at least nothing good. All has to be +fetched.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Genius begins great works, labor alone finishes them.—<i>Joubert.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span></p> + +<p>As steady application to work is the healthiest training for every +individual, so is it the best discipline of a state. Honorable industry +always travels the same road with enjoyment and duty, and progress is +altogether impossible without it.—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>Nature is just towards men. It recompenses them for their sufferings; it +renders them laborious, because to the greatest toils it attaches the +greatest rewards.—<i>Montesquieu.</i></p> + +<p>Virtue's guard is Labor, ease her sleep.—<i>Tasso.</i></p> + +<p>Alexander the Great, reflecting on his friends degenerating into sloth +and luxury, told them that it was a most slavish thing to luxuriate, and +a most royal thing to labor.—<i>Barrow.</i></p> + +<p>Many young painters would never have taken their pencils in hand if they +could have felt, known, and understood, early enough, what really +produced a master like Raphael.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>He that thinks that diversion may not lie in hard labor forgets the +early rising and hard riding of huntsmen.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>The pain of life but sweetens death; the hardest labor brings the +soundest sleep.—<i>Albert Smith.</i></p> + +<p>What men want is not talent, it is purpose; not the power to achieve, +but the will to labor.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>The true epic of our times is not "arms and the man," but "tools and the +man," an infinitely wider kind of epic.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>Labor is the curse of the world, and nobody can meddle with it without +becoming proportionably brutified!—<i>Hawthorne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Land.</b>—There is a distinct joy in owning land, unlike that which you +have in money, in houses, in books, pictures, or anything else which men +have devised. Personal property brings you into society with men. But +land is a part of God's estate in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> globe; and when a parcel of +ground is deeded to you, and you walk over it, and call it your own, it +seems as if you had come into partnership with the original Proprietor +of the earth.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p><b>Language.</b>—The Creator has gifted the whole universe with language, but +few are the hearts that can interpret it. Happy those to whom it is no +foreign tongue, acquired imperfectly with care and pain, but rather a +native language, learned unconsciously from the lips of the great +mother.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>The key to the sciences.—<i>Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p>A countryman is as warm in fustian as a king in velvet, and a truth is +as comfortable in homely language as in fine speech. As to the way of +dishing up the meat, hungry men leave that to the cook, only let the +meat be sweet and substantial.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>The machine of the poet.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>Poetry, indeed, cannot be translated; and, therefore, it is the poets +that preserve the languages; for we would not be at the trouble to learn +a language if we could have all that is written in it just as well in a +translation. But as the beauties of poetry cannot be preserved in any +language except that in which it was originally written, we learn the +language.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Language most shows a man; speak that I may see thee: it springs out of +the most retired and inmost part of us.—<i>Ben Jonson.</i></p> + +<p>If the way in which men express their thoughts is slipshod and mean, it +will be very difficult for their thoughts themselves to escape being the +same. If it is high flown and bombastic, a character for national +simplicity and thankfulness cannot long be maintained.—<i>Dean Alford.</i></p> + +<p><b>Laughter.</b>—Conversation never sits easier than when we now and then +discharge ourselves in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span> a symphony of laughter; which may not improperly +be called the chorus of conversation.—<i>Steele.</i></p> + +<p>The laughers are a majority.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Learn from the earliest days to inure your principles against the perils +of ridicule: you can no more exercise your reason, if you live in the +constant dread of laughter, than you can enjoy your life if you are in +the constant terror of death.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>How much lies in laughter: the cipher key, wherewith we decipher the +whole man!—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>God made both tears and laughter, and both for kind purposes; for as +laughter enables mirth and surprise to breathe freely, so tears enable +sorrow to vent itself patiently. Tears hinder sorrow from becoming +despair and madness.—<i>Leigh Hunt.</i></p> + +<p>How inevitably does an immoderate laughter end in a sigh!—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p>Laughing, if loud, ends in a deep sigh; and all pleasures have a sting +in the tail, though they carry beauty on the face.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p>Laughter means sympathy.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>One good, hearty laugh is a bombshell exploding in the right place, +while spleen and discontent are a gun that kicks over the man who shoots +it off.—<i>De Witt Talmage.</i></p> + +<p>I am sure that since I had the use of my reason, no human being has ever +heard me laugh.—<i>Chesterfield.</i></p> + +<p>I like the laughter that opens the lips and the heart, that shower at +the same time pearls and the soul.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p>Laughter is a most healthful exertion; it is one of the greatest helps +to digestion with which I am acquainted; and the custom prevalent among +our forefathers, of exciting it at table by jesters and buffoons, was +founded on true medical principles.—<i>Dr. Hufeland.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Law.</b>—With us, law is nothing unless close behind it stands a warm, +living public opinion. Let that die or grow indifferent, and statutes +are waste paper, lacking all executive force.—<i>Wendell Phillips.</i></p> + +<p>Of all the parts of a law, the most effectual is the <i>vindicatory</i>; for +it is but lost labor to say, "Do this, or avoid that," unless we also +declare, "This shall be the consequence of your non-compliance." The +main strength and force of a law consists in the penalty annexed to +it.—<i>Blackstone.</i></p> + +<p>If there be any one principle more widely than another confessed by +every utterance, or more sternly than another imprinted on every atom of +the visible creation, that principle is not liberty, but law.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>It would be very singular if this great shad-net of the law did not +enable men to catch at something, balking for the time the eternal +flood-tide of justice.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>True law is right reason conformably to nature, universal, unchangeable, +eternal, whose commands urge us to duty, and whose prohibitions restrain +us from evil.—<i>Cicero.</i></p> + +<p>Aristotle himself has said, speaking of the laws of his own country, +that jurisprudence, or the knowledge of those laws, is the principal and +most perfect branch of ethics.—<i>Blackstone.</i></p> + +<p>In effect, to follow, not to force, the public inclination, to give a +direction, a form, a technical dress, and a specific sanction, to the +general sense of the community, is the true end of +legislation.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>In the habits of legal men every accusation appears insufficient if they +do not exaggerate it even to calumny. It is thus that justice itself +loses its sanctity and its respect amongst men.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p>Pity is the virtue of the law, and none but tyrants use it +cruelly.—<i>Shakespeare.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is a very easy thing to devise good laws; the difficulty is to make +them effective. The great mistake is that of looking upon men as +virtuous, or thinking that they can be made so by laws; and consequently +the greatest art of a politician is to render vices serviceable to the +cause of virtue.—<i>Bolingbroke.</i></p> + +<p>A mouse-trap; easy to enter but not easy to get out of.—<i>Mrs Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>What can idle laws do with morals?—<i>Horace.</i></p> + +<p>The law is a gun, which if it misses a pigeon always kills a crow; if it +does not strike the guilty it hits some one else. As every crime creates +a law, so in turn every law creates a crime.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Learning.</b>—It adds a precious seeing to the eye.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>You are to consider that learning is of great use to society; and though +it may not add to the stock, it is a necessary vehicle to transmit it to +others. Learned men are the cisterns of knowledge, not the +fountain-heads.—<i>James Northcote.</i></p> + +<p>Learning makes a man fit company for himself.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>Learning maketh young men temperate, is the comfort of old age, standing +for wealth with poverty, and serving as an ornament to +riches.—<i>Cicero.</i></p> + +<p>The chief art of learning, as Locke has observed, is to attempt but +little at a time. The widest excursions of the mind are made by short +flights frequently repeated; the most lofty fabrics of science are +formed by the continued accumulation of single propositions.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>No man can ever want this mortification of his vanity, that what he +knows is but a very little, in comparison of what he still continues +ignorant of. Consider this, and, instead of boasting thy knowledge of a +few things, confess and be out of countenance for the many more which +thou dost not understand.—<i>Thomas à Kempis.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span></p> + +<p>Suppose we put a tax upon learning? Learning, it is true, is a useless +commodity, but I think we had better lay it on ignorance; for learning +being the property but of a very few, and those poor ones too, I am +afraid we can get little among them; whereas ignorance will take in most +of the great fortunes in the kingdom.—<i>Fielding.</i></p> + +<p>For ignorance of all things is an evil neither terrible nor excessive, +nor yet the greatest of all; but great cleverness and much learning, if +they be accompanied by a bad training is a much greater +misfortune.—<i>Plato.</i></p> + +<p>No power can exterminate the seeds of liberty when it has germinated in +the blood of brave men. Our religion of to-day is still that of +martyrdom; to-morrow it will be the religion of victory.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p><b>Leisure.</b>—"Never less idle than when idle," was the motto which the +admirable Vittoria Colonna wrought upon her husband's dressing-gown. And +may we not justly regard our appreciation of leisure as a test of +improved character and growing resources?—<i>Tuckerman.</i></p> + +<p>Leisure is gone; gone where the spinning-wheels are gone, and the +pack-horses, and the slow wagons, and the peddlers who brought bargains +to the door on sunny afternoons.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Libels.</b>—Undoubtedly the good fame of every man ought to be under the +protection of the laws, as well as his life and liberty and property. +Good fame is an outwork that defends them all and renders them all +valuable. The law forbids you to revenge; when it ties up the hands of +some, it ought to restrain the tongues of others.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>If it was a new thing, it may be I should not be displeased with the +suppression of the first libel that should abuse me; but, since there +are enough of them to make a small library, I am secretly pleased to see +the number increased, and take delight in raising a heap of stones that +envy has cast at me without doing me any harm.—<i>Balzac.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Liberty.</b>—Liberty is the right to do what the laws allow; and if a +citizen could do what they forbid, it would be no longer liberty, +because others would have the same powers.—<i>Montesquieu.</i></p> + +<p>If the true spark of religious and civil liberty be kindled, it will +burn. Human agency cannot extinguish it. Like the earth's central fire, +it may be smothered for a time; the ocean may overwhelm it; mountains +may press it down; but its inherent and unconquerable force will heave +both the ocean and the land, and at some time or another, in some place +or another, the volcano will break out and flame to heaven.—<i>Daniel +Webster.</i></p> + +<p>Interwoven is the love of liberty with every ligament of the +heart.—<i>Washington.</i></p> + +<p><b>Library.</b>—A large library is apt to distract rather than to instruct the +learner; it is much better to be confined to a few authors than to +wander at random over many.—<i>Seneca.</i></p> + +<p>He has his Rome, his Florence, his whole glowing Italy, within the four +walls of his library. He has in his books the ruins of an antique world, +and the glories of a modern one.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>What a place to be in is an old library! It seems as though all the +souls of all the writers that have bequeathed their labors to these +Bodleians were reposing here, as in some dormitory, or middle state. I +do not want to handle, to profane the leaves, their winding-sheets. I +could as soon dislodge a shade. I seem to inhale learning, walking amid +their foliage; and the odor of their old moth-scented coverings is +fragrant as the first bloom of those sciential apples which grew amid +the happy orchard.—<i>Lamb.</i></p> + +<p><b>Life.</b>—Life is a quaint puzzle. Bits the most incongruous join into each +other, and the scheme thus gradually becomes symmetrical and clear; +when, lo! as the infant clasps his hands, and cries, "See, see! the +puzzle is made out," all the pieces are swept<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span> back into the box—black +box with the gilded nails!—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>We never live, but we ever hope to live.—<i>Pascal.</i></p> + +<p>Life is like a beautiful and winding lane, on either side bright +flowers, and beautiful butterflies, and tempting fruits, which we +scarcely pause to admire and to taste, so eager are we to hasten to an +opening which we imagine will be more beautiful still. But by degrees as +we advance, the trees grow bleak; the flowers and butterflies fail, the +fruits disappear, and we find we have arrived—to reach a desert +waste.—<i>G. A. Sala.</i></p> + +<p>How small a portion of our life it is that we really enjoy! In youth we +are looking forward to things that are to come; in old age we are +looking backwards to things that are gone past; in manhood, although we +appear indeed to be more occupied in things that are present, yet even +that is too often absorbed in vague determinations to be vastly happy on +some future day when we have time.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>The days of our years are three-score years and ten; and if by reason of +strength they be four-score years, yet is their strength labor and +sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>When I reflect upon what I have seen, what I have heard, what I have +done, I can hardly persuade myself that all that frivolous hurry and +bustle and pleasure of the world had any reality; and I look on what has +passed as one of those wild dreams which opium occasions, and I by no +means wish to repeat the nauseous dose for the sake of the fugitive +illusion.—<i>Chesterfield.</i></p> + +<p>Life is like a game of whist. I don't enjoy the game much, but I like to +play my cards well, and see what will be the end of it.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>He most lives who thinks most, feels the noblest, acts the best; and he +whose heart beats the quickest lives the longest.—<i>James Martineau.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span></p> + +<p>Life is so complicated a game that the devices of skill are liable to be +defeated at every turn by air-blown chances, incalculable as the descent +of thistledown.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>When we embark in the dangerous ship called Life, we must not, like +Ulysses, be tied to the mast; we must know how to listen to the songs of +the sirens and to brave their blandishments.—<i>Arsène Houssaye.</i></p> + +<p>Life is thick sown with thorns, and I know no other remedy than to pass +quickly through them. The longer we dwell on our misfortunes the greater +is their power to harm us.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>The earnestness of life is the only passport to the satisfaction of +life.—<i>Theodore Parker.</i></p> + +<p>I am convinced that there is no man that knows life well, and remembers +all the incidents of his past existence, who would accept it again; we +are certainly here to punish precedent sins.—<i>Campbell.</i></p> + +<p>The childhood of immortality.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>So our lives glide on; the river ends we don't know where, and the sea +begins, and then there is no more jumping ashore.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>We never think of the main business of life till a vain repentance minds +us of it at the wrong end.—<i>L'Estrange.</i></p> + +<p>This tide of man's life after it once turneth and declineth ever runneth +with a perpetual ebb and falling stream, but never floweth again.—<i>Sir +W. Raleigh.</i></p> + +<p>If the first death be the mistress of mortals, and the mistress of the +universe, reflect then on the brevity of life. "I have been, and that is +all," said Saladin the Great, who was conqueror of the East. The longest +liver had but a handful of days, and life itself is but a circle, always +beginning where it ends.—<i>Henry Mayhew.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p> + +<p>Why all this toil for the triumphs of an hour?—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>The cradle and the tomb, alas! so nigh.—<i>Prior.</i></p> + +<p>Life's short summer—man is but a flower.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Man lives only to shiver and perspire.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>O frail estate of human things!—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Many think themselves to be truly God-fearing when they call this world +a valley of tears. But I believe they would be more so, if they called +it a happy valley. God is more pleased with those who think everything +right in the world, than with those who think nothing right. With so +many thousand joys, is it not black ingratitude to call the world a +place of sorrow and torment?—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Life is a progress from want to want, not from enjoyment to +enjoyment.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>We never live: we are always in the expectation of living.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>Life does not count by years. Some suffer a lifetime in a day, and so +grow old between the rising and the setting of the sun.—<i>Augusta +Evans.</i></p> + +<p><b>Light.</b>—Science and art may invent splendid modes of illuminating the +apartments of the opulent; but these are all poor and worthless compared +with the light which the sun sends into our windows, which he pours +freely, impartially, over hill and valley, which kindles daily the +eastern and western sky; and so the common lights of reason and +conscience and love are of more worth and dignity than the rare +endowments which give celebrity to a few.—<i>Dr. Channing.</i></p> + +<p>More light!—<i>Goethe's last words.</i></p> + +<p>Light! Nature's resplendent robe; without whose vesting beauty all were +wrapt in gloom.—<i>Thomson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p> + +<p>Hail! holy light, offspring of heaven, first born!—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>We should render thanks to God for having produced this temporal light, +which is the smile of heaven and joy of the world, spreading it like a +cloth of gold over the face of the air and earth, and lighting it as a +torch, by which we might behold his works.—<i>Caussin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Likeness.</b>—Like, but oh, how different!—<i>Wordsworth.</i></p> + +<p><b>Lips.</b>—Lips like rosebuds peeping out of snow.—<i>Bailey.</i></p> + +<p>He kissed me hard, as though he'd pluck up kisses by the roots that grew +upon my lips.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The lips of a fool swallow up himself.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p><b>Literature.</b>—Literature happens to be the only occupation in which wages +are not given in proportion to the goodness of the work done.—<i>Froude.</i></p> + +<p>The literature of a people must spring from the sense of its +nationality; and nationality is impossible without self-respect, and +self-respect is impossible without liberty.—<i>Mrs. Stowe.</i></p> + +<p>Cleverness is a sort of genius for instrumentality. It is the brain of +the hand. In literature, cleverness is more frequently accompanied by +wit, genius, and sense, than by humor.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>When literature is the sole business of life, it becomes a drudgery. +When we are able to resort to it only at certain hours, it is a charming +relaxation. In my earlier days I was a banker's clerk, obliged to be at +the desk everyday from ten till five o'clock; and I shall never forget +the delight with which, on returning home, I used to read and write +during the evening.—<i>Rogers.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p> + +<p>Literary history is the great morgue where all seek the dead ones whom +they love, or to whom they are related.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Whatever the skill of any country be in sciences, it is from excellence +in polite learning alone that it must expect a character from +posterity.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Logic.</b>—Logic differeth from rhetoric as the fist from the palm; the one +close, the other at large.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Syllogism is of necessary use, even to the lovers of truth, to show them +the fallacies that are often concealed in florid, witty, or involved +discourses.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>Logic is the art of convincing us of some truth.—<i>Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p><b>Love.</b>—Fie, fie! how wayward is this foolish love, that, like a testy +babe, will scratch the nurse, and presently, all humbled, will kiss the +rod!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Love is the cross and passion of the heart; its end, its errand.—<i>P. L. +Bailey.</i></p> + +<p>Love is frightened at the intervals of insensibility and callousness +that encroach by little and little on the dominion of grief, and it +makes efforts to recall the keenness of the first anguish.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Love while 't is day; night cometh soon, wherein no man or maiden +may.—<i>Joaquin Miller.</i></p> + +<p>Love has a way of cheating itself consciously, like a child who plays at +solitary hide-and-seek; it is pleased with assurances that it all the +while disbelieves.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>As soon go kindle fire with snow, as seek to quench the fire of love +with words.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Loves change sure as man or moon, and wane like warm full days of +June.—<i>Joaquin Miller.</i></p> + +<p>Take of love as a sober man takes wine; do not get drunk.—<i>Alfred de +Musset.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span></p> + +<p>Love is the admiration and cherishing of the amiable qualities of the +beloved person, upon the condition of yourself being the object of their +action. The qualities of the sexes correspond. The man's courage is +loved by the woman, whose fortitude again is coveted by the man. His +vigorous intellect is answered by her infallible tact. Can it be true, +what is so constantly affirmed, that there is no sex in souls? I doubt +it—I doubt it exceedingly.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>As love increases prudence diminishes.—<i>Rochefoucauld.</i></p> + +<p>Never self-possessed, or prudent, love is all abandonment.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>The desire to be beloved is ever restless and unsatisfied; but the love +that flows out upon others is a perpetual well-spring from on high.—<i>L. +M. Child.</i></p> + +<p>Love is love's reward.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>The violence of love is as much to be dreaded as that of hate. When it +is durable, it is serene and equable. Even its famous pains begin only +with the ebb of love, for few are indeed lovers, though all would fain +be.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>Love makes all things possible.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Economy in love is peace to nature, much like economy in worldly +matters; we should be prudent, never love too fast; profusion will not, +cannot, always last.—<i>Peter Pindar.</i> (<i>John W. Wolcott.</i>)</p> + +<p>There is no fear in love, for perfect love casteth out fear.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>O love! thy essence is thy purity! Breathe one unhallowed breath upon +thy flame and it is gone for ever, and but leaves a sullied vase,—its +pure light lost in shame.—<i>Landor.</i></p> + +<p>The pale complexion of true love.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Love has no middle term; it either saves or destroys.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p> + +<p>Young love is a flame; very pretty, often very hot and fierce, but still +only light and flickering. The love of the older and disciplined heart +is as coals, deep-burning, unquenchable.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>In love's war, he who flies is conqueror.—<i>Mrs. Osgood.</i></p> + +<p>Where there is room in the heart there is always room in the +house.—<i>Moore.</i></p> + +<p>Love's like the measles, all the worse when it comes late in +life.—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i></p> + +<p>Only they conquer love who run away.—<i>Carew.</i></p> + +<p>The heart's hushed secret in the soft dark eye.—<i>L. E. Landon.</i></p> + +<p>Love, well thou know'st, no partnership allows; cupid averse rejects +divided vows.—<i>Prior.</i></p> + +<p>Celestial rosy red, love's proper hue.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Those who yield their souls captive to the brief intoxication of love, +if no higher and holier feeling mingle with and consecrate their dream +of bliss, will shrink trembling from the pangs that attend their +waking.—<i>Schlegel.</i></p> + +<p>The first sigh of love is the last of wisdom.—<i>Antoine Bret.</i></p> + +<p>I have enjoyed the happiness of this world, I have lived and have +loved.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Life is a flower of which love is the honey.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p>Love is a severe critic. Hate can pardon more than love.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>Young love-making, that gossamer web! Even the points it clings to—the +things whence its subtle interlacings are swung—are scarcely +perceptible: momentary touches of finger-tips, meetings of rays from +blue and dark orbs, unfinished phrases, lightest changes of cheek and +lip, faintest tremors. The web itself is made of spontaneous beliefs and +indefinable joys, yearnings of one life towards another, visions of +completeness, indefinite trust.—<i>George Eliot.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p> + +<p>Love is the loadstone of love.—<i>Mrs. Osgood.</i></p> + +<p>Love is never lasting which flames before it burns.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>The best part of woman's love is worship; but it is hard to her to be +sent away with her precious spikenard rejected, and her long tresses, +too, that were let fall ready to soothe the wearied feet.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Love is an Oriental despot.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>We must love as looking one day to hate.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Love with old men is as the sun upon the snow, it dazzles more than it +warms them.—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>Love is lowliness; on the wedding ring sparkles no jewel.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Love alone is wisdom, love alone is power; and where love seems to fail, +it is where self has stepped between and dulled the potency of its +rays.—<i>George MacDonald.</i></p> + +<p>To speak of love is to make love.—<i>Balzac.</i></p> + +<p>A man may be a miser of his wealth; he may tie up his talent in a +napkin; he may hug himself in his reputation; but he is always generous +in his love. Love cannot stay at home; a man cannot keep it to himself. +Like light, it is constantly traveling. A man must spend it, must give +it away.—<i>Macleod.</i></p> + +<p>Repining love is the stillest; the shady flowers in this spring as in +the other, shun sunlight.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Love is like the moon; when it does not increase it decreases.—<i>Ségur.</i></p> + +<p>Love is the most terrible, and also the most generous of the passions: +it is the only one that includes in its dreams the happiness of some one +else.—<i>Alphonse Karr.</i></p> + +<p>A woman whom we truly love is a religion.—<i>Emile de Girardin.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p> + +<p>Childhood is only a wearisome prologue: the first act of the human +comedy opens only at the moment when love makes a breach in our +hearts.—<i>Arsène Houssaye.</i></p> + +<p>The religion of humanity is love.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>He who is intoxicated with wine will be sober again in the course of the +night, but he who is intoxicated by the cup-bearer will not recover his +senses until the day of judgment.—<i>Saadi.</i></p> + +<p>Love reasons without reason.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>It seems to me that the coming of love is like the coming of spring—the +date is not to be reckoned by the calendar. It may be slow and gradual; +it may be quick and sudden. But in the morning, when we wake and +recognize a change in the world without, verdure on the trees, blossoms +on the sward, warmth in the sunshine, music in the air, we say spring +has come.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Love and a cough cannot be hid.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Love is the most dunder-headed of all the passions; it never will listen +to reason. The very rudiments of logic are unknown to it. "Love has no +wherefore," says one of the Latin poets.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Love in marriage should be the accomplishment of a beautiful dream, and +not, as it too often is, the end.—<i>Alphonse Karr.</i></p> + +<p>One dies twice: to cease to live is nothing, but to cease to love and to +be loved is an insupportable death.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>The heart of a woman is never so full of affection that there does not +remain a little corner for flattery and love.—<i>Mauvaux.</i></p> + +<p>Love is always blind and tears his hands whenever he tries to gather +roses.—<i>Arsène Houssaye.</i></p> + +<p>Love is a canvas furnished by Nature and embroidered by +imagination.—<i>Voltaire.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p> + +<p>Oh! I was mad to intoxicate myself with the wine of love, and to extend +my hand to the crown of poets. Pleasure! Poetry! you are perfidious +friends. Pain follows you closely.—<i>Arsène Houssaye.</i></p> + +<p>If love gives wit to fools, it undoubtedly takes it from +wits.—<i>Alphonse Karr.</i></p> + +<p>In love, as in everything else, experience is a physician who never +comes until after the disorder is cured.—<i>Mme. de la Tour.</i></p> + +<p>One expresses well only the love he does not feel.—<i>Alphonse Karr.</i></p> + +<p>In love, as in war, a fortress that parleys is half taken.—<i>Marguerite +de Valois.</i></p> + +<p>A supreme love, a motive that gives a sublime rhythm to a woman's life, +and exalts habit into partnership with the soul's highest needs, is not +to be had where and how she wills: to know that high initiation, she +must often tread where it is hard to tread, and feel the chill air, and +watch through darkness.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>To love one who loves you, to admire one who admires you, in a word, to +be the idol of one's idol, is exceeding the limit of human joy; it is +stealing fire from heaven and deserves death.—<i>Madame de Girardin.</i></p> + +<p>But to enlarge or illustrate this power and effects of love is to set a +candle in the sun.—<i>Burton.</i></p> + +<p>There are as many kinds of love as there are races. A great tall German, +learned, virtuous, phlegmatic, said one day: "Souls are sisters, fallen +from heaven, who all at once recognize and run to meet each other." A +little dry Frenchman, hot-blooded, witty, lively, replied to him: "You +are right; you can always find shoes to fit."—<i>Taine.</i></p> + +<p>Love supreme defies all sophistry.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>It is strange that men will talk of miracles, revelations, inspiration, +and the like, as things past, while love remains.—<i>Thoreau.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span></p> + +<p>The love of man to woman is a thing common, and of course, and at first +partakes more of instinct and passion than of choice; but true +friendship between man and man is infinite and immortal.—<i>Plato.</i></p> + +<p>We look at the one little woman's face we love, as we look at the face +of our mother earth, and see all sorts of answers to our own +yearnings.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Take away love, and not physical nature only, but the heart of the moral +world would be palsied.—<i>Southey.</i></p> + +<p>Among all the many kinds of first love, that which begins in childish +companionship is the strongest and most enduring; when passion comes to +unite its force to long affection, love is at its spring-tide.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing quickens the perceptions like genuine love. From the humblest +professional attachment to the most chivalric devotion, what keenness of +observation is born under the influence of that feeling which drives +away the obscuring clouds of selfishness, as the sun consumes the vapor +of the morning.—<i>Tuckerman.</i></p> + +<p><b>Luck.</b>—Hope nothing from luck, and the probability is that you will be +so prepared, forewarned, and forearmed, that all shallow observers will +call you lucky.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Luxury.</b>—Whenever vanity and gayety, a love of pomp and dress, +furniture, equipage, buildings, great company, expensive diversions, and +elegant entertainments get the better of the principles and judgments of +men and women, there is no knowing where they will stop, nor into what +evils, natural, moral, or political, they will lead us.—<i>John Adams.</i></p> + +<p>He repents on thorns that sleeps in beds of roses.—<i>Quarles.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p> + +<p>O brethren, it is sickening work to think of your cushioned seats, your +chants, your anthems, your choirs, your organs, your gowns, and your +bands, and I know not what besides, all made to be instruments of +religious luxury, if not of pious dissipation, while ye need far more to +be stirred up and incited to holy ardor for the propagation of the truth +as it is in Jesus.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>O Luxury! Thou curst of heaven's decree.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>Superfluity comes sooner by white hairs, but competency lives +longer.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Lying.</b>—Lying's a certain mark of cowardice.—<i>Southern.</i></p> + +<p>There are people who lie simply for the sake of lying.—<i>Pascal.</i></p> + +<p>Every brave man shuns more than death the shame of lying.—<i>Corneille.</i></p> + +<p>It is a hard matter for a man to lie all over, nature having provided +king's evidence in almost every member. The hand will sometimes act as a +vane, to show which way the wind blows, even when every feature is set +the other way; the knees smite together and sound the alarm of fear +under a fierce countenance; the legs shake with anger, when all above is +calm.—<i>Washington Allston.</i></p> + +<p>Lies exist only to be extinguished.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>A lie that is half a truth is ever the blackest of lies.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + + +<h3>M.</h3> + +<p><b>Madness.</b>—Many a man is mad in certain instances, and goes through life +without having it perceived. For example, a madness has seized a person +of supposing himself obliged literally to pray continually; had the +madness turned the opposite<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span> way, and the person thought it a crime ever +to pray, it might not improbably have continued unobserved.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Man.</b>—It is of dangerous consequence to represent to man how near he is +to the level of beasts, without showing him at the same time his +greatness. It is likewise dangerous to let him see his greatness without +his meanness. It is more dangerous yet to leave him ignorant of either; +but very beneficial that he should be made sensible of both.—<i>Pascal.</i></p> + +<p>Man, I tell you, is a vicious animal.—<i>Molière.</i></p> + +<p>He is of the earth, but his thoughts are with the stars. Mean and petty +his wants and his desires; yet they serve a soul exalted with grand, +glorious aims,—with immortal longings,—with thoughts which sweep the +heavens, and wander through eternity. A pigmy standing on the outward +crest of this small planet, his far-reaching spirit stretches outward to +the infinite, and there alone finds rest.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>Alas! what does man here below? A little noise in much +obscurity.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p>What a piece of work is a man! how noble in reason! how infinite in +faculty! in form and movement, how express and admirable! in action, how +like an angel! in apprehension, how like a god! the beauty of the world! +the paragon of animals!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Every man is a divinity in disguise, a god playing the fool. It seems as +if heaven had sent its insane angels into our world as to an asylum. And +here they will break out into their native music, and utter at intervals +the words they have heard in heaven; then the mad fit returns, and they +mope and wallow like dogs!—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>In my youth I thought of writing a satire on mankind; but now in my age +I think I should write an apology for them.—<i>Walpole.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p> + +<p>Man is a reasoning rather than a reasonable animal.—<i>Alexander +Hamilton.</i></p> + +<p>I considered how little man is, yet, in his own mind, how great! He is +lord and master of all things, yet scarce can command anything. He is +given a freedom of his will; but wherefore? Was it but to torment and +perplex him the more? How little avails this freedom, if the objects he +is to act upon be not as much disposed to obey as he is to +command!—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>Men's natures are neither white nor black, but brown.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>He is compounded of two very different ingredients, spirit and matter; +but how such unallied and disproportioned substances should act upon +each other, no man's learning yet could tell him.—<i>Jeremy Collier.</i></p> + +<p>Man is the highest product of his own history. The discoverer finds +nothing so grand or tall as himself, nothing so valuable to him. The +greatest star is at the small end of the telescope, the star that is +looking, not looked after nor looked at.—<i>Theodore Parker.</i></p> + +<p>Men are but children of a larger growth; our appetites are apt to change +as theirs, and full as craving, too, and full as vain.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Little things are great to little men.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>Man himself is the crowning wonder of creation; the study of his nature +the noblest study the world affords.—<i>Gladstone.</i></p> + +<p>Limited in his nature, infinite in his desires.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Manners.</b>—A man ought to carry himself in the world as an orange tree +would if it could walk up and down in the garden, swinging perfume from +every little censer it holds up to the air.—<i>Beecher.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span></p> + +<p>All manners take a tincture from our own.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>I have seen manners that make a similar impression with personal beauty, +that give the like exhilaration and refine us like that; and in +memorable experiences they are suddenly better than beauty, and make +that superfluous and ugly. But they must be marked by fine perception, +the acquaintance with real beauty. They must always show control; you +shall not be facile, apologetic, or leaky, but king over your word; and +every gesture and action shall indicate power at rest. They must be +inspired by the good heart. There is no beautifier of complexion, or +form, or behavior, like the wish to scatter joy, and not pain, around +us.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>We perhaps never detect how much of our social demeanor is made up of +artificial airs, until we see a person who is at once beautiful and +simple: without the beauty, we are apt to call simplicity +awkwardness.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>We cannot always oblige, but we can always speak +obligingly.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>Nature is the best posture-master.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>Good breeding consists in having no particular mark of any profession, +but a general elegance of manners.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Men are like wine; not good before the lees of clownishness be +settled.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>The person who screams, or uses the superlative degree, or converses +with heat, puts whole drawing-rooms to flight. If you wish to be loved, +love measure. You must have genius or a prodigious usefulness if you +will hide the want of measure.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>We are to carry it from the hand to the heart, to improve a ceremonial +nicety into a substantial duty, and the modes of civility into the +realities of religion.—<i>South.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p> + +<p>Better were it to be unborn than to be ill-bred.—<i>Sir W. Raleigh.</i></p> + +<p>Simplicity of manner is the last attainment. Men are very long afraid of +being natural, from the dread of being taken for ordinary.—<i>Jeffrey.</i></p> + +<p>Kings themselves cannot force the exquisite politeness of distance to +capitulate, hid behind its shield of bronze.—<i>Balzac.</i></p> + +<p>Comport thyself in life as at a banquet. If a plate is offered thee, +extend thy hand and take it moderately; if it be withdrawn, do not +detain it. If it come not to thy side, make not thy desire loudly known, +but wait patiently till it be offered thee.—<i>Epictetus.</i></p> + +<p>Good manners and good morals are sworn friends and firm +allies.—<i>Bartol.</i></p> + +<p>The "over-formal" often impede, and sometimes frustrate, business by a +dilatory, tedious, circuitous, and (what in colloquial language is +called) fussy way of conducting the simplest transactions. They have +been compared to a dog which cannot lie down till he has made three +circuits round the spot.—<i>Whately.</i></p> + +<p><b>Martyrs.</b>—Even in this world they will have their judgment-day, and +their names, which went down in the dust like a gallant banner trodden +in the mire, shall rise again all glorious in the sight of +nations.—<i>Mrs. Stowe.</i></p> + +<p>It is not the death that makes the martyr, but the cause.—<i>Canon Dale.</i></p> + +<p>It is admirable to die the victim of one's faith; it is sad to die the +dupe of one's ambition.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p>God discovers the martyr and confessor without the trial of flames and +tortures, and will hereafter entitle many to the reward of actions which +they had never the opportunity of performing.—<i>Addison.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Matrimony.</b>—When a man and woman are married their romance ceases and +their history commences.—<i>Rochebrune.</i></p> + +<p>It resembles a pair of shears, so joined that they cannot be separated; +often moving in opposite directions, yet always punishing any one who +comes between them.—<i>S. Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Married in haste, we repent at leisure.—<i>Congreve.</i></p> + +<p>I believe marriages would in general be as happy, and often more so, if +they were all made by the Lord Chancellor, upon a due consideration of +the characters and circumstances, without the parties having any choice +in the matter.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Hanging and wiving go by destiny.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The married man is like the bee that fixes his hive, augments the world, +benefits the republic, and by a daily diligence, without wronging any, +profits all; but he who contemns wedlock, like a wasp, wanders an +offence to the world, lives upon spoil and rapine, disturbs peace, +steals sweets that are none of his own, and, by robbing the hives of +others, meets misery as his due reward.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>One can, with dignity, be wife and widow but once.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Few natures can preserve through years the poetry of the first +passionate illusion. That can alone render wedlock the seal that +confirms affection, and not the mocking ceremonial that consecrates its +grave.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>It's hard to wive and thrive both in a year.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Maids want nothing but husbands, and when they have them, they want +everything.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Wedlock's like wine, not properly judged of till the second +glass.—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span></p> + +<p>A good wife is like the ivy which beautifies the building to which it +clings, twining its tendrils more lovingly as time converts the ancient +edifice into a ruin.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>He that marries is like the Doge who was wedded to the Adriatic. He +knows not what there is in that which he marries: mayhap treasures and +pearls, mayhap monsters and tempests, await him.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>A husband is a plaster that cures all the ills of girlhood.—<i>Molière.</i></p> + +<p>There is more of good nature than of good sense at the bottom of most +marriages.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>The love of some men for their wives is like that of Alfieri for his +horse. "My attachment for him," said he, "went so far as to destroy my +peace every time that he had the least ailment; but my love for him did +not prevent me from fretting and chafing him whenever he did not wish to +go my way."—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p>No navigator has yet traced lines of latitude and longitude on the +conjugal sea.—<i>Balzac.</i></p> + +<p>Has any one ever pinched into its pilulous smallness the cobweb of +pre-matrimonial acquaintanceship?—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Mediocrity.</b>—Mediocrity is excellent to the eyes of mediocre +people.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Mediocrity is now, as formerly, dangerous, commonly fatal, to the poet; +but among even the successful writers of prose, those who rise sensibly +above it are the very rarest exceptions.—<i>Gladstone.</i></p> + +<p><b>Meditation.</b>—Chewing the cud of sweet and bitter fancy.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis greatly wise to talk with our past hours, and ask them what report +they bore to heaven, and how they might have borne more welcome +news.—<i>Young.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p> + +<p>Meditation is that exercise of the mind by which it recalls a known +truth, as some kind of creatures do their food, to be ruminated upon +till all vicious parts be extracted.—<i>Bishop Horne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Meekness.</b>—The flower of meekness grows on a stem of grace.—<i>J. +Montgomery.</i></p> + +<p>A boy was once asked what meekness was. He thought for a moment and +said, "Meekness gives smooth answers to rough questions."—<i>Mrs. +Balfour.</i></p> + +<p><b>Melancholy.</b>—Melancholy is a fearful gift; what is it but the telescope +of truth?—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>A lazy frost, a numbness of the mind.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Demoniac frenzy, moping melancholy.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>The noontide sun is dark, and music discord, when the heart is +low.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p><b>Memory.</b>—Memory is what makes us young or old.—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i></p> + +<p>No canvas absorbs color like memory.—<i>Willmott.</i></p> + +<p>Of all the faculties of the mind, memory is the first that flourishes, +and the first that dies.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Joy's recollection is no longer joy; but sorrow's memory is sorrow +still.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>A sealed book, at whose contents we tremble.—<i>L. E. Landon.</i></p> + +<p>And fondly mourn the dear delusions gone.—<i>Prior.</i></p> + +<p>How can such deep-imprinted images sleep in us at times, till a word, a +sound, awake them?—<i>Lessing.</i></p> + +<p>In literature and art memory is a synonym for invention; it is the +life-blood of imagination, which faints and dies when the veins are +empty.—<i>Willmott.</i></p> + +<p>Memory is the scribe of the soul.—<i>Aristotle.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p> + +<p>The memory has as many moods as the temper, and shifts its scenery like +a diorama.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>We must always have old memories and young hopes.—<i>Arsène Houssaye.</i></p> + +<p>They teach us to remember; why do not they teach us to forget? There is +not a man living who has not, some time in his life, admitted that +memory was as much of a curse as a blessing.—<i>F. A. Durivage.</i></p> + +<p><b>Mercy.</b>—Mercy more becomes a magistrate than the vindictive wrath which +men call justice!—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing emboldens sin so much as mercy.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis mightiest in the mightiest; it becomes the throned monarch better +than his crown.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Give money, but never lend it. Giving it only makes a man ungrateful; +lending it makes him an enemy.—<i>Dumas.</i></p> + +<p>Mercy among the virtues is like the moon among the stars,—not so +sparkling and vivid as many, but dispensing a calm radiance that hallows +the whole. It is the bow that rests upon the bosom of the cloud when the +storm is past. It is the light that hovers above the +judgment-seat.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>We hand folks over to God's mercy, and show none ourselves.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Among the attributes of God, although they are all equal, mercy shines +with even more brilliancy than justice.—<i>Cervantes.</i></p> + +<p><b>Milton.</b>—His poetry reminds us of the miracles of Alpine scenery. Nooks +and dells, beautiful as fairy land, are embosomed in its most rugged and +gigantic elevations. The roses and myrtles bloom unchilled on the verge +of the avalanche.—<i>Macaulay.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Mind.</b>—It is with diseases of the mind as with diseases of the body, we +are half dead before we understand our disorder, and half cured when we +do.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>The end which at present calls forth our efforts will be found when it +is once gained to be only one of the means to some remoter end. The +natural flights of the human mind are not from pleasure to pleasure, but +from hope to hope.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Minds filled with vivid, imaginative thoughts, are the most indolent in +reproducing. Clear, cold, hard minds are productive. They have to +retrace a very simple design.—<i>X. Doudan.</i></p> + +<p>The mind is the atmosphere of the soul.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>What is this little, agile, precious fire, this fluttering motion which +we call the mind?—<i>Prior.</i></p> + +<p>Just as a particular soil wants some one element to fertilize it, just +as the body in some conditions has a kind of famine for one special +food, so the mind has its wants, which do not always call for what is +best, but which know themselves and are as peremptory as the salt sick +sailor's call for a lemon or raw potato.—<i>Holmes.</i></p> + +<p>The best way to prove the clearness of our mind is by showing its +faults; as when a stream discovers the dirt at the bottom, it convinces +us of the transparency of the water.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>A mind once cultivated will not lie fallow for half an +hour.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Mischief.</b>—The opportunity to do mischief is found a hundred times a +day, and that of doing good once a year.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p><b>Miser.</b>—The miser swimming in gold seems to me like a thirsty fish.—<i>J. +Petit Senn.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span></p> + +<p>In all meanness there is a deficit of intellect as well as of heart, and +even the cleverness of avarice is but the cunning of +imbecility.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Misery.</b>—There are a good many real miseries in life that we cannot help +smiling at, but they are the smiles that make wrinkles and not +dimples.—<i>Holmes.</i></p> + +<p>Misery is so little appertaining to our nature, and happiness so much +so, that we in the same degree of illusion only lament over that which +has pained us, but leave unnoticed that which has rejoiced +us.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p><b>Misfortune.</b>—If all the misfortunes of mankind were cast into a public +stock, in order to be equally distributed among the whole species, those +who now think themselves the most unhappy would prefer the share they +are already possessed of before that which would fall to them by such a +division.—<i>Socrates.</i></p> + +<p>Depend upon it, that if a man <i>talks</i> of his misfortunes there is +something in them that is not disagreeable to him; for where there is +nothing but pure misery, there never is any recourse to the mention of +it.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Flowers never emit so sweet and strong a fragrance as before a storm. +Beauteous soul! when a storm approaches thee be as fragrant as a +sweet-smelling flower.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Our bravest lessons are not learned through success, but +misadventure.—<i>Alcott.</i></p> + +<p>There is a chill air surrounding those who are down in the world, and +people are glad to get away from them, as from a cold room.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Men shut their doors against the setting sun.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>He that is down needs fear no fall.—<i>Bunyan.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Moderation.</b>—Till men have been some time free, they know not how to use +their freedom. The natives of wine countries are generally sober. In +climates where wine is a rarity intemperance abounds. A newly liberated +people may be compared to a Northern army encamped on the Rhine or the +Xeres. It is said that, when soldiers in such a situation first find +themselves able to indulge without restraint in such a rare and +expensive luxury, nothing is to be seen but intoxication. Soon, however, +plenty teaches discretion; and after wine has been for a few months +their daily fare, they become more temperate than they had ever been in +their own country. In the same manner, the final and permanent fruits of +liberty are wisdom, moderation, and mercy.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>The superior man wishes to be slow in his words, and earnest in his +conduct.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>Let a man take time enough for the most trivial deed, though it be but +the paring of his nails. The buds swell imperceptibly, without hurry or +confusion; as if the short spring days were an eternity.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>It is a little stream which flows softly, but freshens everything along +its course.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Modesty.</b>—False modesty is the last refinement of vanity. It is a +lie.—<i>Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p>The first of all virtues is innocence; the next is modesty. If we banish +Modesty out of the world, she carries away with her half the virtue that +is in it.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>He of his port was meek as is a maid.—<i>Chaucer.</i></p> + +<p>Modesty is the lowest of the virtues, and is a confession of the +deficiency it indicates. He who undervalues himself is justly +undervalued by others.—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p> + +<p>Modesty, who, when she goes, is gone forever.—<i>Landor.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p> + +<p>Modesty is the conscience of the body.—<i>Balzac.</i></p> + +<p>There are as many kinds of modesty as there are races. To the English +woman it is a duty; to the French woman a propriety.—<i>Taine.</i></p> + +<p>Virtue which shuns the day.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Modesty and the dew love the shade. Each shine in the open day only to +be exhaled to heaven.—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>Modesty is still a provocation.—<i>Poincelot.</i></p> + +<p>Modesty is the chastity of merit, the virginity of noble souls.—<i>E. de +Girardin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Money.</b>—Wisdom, knowledge, power—all combined.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Oh, what a world of vile ill-favored faults looks handsome in three +hundred pounds a year!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>It is my opinion that a man's soul may be buried and perish under a +dung-heap, or in a furrow of the field, just as well as under a pile of +money.—<i>Hawthorne.</i></p> + +<p>If you would know the value of money, go and try to borrow some; for he +that goes a-borrowing goes a-sorrowing.—<i>Franklin.</i></p> + +<p>Make all you can, save all you can, give all you can.—<i>Wesley.</i></p> + +<p>The avaricious love of gain, which is so feelingly deplored, appears to +us a principle which, in able hands, might be guided to the most +salutary purposes. The object is to encourage the love of labor, which +is best encouraged by the love of money.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Ready money is Aladdin's lamp.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Money does all things; for it gives and it takes away, it makes honest +men and knaves, fools and philosophers; and so forward, <i>mutatis +mutandis</i>, to the end of the chapter.—<i>L'Estrange.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mammon is the largest slave-holder in the world.—<i>Fred. Saunders.</i></p> + +<p>But for money and the need of it, there would not be half the friendship +in the world. It is powerful for good if divinely used. Give it plenty +of air and it is sweet as the hawthorn; shut it up and it cankers and +breeds worms.—<i>George MacDonald.</i></p> + +<p>Money, the life-blood of the nation.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p><b>Moon.</b>—The silver empress of the night.—<i>Tickell.</i></p> + +<p>How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Mysterious veil of brightness made.—<i>Butler.</i></p> + +<p>Cynthia, fair regent of the night.—<i>Gay.</i></p> + +<p>The maiden moon in her mantle of blue.—<i>Joaquin Miller.</i></p> + +<p><b>Morals.</b>—Every age and every nation has certain characteristic vices, +which prevail almost universally, which scarcely any person scruples to +avow, and which even rigid moralists but faintly censure. Succeeding +generations change the fashion of their morals with the fashion of their +hats and their coaches; take some other kind of wickedness under their +patronage, and wonder at the depravity of their ancestors.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>We like the expression of Raphael's faces without an edict to enforce +it. I do not see why there should not be a taste in morals formed on the +same principle.—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p> + +<p>Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of much life so. Aim +above morality. Be not simply good; be good for something.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p><b>Morning.</b>—Vanished night, shot through with orient beams.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>The dewy morn, with breath all incense, and with cheek all +bloom.—<i>Byron.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p> + +<p>Jocund day stands tiptoe on the misty mountain top.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>When the glad sun, exulting in his might, comes from the dusky-curtained +tents of night.—<i>Emma C. Embury.</i></p> + +<p>The cock, that is the trumpet of the morn, doth with his lofty and +shrill-sounding throat awake the god of day.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Its brightness, mighty divinity! has a fleeting empire over the day, +giving gladness to the fields, color to the flowers, the season of the +loves, harmonious hour of wakening birds.—<i>Calderon.</i></p> + +<p>Temperate as the morn.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>I was always an early riser. Happy the man who is! Every morning day +comes to him with a virgin's love, full of bloom and freshness. The +youth of nature is contagious, like the gladness of a happy +child.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Mother.</b>—Children, look in those eyes, listen to that dear voice, notice +the feeling of even a single touch that is bestowed upon you by that +gentle hand! Make much of it while yet you have that most precious of +all good gifts, a loving mother. Read the unfathomable love of those +eyes; the kind anxiety of that tone and look, however slight your pain. +In after life you may have friends, fond, dear friends, but never will +you have again the inexpressible love and gentleness lavished upon you +which none but a mother bestows.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>Nature's loving proxy, the watchful mother.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>I believe I should have been swept away by the flood of French +infidelity, if it had not been for one thing, the remembrance of the +time when my sainted mother used to make me kneel by her side, taking my +little hands folded in hers, and caused me to repeat the Lord's +Prayer.—<i>Thomas Randolph.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p> + +<p>The mother's yearning, that completest type of the life in another life +which is the essence of real human love, feels the presence of the +cherished child even in the base, degraded man.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>When Eve was brought unto Adam, he became filled with the Holy Spirit, +and gave her the most sanctified, the most glorious of appellations. He +called her Eva, that is to say, the Mother of All. He did not style her +wife, but simply mother,—mother of all living creatures. In this +consists the glory and the most precious ornament of woman.—<i>Luther.</i></p> + +<p>There is in all this cold and hollow world no fount of deep, strong, +deathless love, save that within a mother's heart.—<i>Hemans.</i></p> + +<p><b>Motive.</b>—The morality of an action depends upon the motive from which we +act. If I fling half-a-crown to a beggar with intention to break his +head, and he picks it up and buys victuals with it, the physical effect +is good; but with respect to me, the action is very wrong.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Whatever touches the nerves of motive, whatever shifts man's moral +position, is mightier than steam, or caloric, or lightning.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>Let the motive be in the deed and not in the event. Be not one whose +motive for action is the hope of reward.—<i>Kreeshna.</i></p> + +<p>We must not inquire too curiously into motives. They are apt to become +feeble in the utterance: the aroma is mixed with the grosser air. We +must keep the germinating grain away from the light.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Every activity proposes to itself a passivity, every labor +enjoyment.—<i>Jacobi.</i></p> + +<p><b>Mourning.</b>—Oh, for the touch of a vanished hand, and the sound of a +voice that is still!—<i>Tennyson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span></p> + +<p>The meek-ey'd morn appears, mother of dews.—<i>Thomson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Music.</b>—Sentimentally I am disposed to harmony, but organically I am +incapable of a tune.—<i>Lamb.</i></p> + +<p>All musical people seem to be happy; it is the engrossing pursuit; +almost the only innocent and unpunished passion.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Where painting is weakest, namely, in the expression of the highest +moral and spiritual ideas, there music is sublimely strong.—<i>Mrs. +Stowe.</i></p> + +<p>There is something marvelous in music. I might almost say that music is, +in itself, a marvel. Its position is somewhere between the region of +thought and that of phenomena; a glimmering medium between mind and +matter, related to both and yet differing from either. Spiritual, and +yet requiring rhythm; material, and yet independent of space.—<i>Heinrich +Heine.</i></p> + +<p>The hidden soul of harmony.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Give me some music! music, moody food of us that trade in +love.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Explain it as we may, a martial strain will urge a man into the front +rank of battle sooner than an argument, and a fine anthem excite his +devotion more certainly than a logical discourse.—<i>Tuckerman.</i></p> + +<p>Such sweet compulsion doth in music lie.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Music, in the best sense, does not require novelty; nay, the older it +is, and the more we are accustomed to it, the greater its +effect.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Music, which gentler on the spirit lies than tired eyelids upon tired +eyes.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Melodies die out like the pipe of Pan, with the ears that love them and +listen for them.—<i>George Eliot.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span></p> + +<p>Music can noble hints impart, engender fury, kindle love, with +unsuspected eloquence can move and manage all the man with secret +art.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Music is the harmonious voice of creation; an echo of the invisible +world; one note of the divine concord which the entire universe is +destined one day to sound.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + + +<h3>N.</h3> + +<p><b>Naïveté.</b>—Naïveté is the language of pure genius and of discerning +simplicity. It is the most simple picture of a refined and ingenious +idea; a masterpiece of art in him in whom it is not +natural.—<i>Mendelssohn.</i></p> + +<p><b>Name.</b>—A virtuous name is the precious only good for which queens and +peasants' wives must contest together.—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>A man's name is not like a mantle which merely hangs about him, and +which one perchance may safely twitch and pull, but a perfectly fitting +garment, which, like the skin, has grown over and over him, at which one +cannot rake and scrape without injuring the man himself.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p><b>Napoleon.</b>—Whose game was empires, and whose stakes were +thrones.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Napoleon I. might have been the Washington of France; he preferred to be +another Attila,—a question of taste.—<i>F. A. Durivage.</i></p> + +<p><b>Nature.</b>—Nature has no mind; every man who addresses her is compelled to +force upon her for a moment the loan of his own mind. And if she answers +a question which his own mind puts to her, it is only by such a reply as +his own mind teaches to her parrot-like lips. And as every man has a +different mind, so every man gets a different answer.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p> + +<p>Nature will be buried a great time, and yet revive upon the occasion or +temptation: like as it was with Æsop's damsel, turned from a cat to a +woman, who sat very demurely at the board's end till a mouse ran before +her.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Virtue, as understood by the world, is a constant struggle against the +laws of nature.—<i>De Finod.</i></p> + +<p>Nature,—a thing which science and art never appear to see with the same +eyes. If to an artist Nature has a soul, why, so has a steam-engine. Art +gifts with soul all matter that it contemplates; science turns all that +is already gifted with soul into matter.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Nature is too thin a screen; the glory of the One breaks in +<i>everywhere</i>.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>Nature is poetic, but not mankind. When one aims at truth it is easier +to find the poetic side of nature than of man.—<i>X. Doudan.</i></p> + +<p>All nature is a vast symbolism; every material fact has sheathed within +it a spiritual truth.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>Nature is no sentimentalist,—does not cosset or pamper us. We must see +that the world is rough and surly, and will not mind drowning a man or a +woman, but swallows your ships like a grain of dust. The cold, +inconsiderate of persons, tingles your blood, benumbs your feet, freezes +a man like an apple. The diseases, the elements, fortune, gravity, +lightning, respect no persons.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>Nature imitates herself. A grain thrown into good ground brings forth +fruit: a principle thrown into a good mind brings forth fruit. +Everything is created and conducted by the same Master,—the root, the +branch, the fruits,—the principles, the consequences.—<i>Pascal.</i></p> + +<p>A noble nature can alone attract the noble, and alone knows how to +retain them.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Nature, the vicar of the almighty Lord.—<i>Chaucer.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p> + +<p>A poet ought not to pick Nature's pocket. Let him borrow, and so borrow +as to repay by the very act of borrowing. Examine nature accurately, but +write from recollection, and trust more to the imagination than the +memory.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>We, by art, unteach what Nature taught.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Nature is the armory of genius. Cities serve it poorly, books and +colleges at second hand; the eye craves the spectacle of the horizon, of +mountain, ocean, river and plain, the clouds and stars; actual contact +with the elements, sympathy with the seasons as they rise and +roll.—<i>Alcott.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing is rich but the inexhaustible wealth of Nature. She shows us +only surfaces, but she is million fathoms deep.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>Nature is an absolute and jealous divinity. Lovely, eloquent, and +instructive in all her inequalities and contrasts, she hides her face, +and remains mute to those who, by attempting to re-fashion her, profane +her.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p><b>Necessity.</b>—Necessity is a bad recommendation to favors of any kind, +which as seldom fall to those who really want them, as to those who +really deserve them.—<i>Fielding.</i></p> + +<p>It is observed in the golden verses of Pythagoras, that power is never +far from necessity. The vigor of the human mind quickly appears when +there is no longer any place for doubt and hesitation, when diffidence +is absorbed in the sense of danger, or overwhelmed by some resistless +passion.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>When God would educate a man He compels him to learn bitter lessons. He +sends him to school to the necessities rather than to the graces, that, +by knowing all suffering, he may know also the eternal +consolation.—<i>Celia Burleigh.</i></p> + +<p>Necessity may render a doubtful act innocent, but it cannot make it +praiseworthy.—<i>Joubert.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p> + +<p>What was once to me mere matter of the fancy now has grown the vast +necessity of heart and life.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Neglect.</b>—He that thinks he can afford to be negligent is not far from +being poor.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>News.</b>—Give to a gracious message an host of tongues; but let ill +tidings tell themselves when they be felt.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Newspapers.</b>—In these times we fight for ideas, and newspapers are our +fortresses.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Before this century shall run out journalism will be the whole press. +Mankind will write their book day by day, hour by hour, page by page. +Thought will spread abroad with the rapidity of light; instantly +conceived, instantly written, instantly understood at the extremities of +the earth; it will spread from Pole to Pole, suddenly burning with the +fervor of soul which made it burst forth; it will be the reign of the +human mind in all its plenitude; it will not have time to ripen, to +accumulate in the form of a book; the book will arrive too late; the +only book possible from day to day is a newspaper.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p>Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand +bayonets.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>They preach to the people daily, weekly; admonishing kings themselves; +advising peace or war with an authority which only the first Reformers +and a long-past class of Popes were possessed of; inflicting moral +censure; imparting moral encouragement, consolation, edification; in all +ways diligently "administering the discipline of the Church." It may be +said, too, that in private disposition the new preachers somewhat +resemble the mendicant Friars of old times; outwardly, full of holy +zeal; inwardly, not without stratagem, and hunger for terrestrial +things.—<i>Carlyle.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p> + +<p>These papers of the day have uses more adequate to the purposes of +common life than more pompous and durable volumes.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Night.</b>—Wisdom mounts her zenith with the stars.—<i>Mrs. Barbauld.</i></p> + +<p>The day is done, and the darkness falls from the wings of +night.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>Sable-vested night, eldest of things.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>O mysterious night! Thou art not silent: many tongues hast +thou.—<i>Joanna Baillie.</i></p> + +<p>Night, when deep sleep falleth on men.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p><b>No.</b>—No is a surly, honest fellow, speaks his mind rough and round at +once.—<i>Walter Scott.</i></p> + +<p>Learn to say No! and it will be of more use to you than to be able to +read Latin.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>The woman who really wishes to refuse contents herself with saying No. +She who explains wants to be convinced.—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i></p> + +<p><b>Nobility.</b>—Virtue is the first title of nobility.—<i>Molière.</i></p> + +<p><b>Nonsense.</b>—Nonsense is to sense as shade to light—it heightens +effect.—<i>Fred. Saunders.</i></p> + +<p><b>Nothing.</b>—There is nothing useless to men of sense; clever people turn +everything to account.—<i>Fontaine.</i></p> + +<p>Variety of mere nothings gives more pleasure than uniformity of +something.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p><b>Novels.</b>—Novels are sweet. All people with healthy literary appetites +love them—almost all women; a vast number of clever, hard-headed +men,—Judges, bishops, chancellors, mathematicians,—are notorious novel +readers, as well as young boys and sweet girls, and their kind, tender +mothers.—<i>Thackeray.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span></p> + +<p>We must have books for recreation and entertainment, as well as books +for instruction and for business; the former are agreeable, the latter +useful, and the human mind requires both. The canon law and the codes of +Justinian shall have due honor and reign at the universities, but Homer +and Virgil need not therefore be banished. We will cultivate the olive +and the vine, but without eradicating the myrtle and the +rose.—<i>Balzac.</i></p> + +<p>A little grain of the romance is no ill ingredient to preserve and exalt +the dignity of human nature, without which it is apt to degenerate into +everything that is sordid, vicious, and low.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p><b>Novelty.</b>—The enormous influence of novelty—the way in which it +quickens observation, sharpens sensation, and exalts sentiment—is not +half enough taken note of by us, and is to me a very sorrowful matter. +And yet, if we try to obtain perpetual change, change itself will become +monotonous; and then we are reduced to that old despair, "If water +chokes, what will you drink after it?" The two points of practical +wisdom in the matter are, first, to be content with as little novelty as +possible at a time; and secondly, to preserve, as as much possible, the +sources of novelty.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>Novelty is the great-parent of pleasure.—<i>South.</i></p> + + +<h3>O.</h3> + +<p><b>Obedience.</b>—To obey is better than sacrifice.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>How will you find good? It is not a thing of choice, it is a river that +flows from the foot of the Invisible Throne, and flows by the path of +obedience.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Oblivion.</b>—Oblivion is the flower that grows best on graves.—<i>George +Sand.</i></p> + +<p>The grave of human misery.—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Observation.</b>—It is the close observation of little things which is the +secret of success in business, in art, in science, and in every pursuit +in life. Human knowledge is but an accumulation of small facts, made by +successive generations of men,—the little bits of knowledge and +experience carefully treasured up by them growing at length into a +mighty pyramid.—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>Observation made in the cloister, or in the desert, will generally be as +obscure as the one, and as barren as the other; but he that would paint +with his pencil must study originals, and not be over fearful of a +little dust.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Each one sees what he carries in his heart.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p><b>Occupation.</b>—The want of occupation is no less the plague of society +than of solitude.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p>The busy have no time for tears.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>One of the principal occupations of man is to divine +woman.—<i>Lacretelle.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ocean.</b>—Wave rolling after wave in torrent rapture.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>It plays with the clouds, it mocks the skies, or like a cradled creature +lies.—<i>Barry Cornwall.</i></p> + +<p>The visitation of the winds, who take the ruffian billows by the top, +curling their monstrous heads.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Office.</b>—The gratitude of place-expectants is a lively sense of future +favors.—<i>Walpole.</i></p> + +<p><b>Opinion.</b>—The men of the past had convictions, while we moderns have +only opinions.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Wind puffs up empty bladders; opinion, fools.—<i>Socrates.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p> + +<p>Our pet opinions are usually those which place us in a minority of a +minority amongst our own party: very happily, else those poor opinions, +born with no silver spoon in their mouths, how would they get nourished +and fed?—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Those who never retract their opinions love themselves more than they +love truth.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>It has been shrewdly said that when men abuse us, we should suspect +ourselves, and when they praise us, them. It is a rare instance of +virtue to despise censure which we do not deserve, and still more rare +to despise praise, which we do. But that integrity that lives only on +opinion would starve without it.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>There never was in the world two opinions alike, no more than two hairs +or two grains. The most universal quality is diversity.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>The history of human opinion is scarcely anything more than the history +of human errors.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>If a man should register all his opinions upon love, politics, religion, +learning, etc., beginning from his youth, and so go on to old age, what +a bundle of inconsistencies and contradictions would appear at +last.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p>One of the mistakes in the conduct of human life is, to suppose that +other men's opinions are to make us happy.—<i>Burton.</i></p> + +<p>It is with true opinions which one has the courage to utter as with +pawns first advanced on the chess-board; they may be beaten, but they +have inaugurated a game which must be won.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>The feeble tremble before opinion, the foolish defy it, the wise judge +it, the skillful direct it.—<i>Mme. Roland.</i></p> + +<p><b>Opportunity.</b>—The cleverest of all devils is opportunity.—<i>Vieland.</i></p> + +<p>Chance opportunities make us known to others, and still more to +ourselves.—<i>Rochefoucauld.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></p> + +<p>What is opportunity to the man who can't use it? An unfecundated egg, +which the waves of time wash away into nonentity.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>There is no man whom Fortune does not visit once in his life; but when +she does not find him ready to receive her, she walks in at the door and +flies out at the window.—<i>Cardinal Imperiali.</i></p> + +<p>The golden moments in the stream of life rush past us, and we see +nothing but sand; the angels come to visit us, and we only know them +when they are gone.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Every one has a fair turn to be as great as he pleases.—<i>Jeremy +Collier.</i></p> + +<p>A philosopher being asked what was the first thing necessary to win the +love of a woman, answered: "Opportunity."—<i>Moore.</i></p> + +<p>Opportunity, sooner or later, comes to all who work and wish.—<i>Lord +Stanley.</i></p> + +<p>You will never "find" time for anything. If you want time you must make +it.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Opposition.</b>—The effects of opposition are wonderful. There are men who +rise refreshed on hearing of a threat,—men to whom a crisis which +intimidates and paralyzes the majority—demanding, not the faculties of +prudence and thrift, but comprehension, immovableness, the readiness of +sacrifice—comes graceful and beloved as a bride!—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>Nobody loves heartily unless people take pains to prevent +it.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Oratory.</b>—Orators are most vehement when they have the weakest cause, as +men get on horseback when they cannot walk.—<i>Cicero.</i></p> + +<p>Metaphor is the figure most suitable for the orator, as men find a +positive pleasure in catching resemblances for +themselves.—<i>Aristotle.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span></p> + +<p>Those orators who give us much noise and many words, but little argument +and less wit, and who are most loud when they are least lucid, should +take a lesson from the great volume of Nature; she often gives us the +lightning even without the thunder, but never the thunder without the +lightning.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>An orator without judgment is a horse without a bridle.—<i>Theophrastus.</i></p> + +<p>When the Roman people had listened to the diffuse and polished +discourses of Cicero, they departed, saying one to another, "What a +splendid speech our orator has made!" But when the Athenians heard +Demosthenes, he so filled them with the subject-matter of his oration, +that they quite forgot the orator, and left him at the finish of his +harangue, breathing revenge, and exclaiming, "Let us go and fight +against Philip!"—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Let not a day pass without exercising your powers of speech. There is no +power like that of oratory. Cæsar controlled men by exciting their +fears; Cicero, by captivating their affections and swaying their +passions. The influence of the one perished with its author; that of the +other continues to this day.—<i>Henry Clay.</i></p> + +<p>It was reckoned the fault of the orators at the decline of the Roman +empire, when they had been long instructed by rhetoricians, that their +periods were so harmonious as that they could be sung as well as spoken. +What a ridiculous figure must one of these gentlemen cut, thus measuring +syllables and weighing words when he should plead the cause of his +client!—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Originality.</b>—Originality is nothing but judicious +imitation.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>One couldn't carry on life comfortably without a little blindness to the +fact that everything has been said better than we can put it +ourselves.—<i>George Eliot.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p> + +<p>The most original writers borrowed one from another. Boiardo has +imitated Pulci, and Ariosto Boiardo. The instruction we find in books is +like fire. We fetch it from our neighbor's, kindle it at home, +communicate it to others, and it becomes the property of +all.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>All originality is estrangement.—<i>G. H. Lawes.</i></p> + + +<h3>P.</h3> + +<p><b>Pain.</b>—Psychical pain is more easily borne than physical, and if I had +my choice between a bad conscience and a bad tooth, I should choose the +former.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>The same refinement which brings us new pleasures exposes us to new +pains.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Pardon.</b>—Pardon is the virtue of victory.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>The heart has always the pardoning power.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>The offender never pardons.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Love is on the verge of hate each time it stoops for +pardon.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>These evils I deserve, yet despair not of his final pardon whose ear is +ever open, and his eye gracious to readmit the supplicant.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Having mourned your sin, for outward Eden lost, find paradise +within.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p><b>Parent.</b>—The sacred books of the ancient Persians say: If you would be +holy instruct your children, because all the good acts they perform will +be imputed to you.—<i>Montesquieu.</i></p> + +<p><b>Partiality.</b>—Partiality in a parent is commonly unlucky; for fondlings +are in danger to be made fools, and the children that are least cockered +make the best and wisest men.—<i>L'Estrange.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p> + +<p>As there is a partiality to opinions, which is apt to mislead the +understanding, so there is also a partiality to studies, which is +prejudicial to knowledge.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>Partiality is properly the understanding's judging according to the +inclination of the will and affections, and not according to the exact +truth of things, or the merits of the cause.—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p><b>Parting.</b>—In every parting there is an image of death.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Party.</b>—He knows very little of mankind who expects, by any facts or +reasoning, to convince a determined party-man.—<i>Lavater.</i></p> + +<p>He that aspires to be the head of a party will find it more difficult to +please his friends than to perplex his foes.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Passions.</b>—Passions makes us feel but never see clearly.—<i>Montesquieu.</i></p> + +<p>Passions are likened best to floods and streams: the shallow murmur, but +the deep are dumb.—<i>Sir Walter Raleigh.</i></p> + +<p>The passions are the voice of the body.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p>The advice given by a great moralist to his friend was, that he should +compose his passions; and let that be the work of reason which would +certainly be the work of time.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>A vigorous mind is as necessarily accompanied with violent passions as a +great fire with great heat.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>There are moments when our passions speak and decide for us, and we seem +to stand by and wonder. They carry in them an inspiration of crime, that +in one instant does the work of long premeditation.—<i>George Eliot.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p> + +<p>The blossoms of passion, gay and luxuriant flowers, are brighter and +fuller of fragrance, but they beguile us and lead us astray, and their +odor is deadly.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>"All the passions," says an old writer, "are such near neighbors, that +if one of them is on fire the others should send for the buckets." Thus +love and hate being both passions, the one is never safe from the spark +that sets the other ablaze. But contempt is passionless; it does not +catch, it quenches fire.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>All the passions seek after whatever nourishes them. Fear loves the idea +of danger.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>It is the excess and not the nature of our passions which is perishable. +Like the trees which grow by the tomb of Protesilaus, the passions +flourish till they reach a certain height, but no sooner is that height +attained than they wither away.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Past.</b>—Let the dead past bury its dead.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>Oh vanished times! splendors eclipsed for aye! Oh suns behind the +horizon that have set.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p>It is to live twice, when we can enjoy the recollections of our former +life.—<i>Martial.</i></p> + +<p>I desire no future that will break the ties of the past.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Patience.</b>—There is one form of hope which is never unwise, and which +certainly does not diminish with the increase of knowledge. In that form +it changes its name and we call it patience.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>It's easy finding reasons why other folks should be patient.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Patience, sovereign o'er transmuted ills.—<i>Johnson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span></p> + +<p>There's no music in a "rest," that I know of, but there's the making of +music in it. And people are always missing that part of the life melody, +always talking of perseverance, and courage, and fortitude; but patience +is the finest and worthiest part of fortitude, and the rarest, +too.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>The two powers which in my opinion constitute a wise man are those of +bearing and forbearing.—<i>Epictetus.</i></p> + +<p>Enter into the sublime patience of the Lord. Be charitable in view of +it. God can afford to wait; why cannot we, since we have Him to fall +back upon? Let patience have her perfect work, and bring forth her +celestial fruits.—<i>G. MacDonald.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis all men's office to speak patience to those that wring under the +load of sorrow; but no man's virtue nor sufficiency to be so moral when +he shall endure the like himself.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>He that hath patience hath fat thrushes for a farthing.—<i>George +Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Imitate time. It destroys slowly. It undermines, wears, loosens, +separates. It does not uproot.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>God is with the patient.—<i>Koran.</i></p> + +<p>Patience, the second bravery of man, is, perhaps, greater than the +first.—<i>Antonio de Solis.</i></p> + +<p>Patience—the truest fortitude.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Patriotism.</b>—In peace patriotism really consists only in this—that +every one sweeps before his own door, minds his own business, also +learns his own lesson, that it may be well with him in his own +house.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Our country! In her intercourse with foreign nations may she always be +in the right; but our country, right or wrong.—<i>Decatur.</i></p> + +<p>How dear is fatherland to all noble hearts.—<i>Voltaire.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p> + +<p>Let our object be our country, our whole country, and nothing but our +country. And, by the blessing of God, may that country itself become a +vast and splendid monument, not of oppression and terror, but of wisdom, +of peace, and of liberty, upon which the world may gaze with admiration +forever!—<i>Daniel Webster.</i></p> + +<p>There can be no affinity nearer than our country.—<i>Plato.</i></p> + +<p>Of the whole sum of human life no small part is that which consists of a +man's relations to his country, and his feelings concerning +it.—<i>Gladstone.</i></p> + +<p><b>Peace.</b>—They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears +into pruning-hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, +neither shall they learn war any more.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>Still in thy right hand carry gentle peace.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Lovely concord and most sacred peace doth nourish virtue, and fast +friendship breed.—<i>Spenser.</i></p> + +<p>Peace gives food to the husbandman, even in the midst of rocks; war +brings misery to him, even in the most fertile plains.—<i>Menander.</i></p> + +<p>Peace, dear nurse of arts, plenties, and joyful birth.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>A land rejoicing and a people blest.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p><b>Pedant.</b>—As pedantry is an ostentatious obtrusion of knowledge, in which +those who hear us cannot sympathize, it is a fault of which soldiers, +sailors, sportsmen, gamesters, cultivators, and all men engaged in a +particular occupation, are quite as guilty as scholars; but they have +the good fortune to have the vice only of pedantry, while scholars have +both the vice and the name for it too.—<i>S. Smith.</i></p> + +<p>With loads of learned lumber in his head.—<i>Pope.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is not a circumscribed situation so much as a narrow vision that +creates pedants; not having a pet study or science, but a narrow, vulgar +soul, which prevents a man from seeing all sides and hearing all things; +in short, the intolerant man is the real pedant.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p><b>Perfection.</b>—It is reasonable to have perfection in our eye that we may +always advance towards it, though we know it can never be +reached.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Perfection does not exist; to understand it is the triumph of human +intelligence; to desire to possess it is the most dangerous kind of +madness.—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i></p> + +<p>That historian who would describe a favorite character as faultless +raises another at the expense of himself. Zeuxis made five virgins +contribute their charms to his single picture of Helen; and it is as +vain for the moralist to look for perfection in the mind, as for the +painter to expect to find it in the body.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Trifles make perfection, but perfection is no trifle.—<i>Michael Angelo.</i></p> + +<p>He who boasts of being perfect is perfect in folly. I never saw a +perfect man. Every rose has its thorns, and every day its night. Even +the sun shows spots, and the skies are darkened with clouds. And faults +of some kind nestle in every bosom.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>Faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null, dead perfection; no +more.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Persecution.</b>—Of all persecutions, that of calumny is the most +intolerable. Any other kind of persecution can affect our outward +circumstances only, our properties, our lives; but this may affect our +characters forever.—<i>Hazlitt.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Perseverance.</b>—Great effects come of industry and perseverance; for +audacity doth almost bind and mate the weaker sort of minds.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Let us only suffer any person to tell us his story, morning and evening, +but for one twelve-month, and he will become our master.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>Perpetual pushing and assurance put a difficulty out of countenance, and +make a seeming impossibility give way.—<i>Jeremy Collier.</i></p> + +<p>Much rain wears the marble.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>I'm proof against that word failure. I've seen behind it. The only +failure a man ought to fear is failure in cleaving to the purpose he +sees to be best.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Every man who observes vigilantly, and resolves steadfastly, grows +unconsciously into genius.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Perseverance is not always an indication of great abilities. An +indifferent poet is invulnerable to a repulse, the want of sensibility +in him being what a noble self-confidence was in Milton. These excluded +suitors continue, nevertheless, to hang their garlands at the gate, to +anoint the door-post, and even kiss the very threshold of her home, +though the Muse beckons them not in.—<i>Wordsworth.</i></p> + +<p><b>Perverseness.</b>—The strength of the donkey mind lies in adopting a course +inversely as the arguments urged, which, well considered, requires as +great a mental force as the direct sequence.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Philosophy.</b>—Philosophy is the art of living.—<i>Plutarch.</i></p> + +<p>Philosophy consists not in airy schemes, or idle speculations; the rule +and conduct of all social life is her great province.—<i>Thomson.</i></p> + +<p>The philosopher knows the universe and knows not himself.—<i>Fontaine.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></p> + +<p>Philosophy is the rational expression of genius.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p>It is a maxim received among philosophers themselves from the days of +Aristotle down to those of Sir William Hamilton, that philosophy ceases +where truth is acknowledged.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Physiognomy.</b>—It is a point of cunning to wait upon him with whom you +speak with your eye, as the Jesuits give it in precept; for there be +many wise men that have secret hearts and transparent +countenances.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>As the language of the face is universal, so 'tis very comprehensive; no +laconism can reach it; 'tis the short-hand of the mind, and crowds a +great deal in a little room.—<i>Jeremy Collier.</i></p> + +<p>The distinguishing characters of the face, and the lineaments of the +body, grow more plain and visible with time and age; but the peculiar +physiognomy of the mind is most discernible in children.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>What knowledge is there, of which man is capable, that is not founded on +the exterior; the relation that exists between visible and invisible, +the perceptible and the imperceptible?—<i>Lavater.</i></p> + +<p><b>Piety.</b>—Among the many strange servilities mistaken for pieties one of +the least lovely is that which hopes to flatter God by despising the +world and vilifying human nature.—<i>G. H. Lewes.</i></p> + +<p>Piety softens all that courage bears.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>Piety is a kind of modesty. It makes us turn aside our thoughts, as +modesty makes us cast down our eyes in the presence of whatever is +forbidden.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Piety is not an end, but a means of attaining the highest degree of +culture by perfect peace of mind. Hence it is to be observed that those +who make piety an end and aim in itself for the most part become +hypocrites.—<i>Goethe.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Pity.</b>—Pity is not natural to man. Children are always cruel. Savages +are always cruel. Pity is acquired and improved by the cultivation of +reason. We may have uneasy sensations from seeing a creature in +distress, without pity; for we have not pity unless we wish to relieve +them. When I am on my way to dine with a friend, and, finding it late, +bid the coachman make haste, if I happen to attend when he whips his +horses, I may feel unpleasantly that the animals are put to pain, but I +do not wish him to desist; no, sir, I wish him to drive on.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Pity is sworn servant unto love, and this be sure, wherever it begin to +make the way, it lets the master in.—<i>Daniel.</i></p> + +<p>Those many that need pity, and those infinities of people that refuse to +pity, are miserable upon a several charge, but yet they almost make up +all mankind.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p>Of all the sisters of Love one of the most charming is Pity.—<i>Alfred de +Musset.</i></p> + +<p><b>Place.</b>—In place there is a license to do good and evil, whereof the +latter is a curse; for in evil the best condition is not to will; the +second, not to can.—<i>Lord Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Where you are is of no moment, but only what you are doing there. It is +not the place that ennobles you, but you the place; and this only by +doing that which is great and noble.—<i>Petrarch.</i></p> + +<p>I take sanctuary in an honest mediocrity.—<i>Bruyère.</i></p> + +<p>A true man never frets about his place in the world, but just slides +into it by the gravitation of his nature, and swings there as easily as +a star.—<i>Chapin.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Plagiarism.</b>—Nothing is sillier than this charge of plagiarism. There is +no sixth commandment in art. The poet dare help himself wherever he +lists—wherever he finds material suited to his work. He may even +appropriate entire columns with their carved capitals, if the temple he +thus supports be a beautiful one. Goethe understood this very well, and +so did Shakespeare before him.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Pleasure.</b>—Consider pleasures as they depart, not as they +come.—<i>Aristotle.</i></p> + +<p>We have not an hour of life in which our pleasures relish not some pain, +our sours some sweetness.—<i>Massinger.</i></p> + +<p>How many there are that take pleasure in toil: that can outrise the sun, +outwatch the moon, and outrun the field's wild beasts! merely out of +fancy and delectation, they can find out mirth in vociferation, music in +the barking of dogs, and be content to be led about the earth, over +hedges and through sloughs, by the windings and the shifts of poor +affrighted vermin; yet, after all, come off, as Messalina, tired, and +not satisfied with all that the brutes can do. But were a man enjoined +to this that did not like it, how tedious and how punishable to him +would it prove! since, in itself, it differs not from riding +post.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>Boys immature in knowledge pawn their experience to their present +pleasure.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis a wrong way to proportion other men's pleasures to ourselves. 'Tis +like a child's using a little bird—"Oh, poor bird, thou shalt sleep +with me"—so lays it in his bosom and stifles it with his hot breath. +The bird had rather be in the cold air. And yet, too, 'tis the most +pleasing flattery to like what other men like.—<i>Selden.</i></p> + +<p>There is no pleasure but that some pain is nearly allied to +it.—<i>Menander.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span></p> + +<p>All fits of pleasure are balanced by an equal degree of pain or languor; +'tis like spending this year part of the next year's revenue.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p>Fly the pleasure that bites to-morrow.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Look upon pleasures not upon that side that is next the sun, or where +they look beauteously, that is, as they come towards you to be enjoyed, +for then they paint and smile, and dress themselves up in tinsel, and +glass gems, and counterfeit imagery.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p>Pleasure has its time; so, too, has wisdom. Make love in thy youth, and +in old age attend to thy salvation.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>A man of pleasure is a man of pains.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>Pleasure is very seldom found where it is sought. Our brightest blazes +of gladness are commonly kindled by unexpected sparks.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>What would we not give to still have in store the first blissful moment +we ever enjoyed!—<i>Rochepèdre.</i></p> + +<p>Most pleasures embrace us but to strangle.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Poetry.</b>—Poetry is the apotheosis of sentiment.—<i>Madame de Staël.</i></p> + +<p>Poetry is the sister of sorrow. Every man that suffers and weeps is a +poet; every tear is a verse, and every heart a poem.—<i>Marc André.</i></p> + +<p>Much is the force of heaven-bred poesy.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Poetry, good sir, in my opinion, is like a tender virgin, very young, +and extremely beautiful, whom divers other virgins—namely, all the +other sciences—make it their business to enrich, polish, and adorn; and +to her it belongs to make use of them all, and on her part to give a +lustre to them all.—<i>Cervantes.</i></p> + +<p>Poetry is the overflowing of the soul.—<i>Tuckerman.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span></p> + +<p>Poetry is enthusiasm with wings of fire, it is the angel of high +thoughts, that inspires us with the power of sacrifice.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>Poetry is the music of thought, conveyed to us in the music of +language.—<i>Chatfield.</i></p> + +<p>The great secret of morals is love, or a going out of our own nature, +and an identification of ourselves with the beautiful which exists in +thought, action, or person, not our own. A man, to be greatly good, must +imagine intensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place +of another, and of many others; the pains and pleasures of his species +must become his own. The great instrument of moral good is imagination, +and poetry administers to the effect by acting upon the +cause.—<i>Shelley.</i></p> + +<p>Truth shines the brighter clad in verse.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>It is a shallow criticism that would define poetry as confined to +literary productions in rhyme and metre. The written poem is only poetry +<i>talking</i>, and the statue, the picture, and the musical composition are +poetry <i>acting</i>. Milton and Goethe, at their desks, were not more truly +poets than Phidias with his chisel, Raphael at his easel, or deaf +Beethoven bending over his piano, inventing and producing strains which +he himself could never hope to hear.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>Thought in blossom.—<i>Bishop Ken.</i></p> + +<p>It is a ruinous misjudgment, too contemptible to be asserted, but not +too contemptible to be acted upon, that the end of poetry is +publication.—<i>George MacDonald.</i></p> + +<p>Wisdom married to immortal verse.—<i>Wordsworth.</i></p> + +<p>By poetry we mean the art of employing words in such a manner as to +produce an illusion on the imagination; the art of doing by means of +words what the painter does by means of colors.—<i>Macaulay.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span></p> + +<p>Thoughts, that voluntary move harmonious numbers.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>The world is so grand and so inexhaustible that subjects for poems +should never be wanted. But all poetry should be the poetry of +circumstance; that is, it should be inspired by the Real. A particular +subject will take a poetic and general character precisely because it is +created by a poet. All my poetry is the poetry of circumstance. It +wholly owes its birth to the realities of life.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing which does not transport is poetry. The lyre is a winged +instrument.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Perhaps there are no warmer lovers of the muse than those who are only +permitted occasionally to gain her favors. The shrine is more reverently +approached by the pilgrim from afar than the familiar worshiper. Poetry +is often more beloved by one whose daily vocation is amid the bustle of +the world. We read of a fountain in Arabia upon whose basin is +inscribed, "Drink and away;" but how delicious is that hasty draught, +and how long and brightly the thought of its transient refreshment +dwells in the memory!—<i>Tuckerman.</i></p> + +<p>Old-fashioned poetry, but choicely good.—<i>Izaak Walton.</i></p> + +<p>Poetry is not made out of the understanding. The question of common +sense is always: "What is it good for?" a question which would abolish +the rose and be triumphantly answered by the cabbage.—<i>Lowell.</i></p> + +<p>The poetry of earth is never dead.—<i>Keats.</i></p> + +<p><b>Poets.</b>—Poets, like race-horses, must be fed, not fattened.—<i>Charles +IX.</i></p> + +<p>True poets, like great artists, have scarcely any childhood, and no old +age.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>Modern poets mix much water with their ink.—<i>Goethe.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span></p> + +<p>There is nothing of which Nature has been more bountiful than poets. +They swarm like the spawn of cod-fish, with a vicious fecundity, that +invites and requires destruction. To publish verses is become a sort of +evidence that a man wants sense; which is repelled not by writing good +verses, but by writing excellent verses.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>There is a pleasure in poetic pains which only poets +know.—<i>Wordsworth.</i></p> + +<p>An artist that works in marble or colors has them all to himself and his +tribe, but the man who moulds his thoughts in verse has to employ the +materials vulgarized by everybody's use, and glorify them by his +handling.—<i>Holmes.</i></p> + +<p>A little shallowness might be useful to many a poet! What is depth, +after all? Is the pit deeper than the shallow mirror which reflects its +lowest recesses?—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>We praise the dramatic poet who possesses the art of drawing tears—a +talent which he has in common with the meanest onion!—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>I have observed a gardener cut the outward rind of a tree (which is the +surtout of it), to make it bear well: and this is a natural account of +the usual poverty of poets, and is an argument why wits, of all men +living, ought to be ill clad. I have always a sacred veneration for any +one I observe to be a little out of repair in his person, as supposing +him either a poet or a philosopher; because the richest minerals are +ever found under the most ragged and withered surfaces of the +earth.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p>Words become luminous when the poet's finger has passed over them its +phosphorescence.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Poets are the hierophants of an unapprehended inspiration; the mirrors +of the gigantic shadows which futurity casts upon the +present.—<i>Shelley.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span></p> + +<p>Poets are far rarer births than kings.—<i>Ben Jonson.</i></p> + +<p>One might discover schools of the poets as distinctly as schools of the +painters, by much converse in them, and a thorough taste of their manner +of writing.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>They learn in suffering what they teach in song.—<i>Shelley.</i></p> + +<p><b>Policy.</b>—He has mastered all points who has combined the useful with the +agreeable.—<i>Horace.</i></p> + +<p>At court one becomes a sort of human ant-eater, and learns to catch +one's prey by one's tongue.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Measures, not men, have always been my mark.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>In a troubled state, we must do as in foul weather upon a river, not +think to cut directly through, for the boat may be filled with water; +but rise and fall as the waves do, and give way as much as we +conveniently can.—<i>Seldon.</i></p> + +<p>To manage men one ought to have a sharp mind in a velvet +sheath.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Politeness.</b>—Politeness is fictitious benevolence. It supplies the place +of it among those who see each other only in public, or but little. +Depend upon it, the want of it never fails to produce something +disagreeable to one or other. I have always applied to good breeding +what Addison, in his "Cato," says of honor: "Honor's a sacred tie: the +law of kings; the noble mind's distinguishing perfection; that aids and +strengthens Virtue where it meets her, and imitates her actions where +she is not."—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Self-command is the main elegance.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>Politeness smooths wrinkles.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Politeness is as natural to delicate natures as perfume is to +flowers.—<i>De Finod.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Politics.</b>—It is the misfortune of all miscellaneous political +combinations, that with the purest motives of their more generous +members are ever mixed the most sordid interests and the fiercest +passions of mean confederates.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing is politically right which is morally wrong.—<i>Daniel +O'Connell.</i></p> + +<p>Those who think must govern those who toil.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>The man who can make two ears of corn, or two blades of grass, grow on +the spot where only one grew before, would deserve better of mankind, +and render more essential service to the country, than the whole race of +politicians put together.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p>Jarring interests of themselves create the according music of a +well-mixed state.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Wise men and gods are on the strongest side.—<i>Sir C. Sedley.</i></p> + +<p>The thorough-paced politician must laugh at the squeamishness of his +conscience, and read it another lecture.—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p>A thousand years scarce serve to form a state; an hour may lay it in the +dust.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Extended empire, like extended gold, exchanges solid strength for feeble +splendor.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Possessions.</b>—It so falls out that what we have we prize not to the +worth whiles we enjoy it; but being lacked and lost, why then we rack +the value; then we find the virtue that possession would not show us +whiles it was ours.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>All comes from and will go to others.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>In life, as in chess, one's own pawns block one's way. A man's very +wealth, ease, leisure, children, books, which should help him to win, +more often checkmate him.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span></p> + +<p>In all worldly things that a man pursues with the greatest eagerness and +intention of mind imaginable, he finds not half the pleasure in the +actual possession of them as he proposed to himself in the +expectation.—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p>As soon as women become ours we are no longer theirs.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>Attainment is followed by neglect, and possession by disgust. The +malicious remark of the Greek epigrammatist on marriage may apply to +every other course of life,—that its two days of happiness are the +first and the last.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Posterity.</b>—Posterity preserves only what will pack into small compass. +Jewels are handed down from age to age, less portable valuables +disappear.—<i>Lord Stanley.</i></p> + +<p>The drafts which true genius draws upon posterity, although they may not +always be honored so soon as they are due, are sure to be paid with +compound interest in the end.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Poverty.</b>—Many good qualities are not sufficient to balance a single +want—the want of money.—<i>Zimmerman.</i></p> + +<p>Few save the poor feel for the poor.—<i>L. E. Landon.</i></p> + +<p>Thou shalt know by experience how salt the savor is of others' bread, +and how sad a path it is to climb and descend another's +stairs.—<i>Dante.</i></p> + +<p>Riches endless is as poor as winter, to him that ever fears he shall be +poor.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>A poor man resembles a fiddler, whose music, though liked, is not much +praised, because he lives by it; while a gentleman performer, though the +most wretched scraper alive, throws the audience into +raptures.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>He is not poor that little hath, but he that much desires.—<i>Daniel.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span></p> + +<p>The wicked man's tempter, the good man's perdition, the proud man's +curse, the melancholy man's halter.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Power.</b>—The weakest living creature, by concentrating his powers on a +single object, can accomplish something. The strongest, by dispensing +his over many, may fail to accomplish anything. The drop, by continually +falling, bores its passage through the hardest rock. The hasty torrent +rushes over it with hideous uproar, and leaves no trace +behind.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>Oh for a forty parson power.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Power is so characteristically calm, that calmness in itself has the +aspect of power, and forbearance implies strength. The orator who is +known to have at his command all the weapons of invective is most +formidable when most courteous.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Praise.</b>—Expect not praise without envy until you are dead. Honors +bestowed on the illustrious dead have in them no admixture of envy; for +the living pity the dead; and pity and envy, like oil and vinegar, +assimilate not.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Praise is the best diet for us after all.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Desert being the essential condition of praise, there can be no reality +in the one without the other.—<i>Washington Allston.</i></p> + +<p>Damn with faint praise.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Counsel is not so sacred a thing as praise, since the former is only +useful among men, but the latter is for the most part reserved for the +gods.—<i>Pythagoras.</i></p> + +<p>Praise undeserved is satire in disguise.—<i>Broadhurst.</i></p> + +<p>One good deed, dying tongueless, slaughters a thousand waiting upon +that. Our praises are our wages.—<i>Shakespeare.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Prayer.</b>—The Lord's Prayer contains the sum total of religion and +morals.—<i>Wellington.</i></p> + +<p>Nymph, in thy orisons be all my sins remembered.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis heaven alone that is given away; 'tis only God may be had for the +asking.—<i>Lowell.</i></p> + +<p>Let our prayers, like the ancient sacrifices, ascend morning and +evening. Let our days begin and end with God.—<i>Channing.</i></p> + +<p>The few that pray at all pray oft amiss.—<i>Cowper.</i></p> + +<p>Such words as Heaven alone is fit to hear.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>What are men better than sheep or goats, that nourish a blind life +within the brain, if, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer both +for themselves and those who call them friends!—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Prayer ardent opens heaven.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>Solicitude is the audience-chamber of God.—<i>Landor.</i></p> + +<p>The best answer to all objections urged against prayer is the fact that +man cannot help praying; for we may be sure that that which is so +spontaneous and ineradicable in human nature has its fitting objects and +methods in the arrangements of a boundless Providence.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>He prayeth best who loveth best.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p><b>Preaching.</b>—Preachers say, do as I say, not as I do. But if a physician +had the same disease upon him that I have, and he should bid me do one +thing and he do quite another, could I believe him?—<b>Selden.</b></p> + +<p><b>Preface.</b>—Your opening promises some great design.—<i>Horace.</i></p> + +<p>A preface, being the entrance of a book, should invite by its beauty. An +elegant porch announces the splendor of the interior.—<i>Disraeli.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span></p> + +<p>A good preface is as essential to put the reader into good humor, as a +good prologue is to a play, or a fine symphony is to an opera, +containing something analogous to the work itself; so that we may feel +its want as a desire not elsewhere to be gratified. The Italians call +the preface—La salsa del libro—the sauce of the book; and, if +well-seasoned, it creates an appetite in the reader to devour the book +itself.—<i>Disraeli.</i></p> + +<p><b>Prejudice.</b>—He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of +that.—<i>J. Stuart Mill.</i></p> + +<p>Prejudice, which sees what it pleases, cannot see what is +plain.—<i>Aubrey de Vere.</i></p> + +<p>All looks yellow to the jaundiced eye.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Prejudice is the reason of fools.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>Ignorance is less remote from the truth than prejudice.—<i>Diderot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Present, The.</b>—Since Time is not a person we can overtake when he is +gone, let us honor him with mirth and cheerfulness of heart while he is +passing.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Man, living, feeling man, is the easy sport of the over-mastering +present.—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis but a short journey across the isthmus of Now.—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p>The present hour is always wealthiest when it is poorer than the future +ones, as that is the pleasantest site which affords the pleasantest +prospect.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>Let us enjoy the fugitive hour. Man has no harbor, time has no shore, it +rushes on and carries us with it.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Presentiment.</b>—We walk in the midst of secrets—we are encompassed with +mysteries. We know not what takes place in the atmosphere that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span> +surrounds us—we know not what relations it has with our minds. But one +thing is sure, that, under certain conditions, our soul, through the +exercise of mysterious functions, has a greater power than reason, and +that the power is given it to antedate the future,—ay, to see into the +future.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>We should not neglect a presentiment. Every man has within him a spark +of divine radiance which is often the torch which illumines the darkness +of our future.—<i>Madame de Girardin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Press.</b>—The press is not only free, it is powerful. That power is ours. +It is the proudest that man can enjoy. It was not granted by monarchs, +it was not gained for us by aristocracies; but it sprang from the +people, and, with an immortal instinct, it has always worked for the +people.—<i>B. Disraeli.</i></p> + +<p><b>Presumption.</b>—Presumption is our natural and original +disease.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>Presumption never stops in its first attempt. If Cæsar comes once to +pass the Rubicon, he will be sure to march further on, even till he +enters the very bowels of Rome, and breaks open the Capitol itself. He +that wades so far as to wet and foul himself, cares not how much he +trashes further.—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p>He that presumes steps into the throne of God.—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p><b>Pretence.</b>—As a general rule, people who flagrantly pretend to anything +are the reverse of that which they pretend to. A man who sets up for a +saint is sure to be a sinner, and a man who boasts that he is a sinner +is sure to have some feeble, maudlin, sniveling bit of saintship about +him which is enough to make him a humbug.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Pretension.</b>—Pretences go a great way with men that take fair words and +magisterial looks for current payment.—<i>L'Estrange.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Pride.</b>—I have been more and more convinced, the more I think of it, +that in general, pride is at the bottom of all great mistakes. All the +other passions do occasional good; but whenever pride puts in <i>its</i> +word, everything goes wrong; and what it might really be desirable to +do, quietly and innocently, it is mortally dangerous to do +proudly.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>Pride's chickens have bonny feathers, but they are an expensive brood to +rear—they eat up everything, and are always lean when brought to +market.—<i>Alexander Smith.</i></p> + +<p>When pride thaws look for floods.—<i>Bailey.</i></p> + +<p>Pride, like laudanum and other poisonous medicines, is beneficial in +small, though injurious in large, quantities. No man who is not pleased +with himself, even in a personal sense, can please others.—<i>Frederick +Saunders.</i></p> + +<p>Pride is seldom delicate; it will please itself with very mean +advantages.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Principles.</b>—Principle is a passion for truth.—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p> + +<p>Principles, like troops of the line, are undisturbed, and stand +fast.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Whatever lies beyond the limits of experience, and claims another origin +than that of induction and deduction from established data, is +illegitimate.—<i>G. H. Lewes.</i></p> + +<p>The value of a principle is the number of things it will explain; and +there is no good theory of disease which does not at once suggest a +cure.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>What is the essence and the life of character? Principle, integrity, +independence, or, as one of our great old writers has it, "that inbred +loyalty unto virtue which can serve her without a +livery."—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span></p> + +<p>The change we personally experience from time to time we obstinately +deny to our principles.—<i>Zimmerman.</i></p> + +<p><b>Printing.</b>—Things printed can never be stopped; they are like babies +baptized, they have a soul from that moment, and go on forever.—<i>George +Meredith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Prison.</b>—Young Crime's finishing school.—<i>Mrs. Balfour.</i></p> + +<p>The worst prison is not of stone. It is of a throbbing heart, outraged +by an infamous life.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p><b>Procrastination.</b>—Indulge in procrastination, and in time you will come +to this, that because a thing ought to be done, therefore you can't do +it.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>The man who procrastinates struggles with ruin.—<i>Hesiod.</i></p> + +<p>There is, by God's grace, an immeasurable distance between late and too +late.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Prodigality.</b>—This is a vice too brave and costly to be kept and +maintained at any easy rate; it must have large pensions, and be fed +with both hands, though the man who feeds it starve for his pains.—<i>Dr. +South.</i></p> + +<p>When I see a young profligate squandering his fortune in bagnios, or at +the gaming-table, I cannot help looking on him as hastening his own +death, and in a manner digging his own grave.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>The gains of prodigals are like fig-trees growing on a precipice: for +these, none are better but kites and crows; for those, only harlots and +flatterers.—<i>Socrates.</i></p> + +<p><b>Progress.</b>—All that is human must retrograde if it do not +advance.—<i>Gibbon.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span></p> + +<p>What matters it? say some, a little more knowledge for man, a little +more liberty, a little more general development. Life is so short! He is +a being so limited! But it is precisely because his days are few, and he +cannot attain to all, that a little more culture is of importance to +him. The ignorance in which God leaves man is divine; the ignorance in +which man leaves himself is a crime and a shame.—<i>X. Doudan.</i></p> + +<p>Revolutions never go backwards.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>What pains and tears the slightest steps of man's progress have cost! +Every hair-breadth forward has been in the agony of some soul, and +humanity has reached blessing after blessing of all its vast achievement +of good with bleeding feet.—<i>Bartol.</i></p> + +<p>Progress is lame.—<i>St. Bueve.</i></p> + +<p>We know what a masquerade all development is, and what effective shapes +may be disguised in helpless embryos. In fact, the world is full of +hopeful analogies and handsome dubious eggs called +possibilities.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The pathway of progress will still, as of old, bear the traces of +martyrdom, but the advance is inevitable.—<i>G. H. Lewes.</i></p> + +<p>Nations are educated through suffering, mankind is purified through +sorrow. The power of creating obstacles to progress is human and +partial. Omnipotence is with the ages.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>Every age has its problem, by solving which, humanity is helped +forward.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Men of great genius and large heart sow the seeds of a new degree of +progress in the world, but they bear fruit only after many +years.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>It is curious to note the old sea-margins of human thought. Each +subsiding century reveals some new mystery; we build where monsters used +to hide themselves.—<i>Longfellow.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p> + +<p>The activity of to-day and the assurance of to-morrow.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>The moral law of the universe is progress. Every generation that passes +idly over the earth without adding to that progress by one degree +remains uninscribed upon the register of humanity, and the succeeding +generation tramples its ashes as dust.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>A fresh mind keeps the body fresh. Take in the ideas of the day, drain +off those of yesterday. As to the morrow, time enough to consider it +when it becomes to-day.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Promise.</b>—Promises hold men faster than benefits: hope is a cable and +gratitude a thread.—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p><b>Proof.</b>—In the eyes of a wise judge proofs by reasoning are of more +value than witnesses.—<i>Cicero.</i></p> + +<p>Give me the ocular proof; make me see't; or at the least, so prove it, +that the probation bear no hinge, no loop, to hang a doubt +upon.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Prosperity.</b>—Prosperity makes some friends and many +enemies.—<i>Vauvenargues.</i></p> + +<p>That fortitude which has encountered no dangers, that prudence which has +surmounted no difficulties, that integrity which has been attacked by no +temptation, can at best be considered but as gold not yet brought to the +test, of which therefore the true value cannot be assigned.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Alas for the fate of men! Even in the midst of the highest prosperity a +shadow may overturn them; but if they be in adverse fortune a moistened +sponge can blot out the picture.—<i>Æschylus.</i></p> + +<p>Prosperity lets go the bridle.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p><b>Proverbs.</b>—Proverbs are somewhat analogous to those medical formulas +which, being in frequent use, are kept ready made up in the chemists' +shops, and which often save the framing of a distinct +prescription.—<i>Bishop Whately.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span></p> + +<p>The study of proverbs may be more instructive and comprehensive than the +most elaborate scheme of philosophy.—<i>Motherwell.</i></p> + +<p>The proverbial wisdom of the populace in the street, on the roads, and +in the markets, instructs the ear of him who studies man more fully than +a thousand rules ostentatiously displayed.—<i>Lavater.</i></p> + +<p><b>Prudence.</b>—There is no amount of praise which is not heaped on prudence; +yet there is not the most insignificant event of which it can make us +sure.—<i>Rochefoucauld.</i></p> + +<p>Too many, through want of prudence, are golden apprentices, silver +journeymen, and copper masters.—<i>Whitfield.</i></p> + +<p>Men of sense often learn from their enemies. Prudence is the best +safeguard. This principle cannot be learned from a friend, but an enemy +extorts it immediately. It is from their foes, not their friends, that +cities learn the lesson of building high walls and ships of war. And +this lesson saves their children, their homes, and their +properties.—<i>Aristophanes.</i></p> + +<p><b>Punctuality.</b>—The most indispensable qualification of a cook is +punctuality. The same must be said of guests.—<i>Brillat Savarin.</i></p> + +<p>Punctuality is the stern virtue of men of business, and the graceful +courtesy of princes.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Punishment.</b>—One man meets an infamous punishment for that crime which +confers a diadem upon another.—<i>Juvenal.</i></p> + +<p>It is as expedient that a wicked man be punished as that a sick man be +cured by a physician; for all chastisement is a kind of +medicine.—<i>Plato.</i></p> + +<p>Punishment is lame, but it comes.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>If punishment makes not the will supple it hardens the +offender.—<i>Locke.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span></p> + +<p>Don't let us rejoice in punishment, even when the hand of God alone +inflicts it. The best of us are but poor wretches just saved from +shipwreck: can we feel anything but awe and pity when we see a +fellow-passenger swallowed by the waves?—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The work of eradicating crimes is not by making punishment familiar, but +formidable.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>The public have more interest in the punishment of an injury than he who +receives it.—<i>Cato.</i></p> + +<p>The best of us being unfit to die, what an inexpressible absurdity to +put the worst to death!—<i>Hawthorne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Puns.</b>—I have very little to say about puns; they are in very bad +repute, and so they <i>ought</i> to be. The wit of language is so miserably +inferior to the wit of ideas, that it is very deservedly driven out of +good company. Sometimes, indeed, a pun makes its appearance which seems +for a moment to redeem its species; but we must not be deceived by them: +it is a radically bad race of wit.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Conceits arising from the use of words that agree in sound but differ in +sense.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p><b>Purposes.</b>—Man proposes, but God disposes.—<i>Thomas à Kempis.</i></p> + +<p>A man's heart deviseth his way; but the Lord directeth his +steps.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>It is better by a noble boldness to run the risk of being subject to +half of the evils which we anticipate, than to remain in cowardly +listlessness for fear of what may happen.—<i>Herodotus.</i></p> + +<p>Purposes, like eggs, unless they be hatched into action, will run into +decay.—<i>Smiles.</i></p> + +<p><b>Pursuit.</b>—The rapture of pursuing is the prize the vanquished +gain.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>The fruit that can fall without shaking, indeed is too mellow for +me.—<i>Lady Montagu.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>Q.</h3> + +<p><b>Quacks.</b>—Pettifoggers in law and empirics in medicine have held from +time immemorial the fee simple of a vast estate, subject to no +alienation, diminution, revolution, nor tax—the folly and ignorance of +mankind.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing more strikingly betrays the credulity of mankind than medicine. +Quackery is a thing universal, and universally successful. In this case +it becomes literally true that no imposition is too great for the +credulity of men.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p><b>Qualities.</b>—Wood burns because it has the proper stuff in it; and a man +becomes famous because he has the proper stuff in him.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p><b>Quarrels.</b>—Coarse kindness is, at least, better than coarse anger; and +in all private quarrels the duller nature is triumphant by reason of its +dullness.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The quarrels of lovers are like summer storms. Everything is more +beautiful when they have passed.—<i>Mme. Necker.</i></p> + +<p><b>Questions.</b>—There are innumerable questions to which the inquisitive +mind can, in this state, receive no answer: Why do you and I exist? Why +was this world created? And, since it was to be created, why was it not +created sooner?—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Quotation.</b>—In quoting of books, quote such authors as are usually read; +others you may read for your own satisfaction, but not name +them.—<i>Selden.</i></p> + +<p>If these little sparks of holy fire which I have thus heaped up together +do not give life to your prepared and already enkindled spirit, yet they +will sometimes help to entertain a thought, to actuate a passion, to +employ and hallow a fancy.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span></p> + +<p>If the grain were separated from the chaff which fills the works of our +National Poets, what is truly valuable would be to what is useless in +the proportion of a mole-hill to a mountain.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>It is the beauty and independent worth of the citations, far more than +their appropriateness, which have made Johnson's Dictionary popular even +as a reading-book.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>Ruin half an author's graces by plucking bon-mots from their +places.—<i>Hannah More.</i></p> + +<p>I take memorandums of the schools.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p>The obscurest sayings of the truly great are often those which contain +the germ of the profoundest and most useful truths.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>To select well among old things is almost equal to inventing new +ones.—<i>Trublet.</i></p> + +<p>Why are not more gems from our great authors scattered over the country? +Great books are not in everybody's reach; and though it is better to +know them thoroughly than to know them only here and there, yet it is a +good work to give a little to those who have neither time nor means to +get more. Let every bookworm, when in any fragrant, scarce old tome he +discovers a sentence, a story, an illustration, that does his heart +good, hasten to give it.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>A couplet of verse, a period of prose, may cling to the rock of ages as +a shell that survives a deluge.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Selected thoughts depend for their flavor upon the terseness of their +expression, for thoughts are grains of sugar, or salt, that must be +melted in a drop of water.—<i>J. Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>As people read nothing in these days that is more than forty-eight hours +old, I am daily admonished that allusions, the most obvious, to anything +in the rear of our own times need explanation.—<i>De Quincey.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>R.</h3> + +<p><b>Rain.</b>—Clouds dissolved the thirsty ground supply.—<i>Roscommon.</i></p> + +<p>The kind refresher of the summer heats.—<i>Thomson.</i></p> + +<p>Vexed sailors curse the rain for which poor shepherds prayed in +vain.—<i>Waller.</i></p> + +<p>The spongy clouds are filled with gathering rain.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p><b>Rainbow.</b>—That smiling daughter of the storm.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Born of the shower, and colored by the sun.—<i>J. C. Prince.</i></p> + +<p>God's glowing covenant.—<i>Hosea Ballou.</i></p> + +<p><b>Rank.</b>—If it were ever allowable to forget what is due to superiority of +rank, it would be when the privileged themselves remember it.—<i>Madame +Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>I weigh the man, not his title; 'tis not the king's stamp can make the +metal better.—<i>Wycherley.</i></p> + +<p>Of the king's creation you may be; but he who makes a count ne'er made a +man.—<i>Southerne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Rashness.</b>—Rashness and haste make all things insecure.—<i>Denham.</i></p> + +<p>We may outrun by violent swiftness that which we run at, and lose by +overrunning.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Reading.</b>—Read, and refine your appetite; learn to live upon +instruction; feast your mind and mortify your flesh; read, and take your +nourishment in at your eyes, shut up your mouth, and chew the cud of +understanding.—<i>Congreve.</i></p> + +<p>Deep versed in books, but shallow in himself.—<i>Milton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span></p> + +<p>The love of reading enables a man to exchange the wearisome hours of +life, which come to every one, for hours of delight.—<i>Montesquieu.</i></p> + +<p>There was, it is said, a criminal in Italy, who was suffered to make his +choice between Guicciardini and the galleys. He chose the history. But +the war of Pisa was too much for him. He changed his mind, and went to +the oars.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>Exceedingly well read and profited in strange +concealments.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The reader, who would follow a close reasoner to the summit of the +absolute principle of any one important subject, has chosen a +chamois-hunter for his guide. He cannot carry us on his shoulders; we +must strain our sinews, as he has strained his; and make firm footing on +the smooth rock for ourselves, by the blood of toil from our own +feet.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p><b>Reason.</b>—Reason lies between the spur and the bridle.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>Many are destined to reason wrongly; others not to reason at all; and +others to persecute those who do reason.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>If reasons were as plenty as blackberries I would give no man a reason +upon compulsion.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>We can only reason from what is; we can reason on actualities, but not +on possibilities.—<i>Bolingbroke.</i></p> + +<p>I do not call reason that brutal reason which crushes with its weight +what is holy and sacred; that malignant reason which delights in the +errors it succeeds in discovering; that unfeeling and scornful reason +which insults credulity.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>I have no other but a woman's reason: I think him so, because I think +him so.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Reason 's progressive; instinct is complete: swift instinct leaps; slow +reason feebly climbs.—<i>Young.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span></p> + +<p>Faith evermore looks upward and descries objects remote; but reason can +discover things only near,—sees nothing that's above her.—<i>Quarles.</i></p> + +<p>How can finite grasp infinity?—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Let us not dream that reason can ever be popular. Passions, emotions, +may be made popular, but reason remains ever the property of the +few.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Reason is, so to speak, the police of the kingdom of art, seeking only +to preserve order. In life itself a cold arithmetician who adds up our +follies. Sometimes, alas! only the accountant in bankruptcy of a broken +heart.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Sure He that made us with such large discourse, looking before and +after, gave us not that capability and godlike reason to rust in us +unused.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Reason may cure illusions but not suffering.—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i></p> + +<p><b>Reciprocity.</b>—There is one word which may serve as a rule of practice +for all one's life, that word is <i>reciprocity</i>. What you do not wish +done to yourself, do not do to others.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p><b>Reconciliation.</b>—It is much safer to reconcile an enemy than to conquer +him; victory may deprive him of his poison, but reconciliation of his +will.—<i>Owen Feltham.</i></p> + +<p><b>Rectitude.</b>—The great high-road of human welfare lies along the highway +of steadfast well-doing, and they who are the most persistent, and work +in the truest spirit, will invariably be the most successful.—<i>Samuel +Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>If you would convince a man that he does wrong, do right. But do not +care to convince him. Men will believe what they see. Let them +see.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>No man can do right unless he is good, wise, and strong. What wonder we +fail?—<i>Charles Buxton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Refinement.</b>—Refinement that carries us away from our fellow-men is not +God's refinement.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>Refinement is the lifting of one's self upwards from the merely sensual, +the effort of the soul to etherealize the common wants and uses of +life.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p><b>Reflection.</b>—We are told, "Let not the sun go down on your wrath." This, +of course, is best; but, as it generally does, I would add, never act or +write till it has done so. This rule has saved me from many an act of +folly. It is wonderful what a different view we take of the same event +four-and-twenty hours after it has happened.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Reform.</b>—We are reformers in spring and summer; in autumn and winter we +stand by the old—reformers in the morning, conservatives at night. +Reform is affirmative, conservatism is negative; conservatism goes for +comfort, reform for truth.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>Long is the way and hard, that out of hell leads up to light.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Conscious remorse and anguish must be felt, to curb desire, to break the +stubborn will, and work a second nature in the soul.—<i>Rowe.</i></p> + +<p>They say best men are moulded out of faults, and, for the most, become +much more the better for being a little bad!—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Regret.</b>—Why is it that a blessing only when it is lost cuts as deep +into the heart as a sharp diamond? Why must we first weep before we can +love so deeply that our hearts ache?—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p><b>Religion.</b>—Natural religion supplies still all the facts which are +disguised under the dogma of popular creeds. The progress of religion is +steadily to its identity with morals.—<i>Emerson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span></p> + +<p>I endeavor in vain to give my parishioners more cheerful ideas of +religion; to teach them that God is not a jealous, childish, merciless +tyrant; that He is best served by a regular tenor of good actions, not +by bad singing, ill-composed prayers, and eternal apprehensions. But the +luxury of false religion is to be unhappy!—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Nowhere would there be consolation if religion were not.—<i>Jacobi.</i></p> + +<p>Monopolies are just as injurious to religion as to trade. With +competition religions preserve their strength, but they will never again +flourish in their original glory until religious freedom, or, in other +words, free trade among the gods, is introduced.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>A religion giving dark views of God, and infusing superstitious fear of +innocent enjoyment, instead of aiding sober habits, will, by making men +abject and sad, impair their moral force, and prepare them for +intemperance as a refuge from depression or despair.—<i>Channing.</i></p> + +<p>Religion is the hospital of the souls that the world has wounded.—<i>J. +Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>Ah! what a divine religion might be found out if charity were really +made the principle of it instead of faith.—<i>Shelley.</i></p> + +<p>The ship retains her anchorage yet drifts with a certain range, subject +to wind and tide. So we have for an anchorage the cardinal truths of the +gospel.—<i>Gladstone.</i></p> + +<p>The best religion is the most tolerant.—<i>Emile de Girardin.</i></p> + +<p><b>Remembrance.</b>—The greatest comfort of my old age, and that which gives +me the highest satisfaction, is the pleasing remembrance of the many +benefits and friendly offices I have done to others.—<i>Cato.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p> + +<p>Pleasure is the flower that fades; remembrance is the lasting +perfume.—<i>Boufflers.</i></p> + +<p><b>Remorse.</b>—Remorse is the punishment of crime; repentance its expiation. +The former appertains to a tormented conscience; the latter to a soul +changed for the better.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Remorse sleeps in the atmosphere of prosperity.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p>Unnatural deeds do breed unnatural troubles. Infected minds to their +deaf pillows will discharge their secrets.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Truth severe, by fairy fiction drest.—<i>Gray.</i></p> + +<p><b>Repartee.</b>—The impromptu reply is precisely the touchstone of the man of +wit.—<i>Molière.</i></p> + +<p><b>Repentance.</b>—-Repentance clothes in grass and flowers the grave in which +the past is laid.—<i>Sterling.</i></p> + +<p>He repents on thorns that sleeps in beds of roses.—<i>Quarles.</i></p> + +<p>Beholding heaven, and feeling hell.—<i>Moore.</i></p> + +<p>Is it not in accordance with divine order that every mortal is thrown +into that situation where his hidden evils can be brought forth to his +own view, that he may know them, acknowledge them, struggle against +them, and put them away?—<i>Anna Cora Ritchie.</i></p> + +<p>Repentance is second innocence.—<i>De Bonald.</i></p> + +<p><b>Repose.</b>—Repose is agreeable to the human mind; and decision is repose. +A man has made up his opinions; he does not choose to be disturbed; and +he is much more thankful to the man who confirms him in his errors, and +leaves him alone, than he is to the man who refutes him, or who +instructs him at the expense of his tranquillity.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Rest is the sweet sauce of labor.—<i>Plutarch.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Reproach.</b>—Few love to hear the sins they love to act.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The silent upbraiding of the eye is the very poetry of reproach; it +speaks at once to the imagination.—<i>Mrs. Balfour.</i></p> + +<p><b>Republic.</b>—Though I admire republican principles in theory, yet I am +afraid the practice may be too perfect for human nature. We tried a +republic last century and it failed. Let our enemies try next. I hate +political experiments.—<i>Walpole.</i></p> + +<p>The same fact that Boccaccio offers in support of religion, might be +adduced in behalf of a republic: "It exists in spite of its +ministers."—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>At twenty, every one is republican.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Reputation.</b>—Reputation is one of the prizes for which men contend: it +is, as Mr. Burke calls it, "the cheap defence and ornament of nations, +and the nurse of manly exertions;" it produces more labor and more +talent then twice the wealth of a country could ever rear up. It is the +coin of genius; and it is the imperious duty of every man to bestow it +with the most scrupulous justice and the wisest economy.—<i>Sydney +Smith.</i></p> + +<p>An eminent reputation is as dangerous as a bad one.—<i>Tacitus.</i></p> + +<p>Reputation is but the synonym of popularity; dependent on suffrage, to +be increased or diminished at the will of the voters.—<i>Washington +Allston.</i></p> + +<p>My name and memory I leave to men's charitable speeches, to foreign +nations, and to the next age.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>The blaze of reputation cannot be blown out, but it often dies in the +socket.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>One may be better than his reputation or his conduct, but never better +than his principles.—<i>Laténa.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Request.</b>—No music is so charming to my ear as the requests of my +friends, and the supplications of those in want of my +assistance.—<i>Cæsar.</i></p> + +<p>He who goes round about in his requests wants commonly more than he +chooses to appear to want.—<i>Lavater.</i></p> + +<p><b>Resignation.</b>—O Lord, I do most cheerfully commit all unto +Thee.—<i>Fénelon.</i></p> + +<p>Let God do with me what He will, anything He will; and, whatever it be, +it will be either heaven itself, or some beginning of it.—<i>Mountford.</i></p> + +<p>A man that fortune's buffets and rewards has ta'en with equal +thanks.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Trust in God, as Moses did, let the way be ever so dark; and it shall +come to pass that your life at last shall surpass even your longing. +Not, it may be, in the line of that longing, that shall be as it +pleaseth God; but the glory is as sure as the grace, and the most +ancient heavens are not more sure than that.—<i>Robert Collyer.</i></p> + +<p>Vulgar minds refuse to crouch beneath their load; the brave bear theirs +without repining.—<i>Thomson.</i></p> + +<p>"My will, not thine, be done," turned Paradise into a desert. "Thy will, +not mine, be done," turned the desert into a paradise, and made +Gethsemane the gate of heaven.—<i>Pressense.</i></p> + +<p>Resignation is the courage of Christian sorrow.—<i>Dr. Vinet.</i></p> + +<p><b>Responsibility.</b>—Responsibility educates.—<i>Wendell Phillips.</i></p> + +<p><b>Restlessness.</b>—The mind is found most acute and most uneasy in the +morning. Uneasiness is, indeed, a species of sagacity—a passive +sagacity. Fools are never uneasy.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Always driven towards new shores, or carried hence without hope of +return, shall we never, on the ocean of age cast anchor for even a +day?—<i>Lamartine.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Retribution.</b>—Nemesis is lame, but she is of colossal stature, like the +gods; and sometimes, while her sword is not yet unsheathed, she +stretches out her huge left arm and grasps her victim. The mighty hand +is invisible, but the victim totters under the dire clutch.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>"One soweth and another reapeth" is a verity that applies to evil as +well as good.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Revenge.</b>—Revenge at first, though sweet, bitter ere long back on itself +recoils.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Revenge is a debt, in the paying of which the greatest knave is honest +and sincere, and, so far as he is able, punctual.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>There are some professed Christians who would gladly burn their enemies, +but yet who forgive them merely because it is heaping coals of fire on +their heads.—<i>F. A. Durivage.</i></p> + +<p><b>Revery.</b>—In that sweet mood when pleasant thoughts bring sad thoughts to +the mind.—<i>Wordsworth.</i></p> + +<p><b>Revolution.</b>—The working of revolutions, therefore, misleads me no more; +it is as necessary to our race as its waves to the stream, that it may +not be a stagnant marsh. Ever renewed in its forms, the genius of +humanity blossoms.—<i>Herder.</i></p> + +<p>Great revolutions are the work rather of principles than of bayonets, +and are achieved first in the moral, and afterwards in the material +sphere.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>All experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, +while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the +forms to which they are accustomed.—<i>Jefferson.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing has ever remained of any revolution hut what was ripe in the +conscience of the masses.—<i>Ledru Rollin.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span></p> + +<p>Revolution is the larva of civilization.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p>We deplore the outrages which accompany revolutions. But the more +violent the outrages, the more assured we feel that a revolution was +necessary! The violence of these outrages will always lie proportioned +to the ferocity and ignorance of the people: and the ferocity and +ignorance of the people will be proportioned to the oppression and +degradation under which they have been accustomed to live.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>Let them call it mischief; when it's past and prospered, 't will be +virtue.—<i>Ben Jonson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Rhetoric.</b>—In composition, it is the art of putting ideas together in +graceful and accurate prose; in speaking, it is the art of delivering +ideas with propriety, elegance, and force; or, in other words, it is the +science of oratory.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>Rhetoric without logic is like a tree with leaves and blossoms, but no +root; yet more are taken with rhetoric than logic, because they are +caught with a free expression, when they understand not +reason.—<i>Selden.</i></p> + +<p>The florid, elevated, and figurative way is for the passions; for love +and hatred, fear and anger, are begotten in the soul by showing their +objects out of their true proportion, either greater than the life, or +less; but instruction is to be given by showing them what they naturally +are. A man is to cheated into passion, but reasoned into +truth.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>All the art of rhetoric, besides order and clearness, are for nothing +else but to insinuate wrong ideas, move the passions, and thereby +mislead the judgment.—<i>Locke.</i></p> + +<p>Rhetoric is very good, or stark naught; there's no medium in +rhetoric.—<i>Selden.</i></p> + +<p><b>Riches.</b>—The shortest road to riches lies through contempt of +riches.—<i>Seneca.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span></p> + +<p>One cause, which is not always observed, of the insufficiency of riches, +is that they very seldom make their owner rich.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Of all the riches that we hug, of all the pleasures we enjoy, we can +carry no more out of this world than out of a dream.—<i>Bonnell.</i></p> + +<p>If the search for riches were sure to be successful, though I should +become a groom with a whip in my hand to get them, I will do so. As the +search may not be successful, I will follow after that which I +love.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>I have a rich neighbor that is always so busy that he has no leisure to +laugh; the whole business of his life is to get money, more money, that +he may still get more. He is still drudging, saying what Solomon says, +"The diligent hand maketh rich." And it is true, indeed; but he +considers not that it is not in the power of riches to make a man happy; +for it was wisely said by a man of great observation that "there be as +many miseries beyond riches as on this side of them."—<i>Izaak Walton.</i></p> + +<p>Riches, though they may reward virtues, yet they cannot cause them; he +is much more noble who deserves a benefit, than he who bestows +one.—<i>Owen Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>In these times gain is not only a matter of greed, but of +ambition.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ridicule.</b>—Some men are, in regard to ridicule, like tin-roofed +buildings in regard to hail: all that hits them bounds rattling off, not +a stone goes through.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p><b>Rogues.</b>—Rogues are always found out in some way. Whoever is a wolf will +act as a wolf; that is the most certain of all things.—<i>La Fontaine.</i></p> + +<p>Many a man would have turned rogue if he knew how.—<i>Hazlitt.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Ruin.</b>—To be ruined your own way is some comfort. When so many people +would ruin us, it is a triumph over the villany of the world to be +ruined after one's own pattern.—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i></p> + + +<h3>S.</h3> + +<p><b>Sacrifice.</b>—You cannot win without sacrifice.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>What you most repent of is a lasting sacrifice made under an impulse of +good-nature. The good-nature goes, the sacrifice sticks.—<i>Charles +Buxton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sadness.</b>—Take my word for it, the saddest thing under the sky is a soul +incapable of sadness.—<i>Countess de Gasparin.</i></p> + +<p>Our sadness is not sad, but our cheap joys.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p><b>Salary.</b>—Other rules vary; this is the only one you will find without +exception: That in this world the salary or reward is always in the +inverse ratio of the duties performed.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sarcasm.</b>—A true sarcasm is like a sword-stick—it appears, at first +sight, to be much more innocent than it really is, till, all of a +sudden, there leaps something out of it—sharp and deadly and +incisive—which makes you tremble and recoil.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Satire.</b>—To lash the vices of a guilty age.—<i>Churchill.</i></p> + +<p>Thou shining supplement of public laws!—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>By satire kept in awe, shrink from ridicule, though not from +law.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>When dunces are satiric I take it for a panegyric.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p><b>Scandal.</b>—Believe that story false that ought not to be +true.—<i>Sheridan.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span></p> + +<p>Scandal has something so piquant, it is a sort of cayenne to the +mind.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p><b>School.</b>—More is learned in a public than in a private school from +emulation: there is the collision of mind with mind, or the radiation of +many minds pointing to one centre—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Let the soldier be abroad if he will; he can do nothing in this age. +There is another personage abroad,—a person less imposing,—in the eyes +of some, perhaps, insignificant. The schoolmaster is abroad; and I trust +to him, armed with his primer, against the soldier in full military +array.—<i>Brougham.</i></p> + +<p>The whining school-boy, with his satchel, and shining morning face, +creeping like a snail, unwillingly to school.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Science.</b>—They may say what they like; everything is organized matter. +The tree is the first link of the chain, man is the last. Men are young, +the earth is old. Vegetable and animal chemistry are still in their +infancy. Electricity, galvanism,—what discoveries in a few +years!—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>Human science is uncertain guess.—<i>Prior.</i></p> + +<p>Twin-sister of natural and revealed religion, and of heavenly birth, +science will never belie her celestial origin, nor cease to sympathize +with all that emanates from the same pure home. Human ignorance and +prejudice may for a time seem to have divorced what God has joined +together; but human ignorance and prejudice shall at length pass away, +and then science and religion shall be seen blending their parti-colored +rays into one beautiful bow of light, linking heaven to earth and earth +to heaven.—<i>Prof. Hitchcock.</i></p> + +<p>Science is a first rate piece of furniture for a man's upper chamber, if +he has common sense on the ground-floor. But if a man hasn't got plenty +of good common sense, the more science he has the worse for his +patient.—<i>Holmes.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Scriptures.</b>—The majesty of Scripture strikes me with admiration, as the +purity of the Gospel has its influence on my heart. Peruse the works of +our philosophers; with all their pomp of diction, how mean, how +contemptible, are they, compared with the Scriptures! Is it possible +that a book at once so simple and sublime should be merely the work of +man? The Jewish authors were incapable of the diction, and strangers to +the morality contained in the Gospel, the marks of whose truths are so +striking and inimitable that the inventor would be a more astonishing +character than the hero.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p><b>Secrecy.</b>—Thou hast betrayed thy secret as a bird betrays her nest, by +striving to conceal it.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>Never confide your secrets to paper: it is like throwing a stone in the +air, and if you know who throws the stone, you do not know where it may +fall.—<i>Calderon.</i></p> + +<p>People addicted to secrecy are so without knowing why; they are not so +for cause, but for secrecy's sake.—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sect.</b>—The effective strength of sects is not to be ascertained merely +by counting heads.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>All sects are different, because they come from men; morality is +everywhere the same, because it comes from God.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>Fierce sectarianism breeds fierce latitudinarianism.—<i>De Quincey.</i></p> + +<p><b>Self-Abnegation.</b>—'Tis much the doctrine of the times that men should +not please themselves, but deny themselves everything they take delight +in; not look upon beauty, wear no good clothes, eat no good meat, etc., +which seems the greatest accusation that can be upon the Maker of all +good things. If they are not to be used why did God make +them?—<i>Selden.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span></p> + +<p>Self-abnegation, that rare virtue that good men preach and good women +practice.—<i>Holmes.</i></p> + +<p><b>Self-Examination.</b>—We neither know nor judge ourselves,—others may +judge, but cannot know us,—God alone judges, and knows too.—<i>Wilkie +Collins.</i></p> + +<p>It belongs to every large nature, when it is not under the immediate +power of some strong unquestioning emotion, to suspect itself, and doubt +the truth of its own impressions, conscious of possibilities beyond its +own horizon.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>There are two persons in the world we never see as they are,—one's self +and one's other self.—<i>Arsène Houssaye.</i></p> + +<p><b>Selfishness.</b>—Our infinite obligations to God do not fill our hearts +half as much as a petty uneasiness of our own; nor his infinite +perfections as much as our smallest wants.—<i>Hannah More.</i></p> + +<p>It is astonishing how well men wear when they think of no one but +themselves.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Our selfishness is so robust and many-clutching that, well encouraged, +it easily devours all sustenance away from our poor little +scruples.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>There is an ill-breeding to which, whatever our rank and nature, we are +almost equally sensitive,—the ill-breeding that comes from want of +consideration for others.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Self-Love.</b>—That household god, a man's own self.—<i>Flavel.</i></p> + +<p>The greatest of all flatterers is self-love.—<i>Rochefoucauld.</i></p> + +<p>Self-love exaggerates both our faults and our virtues.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Whatever discoveries we may have made in the regions of self-love, there +still remain many unknown lands.—<i>Rochefoucauld.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span></p> + +<p>Selfishness, if but reasonably tempered with wisdom, is not such an evil +trait.—<i>Ruffini.</i></p> + +<p>A prudent consideration for Number One.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Oh, the incomparable contrivance of Nature who has ordered all things in +so even a method that wherever she has been less bountiful in her gifts, +there she makes it up with a larger dose of self-love, which supplies +the former deficits and makes all even.—<i>Erasmus.</i></p> + +<p>The most inhibited sin in the canon.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Ofttimes nothing profits more than self-esteem, grounded on just and +right.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Whose thoughts are centered on thyself alone.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p><b>Self-reliance.</b>—The spirit of self-help is the root of all genuine +growth in the individual; and, exhibited in the lives of many, it +constitutes the true source of national vigor and strength. Help from +without is often enfeebling in its effects, but help from within +invariably invigorates. Whatever is done <i>for</i> men or classes, to a +certain extent takes away the stimulus and necessity of doing for +themselves; and where men are subjected to over-guidance and +over-government, the inevitable tendency is to render them comparatively +helpless.—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>Doubt whom you will, but never yourself.—<i>Bovée.</i></p> + +<p>A person under the firm persuasion that he can command resources +virtually has them.—<i>Livy.</i></p> + +<p>The supreme fall of falls is this, the first doubt of one's +self.—<i>Countess de Gasparin.</i></p> + +<p>It's right to trust in God; but if you don't stand to your halliards, +your craft'll miss stays, and your faith'll be blown out of the +bolt-ropes in the turn of a marlinspike.—<i>George MacDonald.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span></p> + +<p>The best lightning-rod for your protection is your own +spine.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sensibility.</b>—The wild-flower wreath of feeling, the sunbeam of the +heart.—<i>Halleck.</i></p> + +<p>Sensibility is the power of woman.—<i>Lavater.</i></p> + +<p>Feeling loves a subdued light.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sensitiveness.</b>—Solomon's Proverbs, I think, have omitted to say, that +as a sore palate findeth grit, so an uneasy consciousness heareth +innuendoes.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>That chastity of honor which felt a stain like a wound.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sentiment.</b>—Cure the drunkard, heal the insane, mollify the homicide, +civilize the Pawnee, but what lessons can be devised for the debaucher +of sentiment?—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Separation.</b>—Indifferent souls never part. Impassioned souls part, and +return to one another, because they can do no better.—<i>Madame +Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Shakespeare.</b>—There is only one writer in whom I find something that +reminds me of the directness of style which is found in the Bible. It is +Shakespeare.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Far from fearing, as an inferior artist would have done, the +juxtaposition of the familiar and the divine, the wildest and most +fantastic comedy with the loftiest and gravest tragedy, Shakespeare not +only made such apparently discordant elements mutually heighten and +complete the general effect which he contemplated, but in so doing +teaches us that, in human life, the sublime and ridiculous are always +side by side, and that the source of laughter is placed close by the +fountain of tears.—<i>T. B. Shaw.</i></p> + +<p>Shakespeare is a great psychologist, and whatever can be known of the +heart of man may be found in his plays.—<i>Goethe.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span></p> + +<p>In Shakespeare one sentence begets the next naturally; the meaning is +all inwoven. He goes on kindling like a meteor through the dark +atmosphere.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>No man is too busy to read Shakespeare.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Shakespeare's personages live and move as if they had just come from the +hand of God, with a life that, though manifold, is one, and, though +complex, is harmonious.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>Sweetest Shakespeare, fancy's child.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>And rival all but Shakespeare's name below.—<i>Campbell.</i></p> + +<p>Shakespeare is one of the best means of culture the world possesses. +Whoever is at home in his pages is at home everywhere.—<i>H. N. Hudson.</i></p> + +<p>His imperial muse tosses the creation like a bauble from hand to hand to +embody any capricious thought that is uppermost in her mind. The +remotest spaces of nature are visited, and the farthest sundered things +are brought together by a subtle spiritual connection.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>I think most readers of Shakespeare sometimes find themselves thrown +into exalted mental conditions like those produced by music.—<i>O. W. +Holmes.</i></p> + +<p>Whatever other learning he wanted he was master of two books unknown to +many profound readers, though books which the last conflagration can +alone destroy. I mean the book of Nature and of Man.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>If ever Shakespeare rants, it is not when his imagination is hurrying +him along, but when he is hurrying his imagination along.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>It was said of Euripides, that every verse was a precept; and it may be +said of Shakespeare, that from his works may be collected a system of +civil and economical prudence.—<i>Johnson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span></p> + +<p>The genius of Shakespeare was an innate university.—<i>Keats.</i></p> + +<p>Shame.—Nature's hasty conscience.—<i>Maria Edgeworth.</i></p> + +<p>Mortifications are often more painful than real +calamities.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p><b>Ship.</b>—A prison with the chance of being drowned.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Cradle of the rude imperious surge.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Silence.</b>—The main reason why silence is so efficacious an element of +repute is, first, because of that magnification which proverbially +belongs to the unknown; and, secondly, because silence provokes no man's +envy, and wounds no man's self-love.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Give thy thoughts no tongue.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>True gladness doth not always speak; joy bred and born but in the tongue +is weak.—<i>Ben Jonson.</i></p> + +<p>I hear other men's imperfections, and conceal my own.—<i>Zeno.</i></p> + +<p>Silence in times of suffering is the best.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Silence! coeval with eternity.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Silence is the sanctuary of prudence.—<i>Balthasar Gracian.</i></p> + +<p>The unspoken word never does harm.—<i>Kossuth.</i></p> + +<p>Silence is the understanding of fools and one of the virtues of the +wise.—<i>Bonnard.</i></p> + +<p>Speech is often barren; but silence also does not necessarily brood over +a full nest. Your still fowl, blinking at you without remark, may all +the while be sitting on one addled nest-egg; and when it takes to +cackling, will have nothing to announce but that addled +delusion.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Silence gives consent.—<i>Goldsmith.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span></p> + +<p>Silence is the safest response for all the contradiction that arises +from impertinence, vulgarity, or envy.—<i>Zimmerman.</i></p> + +<p><b>Simplicity.</b>—Simplicity is doubtless a fine thing, but it often appeals +only to the simple. Art is the only passion of true artists. +Palestrina's music resembles the music of Rossini, as the song of the +sparrow is like the cavatina of the nightingale. Choose.—<i>Madame de +Girardin.</i></p> + +<p>Simplicity is Nature's first step, and the last of Art.—<i>P. J. Bailey.</i></p> + +<p>The world could not exist if it were not simple. This ground has been +tilled a thousand years, yet its powers remain ever the same; a little +rain, a little sun, and each spring it grows green again.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>The fairest lives, in my opinion, are those which regularly accommodate +themselves to the common and human model, without miracle, without +extravagance.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>There is a majesty in simplicity which is far above the quaintness of +wit.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sin.</b>—Original sin is in us like the beard: we are shaved to-day, and +look clean, and have a smooth chin; to-morrow our beard has grown again, +nor does it cease growing while we remain on earth. In like manner +original sin cannot be extirpated from us; it springs up in us as long +as we exist; Nevertheless, we are bound to resist it to our utmost +strength, and to cut it down unceasingly.—<i>Luther.</i></p> + +<p>Sin, in fancy, mothers many an ugly fact.—<i>Theodore Parker.</i></p> + +<p>There is no immunity from the consequences of sin; punishment is swift +and sure to one and all.—<i>Hosea Ballou.</i></p> + +<p>Every man has his devilish minutes.—<i>Lavater.</i></p> + +<p>Death from sin no power can separate.—<i>Milton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span></p> + +<p>Our sins, like to our shadows, when our day is in its glory, scarce +appeared. Towards our evening how great and monstrous they are!—<i>Sir J. +Suckling.</i></p> + +<p>'Tis the will that makes the action good or ill.—<i>Herrick.</i></p> + +<p>Guilt, though it may attain temporal splendor, can never confer real +happiness. The evident consequences of our crimes long survive their +commission, and, like the ghosts of the murdered, forever haunt the +steps of the malefactor.—<i>Sir Walter Scott.</i></p> + +<p>Some rise by sin, and some by virtue fall.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Sin is disease, deformity, and weakness.—<i>Plato.</i></p> + +<p>Sin and her shadow death.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>If ye do well, to your own behoof will ye do it; and if ye do evil, +against yourselves will ye do it.—<i>Koran.</i></p> + +<p>It is the sin which we have not committed which seems the most +monstrous.—<i>Boileau.</i></p> + +<p>There are sins of omission as well as those of commission.—<i>Madame +Deluzy.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sincerity.</b>—Sincerity is to speak as we think, to do as we pretend and +profess, to perform and make good what we promise, and really to be what +we would seem and appear to be.—<i>Tillotson.</i></p> + +<p>The whole faculties of man must be exerted in order to call forth noble +energies; and he who is not earnestly sincere lives in but half his +being, self-mutilated, self-paralyzed.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p><b>Skepticism.</b>—Skepticism is slow suicide.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Skill.</b>—Nobody, however able, can gain the very highest success, except +in one line. He may rise above others, but he will fall below +himself.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span></p> + +<p>Whatever may be said about luck, it is skill that leads to +fortune.—<i>Walter Scott.</i></p> + +<p>The winds and waves are always on the side of the ablest +navigators.—<i>Gibbon.</i></p> + +<p><b>Slander.</b>—Done to death by slanderous tongues.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Slugs crawl and crawl over our cabbages, like the world's slander over a +good name. You may kill them, it is true, but there is the +slime.—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i></p> + +<p>Slander lives upon succession, forever housed where it gets +possession.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>When the absent are spoken of, some will speak gold of them, some +silver, some iron, some lead, and some always speak dirt, for they have +a natural attraction towards what is evil, and think it shows +penetration in them. As a cat watching for mice does not look up though +an elephant goes by, so are they so busy mousing for defects, that they +let great excellences pass them unnoticed. I will not say it is not +Christian to make beads of others' faults, and tell them over every day; +I say it is infernal. If you want to know how the devil feels, you do +know if you are such an one.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>If parliament were to consider the sporting with reputation of as much +importance as sporting on manors, and pass an act for the preservation +of fame as well as game, there are many would thank them for the +bill.—<i>Sheridan.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sleep.</b>—When one asked Alexander how he could sleep so soundly and +securely in the midst of danger, he told them that <i>Parmenio</i> watched. +Oh, how securely may they sleep over whom He watches that never slumbers +nor sleeps! "I will," said David, "lay me down and sleep, for thou, +Lord, makest me to dwell in safety."—<i>Venning.</i></p> + +<p>After life's fitful fever he sleeps well.—<i>Shakespeare.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span></p> + +<p>Sleep is no servant of the will; it has caprices of its own; when +courted most, it lingers still; when most pursued, 'tis swiftly +gone.—<i>Bowring.</i></p> + +<p>Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to +sleep.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>Heaven trims our lamps while we sleep.—<i>Alcott.</i></p> + +<p>Night's sepulchre.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Sleep is pain's easiest salve, and doth fulfill all offices of death, +except to kill.—<i>Donne.</i></p> + +<p>Sleep, to the homeless thou art home; the friendless find in thee a +friend.—<i>Ebenezer Elliott.</i></p> + +<p>The soul shares not the body's rest.—<i>Maturin.</i></p> + +<p>Our foster nurse of nature is repose.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sloth.</b>—Sloth, if it has prevented many crimes, has also smothered many +virtues.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Smile.</b>—A woman has two smiles that an angel might envy—the smile that +accepts a lover afore words are uttered, and the smile that lights on +the first-born baby.—<i>Haliburton.</i></p> + +<p>Smiles are smiles only when the heart pulls the wire.—<i>Winthrop.</i></p> + +<p>Those happiest smiles that played on her ripe lips seemed not to know +what guests were in her eyes, which parted thence as pearls from +diamonds dropped.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The smile that was childlike and bland.—<i>Bret Harte.</i></p> + +<p>A soul only needs to see a smile in a white crape bonnet in order to +enter the palace of dreams.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sneer.</b>—The most insignificant people are the most apt to sneer at +others. They are safe from reprisals, and have no hope of rising in +their own esteem but by lowering their neighbors. The severest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> critics +are always those who have either never attempted, or who have failed in +original composition.—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p> + +<p><b>Society.</b>—If you wish to appear agreeable in society, you must consent +to be taught many things which you know already.—<i>Lavater.</i></p> + +<p>Formed of two mighty tribes, the bores and bored.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Society undergoes continual changes; it is barbarous, it is civilized, +it is Christianized, it is rich, it is scientific; but this change is +not amelioration. For everything that is given something is taken. +Society acquires new arts, and loses old instincts. The civilized man +has built a coach, but has lost the use of his feet; he has a fine +Geneva watch, but cannot tell the hour by the sun.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>We take our colors, chameleon-like, from each other.—<i>Chamfort.</i></p> + +<p>Society is the union of men, and not men themselves; the citizen may +perish, and yet man may remain.—<i>Montesquieu.</i></p> + +<p>There are four varieties in society; the lovers, the ambitious, +observers, and fools. The fools are the happiest.—<i>Taine.</i></p> + +<p>Society is the offspring of leisure; and to acquire this forms the only +rational motive for accumulating wealth, notwithstanding the cant that +prevails on the subject of labor.—<i>Tuckerman.</i></p> + +<p>Intercourse is the soul of progress.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>One ought to love society if he wishes to enjoy solitude. It is a social +nature that solitude works upon with the most various power. If one is +misanthropic, and betakes himself to loneliness that he may get away +from hateful things, solitude is a silent emptiness to +him.—<i>Zimmermann.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span></p> + +<p>The most lucrative commerce has ever been that of hope, pleasure, and +happiness, the merchandise of authors, priests, and kings.—<i>Madame +Roland.</i></p> + +<p>The more I see of men the better I think of animals.—<i>Tauler.</i></p> + +<p><b>Soldier.</b>—A soldier seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's +mouth.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Policy goes beyond strength, and contrivance before action; hence it is +that direction is left to the commander, execution to the soldier, who +is not to ask Why? but to do what he is commanded.—<i>Xenophon.</i></p> + +<p>Without a home must the soldier go, a changeful wanderer, and can warm +himself at no home-lit hearth.—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>Soldiers looked at as they ought to be: they are to the world as poppies +to corn fields.—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i></p> + +<p><b>Solitude.</b>—Solitude is dangerous to reason without being favorable to +virtue. Pleasures of some sort are necessary to the intellectual as to +the corporal health, and those who resist gayety will be likely for the +most part to fall a sacrifice to appetite, for the solicitations of +sense are always at hand, and a dram to a vacant and solitary person is +a speedy and seducing relief. Remember that the solitary person is +certainly luxurious, probably superstitious, and possibly mad. The mind +stagnates for want of employment, and is extinguished, like a candle in +foul air.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>To be exempt from the passions with which others are tormented, is the +only pleasing solitude.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Conversation enriches the understanding, but solitude is the school of +genius.—<i>Gibbon.</i></p> + +<p>Solitude has but one disadvantage; it is apt to give one too high an +opinion of one's self. In the world we are sure to be often reminded of +every known or supposed defect we may have.—<i>Byron.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span></p> + +<p>Through the wide world he only is alone who lives not for +another.—<i>Rogers.</i></p> + +<p>Solitude is the worst of all companions when we seek comfort and +oblivion.—<i>Méry.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sophistry.</b>—The juggle of sophistry consists, for the most part, in +using a word in one sense in all the premises, and in another sense in +the conclusion.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>There is no error which hath not some appearance of probability +resembling truth, which, when men who study to be singular find out, +straining reason, they then publish to the world matter of contention +and jangling.—<i>Sir W. Raleigh.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sorrow.</b>—Our sweetest songs are those which tell of saddest +thought.—<i>Shelley.</i></p> + +<p>If hearty sorrow be a sufficient ransom for offence, I tender it here; I +do as truly suffer as e'er I did commit.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>And weep the more, because I weep in vain.—<i>Gray.</i></p> + +<p>The man who has learned to triumph over sorrow wears his miseries as +though they were sacred fillets upon his brow, and nothing is so +entirely admirable as a man bravely wretched.—<i>Seneca.</i></p> + +<p>Sorrow more beautiful than beauty's self.—<i>Keats.</i></p> + +<p>The violence of sorrow is not at the first to be striven withal; being, +like a mighty beast, sooner tamed with following than overthrown by +withstanding.—<i>Sir P. Sidney.</i></p> + +<p>Never morning wore to evening, but some heart did break.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Sorrow being the natural and direct offspring of sin, that which first +brought sin into the world must, by necessary consequence, bring in +sorrow too.—<i>South.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span></p> + +<p>In extent sorrow is boundless. It pours from ten million sources, and +floods the world. But its depth is small. It drowns few.—<i>Charles +Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>It is the veiled angel of sorrow who plucks away one thing and another +that bound us here in ease and security, and, in the vanishing of these +dear objects, indicates the true home of our affections and our +peace.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>The mind profits by the wreck of every passion, and we may measure our +road to wisdom by the sorrows we have undergone.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Earth hath no sorrow that heaven cannot heal.—<i>Moore.</i></p> + +<p>Sorrow breaks seasons, and reposing hours; makes the night morning, and +the noontide night.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Sorrow is not evil, since it stimulates and purifies.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p>Sorrows must die with the joys they outnumber.—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>He that hath so many causes of joy, and so great, is very much in love +with sorrow and peevishness, who loses all these pleasures, and chooses +to sit down on his little handful of thorns. Such a person is fit to +bear Nero company in his funeral sorrow for the loss of one of Poppea's +hairs, or help to mourn for Lesbia's sparrow; and because he loves it, +he deserves to starve in the midst of plenty, and to want comfort while +he is encircled with blessings.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p><b>Soul.</b>—Had I no other proof of the immortality of the soul than the +oppression of the just and the triumph of the wicked in this world, this +alone would prevent my having the least doubt of it. So shocking a +discord amidst a general harmony of things would make me naturally look +for a cause; I should say to myself we do not cease to exist with this +life; everything reassumes its order after death.—<i>Rousseau.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span></p> + +<p>What is mind? No matter. What is matter? Never mind. What is the soul? +It is immaterial.—<i>Hood.</i></p> + +<p>The human soul is hospitable, and will entertain conflicting sentiments +and contradictory opinions with much impartiality.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Our immortal souls, while righteous, are by God himself beautified with +the title of his own image and similitude.—<i>Sir W. Raleigh.</i></p> + +<p><b>Specialty.</b>—No one can exist in society without some specialty. Eighty +years ago it was only necessary to be well dressed and amiable; to-day a +man of this kind would be too much like the garçons at the +cafés.—<i>Taine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Speech.</b>—Sheridan once said of some speech, in his acute, sarcastic way, +that "it contained a great deal both of what was new and what was true: +but that unfortunately what was new was not true, and what was true was +not new."—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p> + +<p>God has given us speech in order that we may say pleasant things to our +friends, and tell bitter truths to our enemies.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>The common fluency of speech in many men, and most women, is owing to a +scarcity of matter and a scarcity of words; for whoever is a master of +language and has a mind full of ideas, will be apt in speaking to +hesitate upon the choice of both; whereas common speakers have only one +set of ideas, and one set of words to clothe them in; and these are +always ready at the mouth: so people come faster out of a church when it +is almost empty, than when a crowd is at the door.—<i>Dean Swift.</i></p> + +<p>Speech is like cloth of Arras, opened and put abroad, whereby the +imagery doth appear in figure; whereas in thoughts they lie but as in +packs.—<i>Plutarch.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span></p> + +<p>Never is the deep, strong voice of man, or the low, sweet voice of +woman, finer than in the earnest but mellow tones of familiar speech, +richer than the richest music, which are a delight while they are heard, +which linger still upon the ear in softened echoes, and which, when they +have ceased, come, long after, back to memory, like the murmurs of a +distant hymn.—<i>Henry Giles.</i></p> + +<p>Half the sorrows of women would be averted if they could repress the +speech they know to be useless—nay, the speech they have resolved not +to utter.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sport.</b>—Dwell not too long upon sports; for as they refresh a man that +is weary, so they weary a man that is refreshed.—<i>Fuller.</i></p> + +<p><b>Spring.</b>—Stately Spring! whose robe-folds are valleys, whose +breast-bouquet is gardens, and whose blush is a vernal +evening.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Fair-handed Spring unbosoms every grace.—<i>Thomson.</i></p> + +<p>The spring, the summer, the chiding autumn, angry winter, change their +wonted liveries.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Sweet daughter of a rough and stormy sire, hoar Winter's blooming child, +delightful Spring.—<i>Mrs. Barbauld.</i></p> + +<p>Ye may trace my step o'er the wakening earth, by the winds which tell of +the violet's birth.—<i>Mrs. Hemans.</i></p> + +<p><b>Stars.</b>—These preachers of beauty, which light the world with their +admonishing smile.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>I am as constant as the northern star; of whose true, fixed, and resting +quality there is no fellow in the firmament.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The stars are so far,—far away!—<i>L. E. Landon.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span></p> + +<p>Day hath put on his jacket, and around his burning bosom buttoned it +with stars.—<i>Holmes.</i></p> + +<p>The evening star, love's harbinger, appeared.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Statesman.</b>—The great difference between the real statesman and the +pretender is, that the one sees into the future, while the other regards +only the present; the one lives by the day, and acts on expediency; the +other acts on enduring principles and for immortality.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>The worth of a state, in the long run, is the worth of the individuals +composing it.—<i>J. Stuart Mill.</i></p> + +<p><b>Storms.</b>—When splitting winds make flexible the knees of knotted +oaks.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Strength.</b>—Oh! it is excellent to have a giant's strength; but it is +tyrannous to use it like a giant.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Study.</b>—Histories make men wise; poets, witty; the mathematics, subtile; +natural philosophy, deep; moral, grave; logic and rhetoric, able to +contend.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Whatever study tends neither directly nor indirectly to make us better +men and citizens is at best but a specious and ingenious sort of +idleness, and the knowledge we acquire by it only a creditable kind of +ignorance, nothing more.—<i>Bolingbroke.</i></p> + +<p>There is no one study that is not capable of delighting us after a +little application to it.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>They are not the best students who are most dependent on books. What can +be got out of them is at best only material: a man must build his house +for himself.—<i>George MacDonald.</i></p> + +<p>The man who has acquired the habit of study, though for only one hour +every day in the year, and keeps to the one thing studied till it is +mastered, will be startled to see the way he has made at the end of a +twelvemonth.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Style.</b>—The style is the man.—<i>Buffon.</i></p> + +<p>As it is a great point of art, when our matter requires it, to enlarge +and veer out all sail, so to take it in and contract it is of no less +praise when the argument doth ask it.—<i>Ben Jonson.</i></p> + +<p>Not poetry, but prose run mad.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>There is a certain majesty in plainness; as the proclamation of a prince +never frisks it in tropes or fine conceits, in numerous and well-turned +periods, but commands in sober natural expressions.—<i>South.</i></p> + +<p>In the present day our literary masonry is well done, but our +architecture is poor.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Perhaps that is nearly the perfection of good writing which is original, +but whose truth alone prevents the reader from suspecting that it is so; +and which effects that for knowledge which the lense effects for the +sunbeam, when it condenses its brightness in order to increase its +force.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>A temperate style is alone classical.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Obscurity and affectation are the two great faults of style. Obscurity +of expression generally springs from confusion of ideas; and the same +wish to dazzle, at any cost, which produces affectation in the manner of +a writer, is likely to produce sophistry in his reasoning.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p>Style is the gossamer on which the seeds of truth float through the +world.—<i>Bancroft.</i></p> + +<p>The lively phraseology of Montesquieu was the result of long meditation. +His words, as light as wings, bear on them grave +reflections.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p><b>Subordination.</b>—The usual way that men adopt to appease the wrath of +those whom they have offended, when they are at their mercy, is humble +submission; whereas a bold front, a firm and resolute bearing,—means +the very opposite,—have been at times equally +successful.—<i>Montaigne.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span></p> + +<p>Reverences stand in awe of yourself.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>He who reigns within himself, and rules passions, desires, and fears, is +more than a king.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Success.</b>—It is a mistake to suppose that men succeed through success; +they much oftener succeed through failure.—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>From mere success nothing can be concluded in favor of any nation upon +whom it is bestowed.—<i>Atterbury.</i></p> + +<p>He that would relish success to purpose should keep his passion cool, +and his expectation low.—<i>Jeremy Collier.</i></p> + +<p>The road to success is not to be run upon by seven-leagued boots. Step +by step, little by little, bit by bit,—that is the way to wealth, that +is the way to wisdom, that is the way to glory. Pounds are the sons, not +of pounds, but of pence.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>The talent of success is nothing more than doing what you can do well; +and doing well whatever you do, without a thought of +fame.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing can seem foul to those that win.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>All the proud virtue of this vaunting world fawns on success and power, +however acquired.—<i>Thomson.</i></p> + +<p>A successful career has been full of blunders.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>The man who succeeds above his fellows is the one who, early in life, +clearly discerns his object, and towards that object habitually directs +his powers. Thus, indeed, even genius itself is but fine observation +strengthened by fixity of purpose. Every man who observes vigilantly and +resolves steadfastly grows unconsciously into genius.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span></p> + +<p>Success soon palls. The joyous time is when the breeze first strikes +your sails, and the waters rustle under your bows.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Success at first doth many times undo men at last.—<i>Venning.</i></p> + +<p><b>Suicide.</b>—Suicide itself, that fearful abuse of the dominion of the soul +over the body, is a strong proof of the distinction of their destinies. +Can the power that kills be the same that is killed? Must it not +necessarily be something superior and surviving? The act of the soul, +which in that fatal instant is in one sense so great an act of power, +can it at the same time be the act of its own annihilation? The will +kills the body, but who kills the will?—<i>Auguste</i> <i>Nicolas.</i></p> + +<p>Those men who destroy a healthful constitution of body by intemperance +as manifestly kill themselves as those who hang, or poison, or drown +themselves.—<i>Sherlock.</i></p> + +<p>He who, superior to the checks of nature, dares make his life the victim +of his reason, does in some sort that reason deify, and takes a flight +at heaven.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p><b>Summer.</b>—Child of the sun, refulgent Summer comes.—<i>Thomson.</i></p> + +<p>Beneath the Winter's snow lie germs of summer flowers.—<i>Whittier.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sun.</b>—The glorious sun stays in his course, and plays the alchemist, +turning with the splendor of his precious eyes the meagre, cloddy earth +to glittering gold.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The downward sun looks out effulgent from amid the flash of broken +clouds.—<i>Thomson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sunday.</b>—If the Sunday had not been observed as a day of rest during the +last three centuries, I have not the slightest doubt that we should have +been at this moment a poorer people and less civilized.—<i>Macaulay.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span></p> + +<p>Oh, what a blessing is Sunday, interposed between the waves of worldly +business like the divine path of the Israelites through Jordan! There is +nothing in which I would advise you to be more strictly conscientious +than in keeping the Sabbath-day holy. I can truly declare that to me the +Sabbath has been invaluable.—<i>W. Wilberforce.</i></p> + +<p><b>Superstition.</b>—A peasant can no more help believing in a traditional +superstition than a horse can help trembling when he sees a +camel.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Religion worships God, while superstition profanes that +worship.—<i>Seneca.</i></p> + +<p>Every inordination of religion that is not in defect is properly called +superstition.—<i>Jeremy Taylor.</i></p> + +<p>The child taught to believe any occurrence a good or evil omen, or any +day of the week lucky, hath a wide inroad made upon the soundness of his +understanding.—<i>Watts.</i></p> + +<p>Superstition is the only religion of which base souls are +capable.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>It is of such stuff that superstitions are commonly made; an intense +feeling about ourselves which makes the evening star shine at us with a +threat, and the blessing of a beggar encourage us. And superstitions +carry consequences which often verify their hope or their +foreboding.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>We are all tattooed in our cradles with the beliefs of our tribe; the +record may seem superficial, but it is indelible. You cannot educate a +man wholly out of the superstitious fears which were implanted in his +imagination, no matter how utterly his reason may reject +them.—<i>Holmes.</i></p> + +<p><b>Surety.</b>—He who is surety is never sure. Take advice, and never be +security for more than you are quite willing to lose. Remember the words +of the wise man. "He that is surety for a stranger shall smart for it; +and he that hateth suretyship is sure."—<i>Spurgeon.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Surfeit.</b>—They are sick, that surfeit with too much, as they that starve +with nothing.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Satiety comes of riches, and contumaciousness of satiety.—<i>Solon.</i></p> + +<p><b>Suspicion.</b>—To be suspicious is to invite treachery.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>There is no rule more invariable than that we are paid for our +suspicions by finding what we suspect.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>Suspicion has its dupes, as well as credulity.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>Don't seem to be on the lookout for crows, else you'll set other people +watching.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Sympathy.</b>—Surely, surely, the only true knowledge of our fellow-man is +that which enables us to feel with him—which gives us a fine ear for +the heart-pulses that are beating under the mere clothes of circumstance +and opinion.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Next to love, sympathy is the divinest passion of the human +heart.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>Outward things don't give, they draw out. You find in them what you +bring to them. A cathedral makes only the devotional feel devotional. +Scenery refines only the fine-minded.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Of all the virtues necessary to the completion of the perfect man, there +is none to be more delicately implied and less ostentatiously vaunted +than that of exquisite feeling or universal +benevolence.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>I would go fifty miles on foot to kiss the hand of that man whose +generous heart will give up the reins of his imagination into his +author's hands; be pleased, he knows not why, and cares not +wherefore.—<i>Sterne.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>T.</h3> + +<p><b>Tact.</b>—A tact which surpassed the tact of her sex as much as the tact of +her sex surpasses the tact of ours.—<i>Macaulay.</i></p> + +<p><b>Talent.</b>—It is adverse to talent to be consorted and trained up with +inferior minds or inferior companions, however high they may rank. The +foal of the racer neither finds out his speed, nor calls out his powers, +if pastured out with the common herd that are destined for the collar +and the yoke.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Whatever you are from nature, keep to it; never desert your own line of +talent. Be what nature intended you for, and you will succeed; be +anything else, and you will be ten thousand times worse than +nothing!—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Gross and vulgar minds will always pay a higher respect to wealth than +to talent; for wealth, although it be a far less efficient source of +power than talent, happens to be far more intelligible.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>As to great and commanding talents, they are the gift of Providence in +some way unknown to us. They rise where they are least expected. They +fail when everything seems disposed to produce them, or at least to call +them forth.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>Talent is the capacity of doing anything that depends on application and +industry, and it is a voluntary power, while genius is +involuntary.—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p> + +<p>Talent, lying in the understanding, is often inherited; genius, being +the action of reason or imagination, rarely or never.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>It always seemed to me a sort of clever stupidity only to have one sort +of talent,—almost like a carrier-pigeon.—<i>George Eliot.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Talking.</b>—I know a lady that loves talking so incessantly, she won't +give an echo fair play; she has that everlasting rotation of tongue, +that an echo must wait till she dies, before it can catch her last +words!—<i>Congreve.</i></p> + +<p>Talkers are no good doers.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>When I think of talking, it is of course with a woman. For talking at +its best being an inspiration, it wants a corresponding divine quality +of receptiveness, and where will you find this but in woman?—<i>Holmes.</i></p> + +<p>Who think too little and who talk too much.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>They talk most who have the least to say.—<i>Prior.</i></p> + +<p><b>Taste.</b>—Taste is the power of relishing or rejecting whatever is offered +for the entertainment of the imagination.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>There are some readers who have never read an essay on taste; and if +they take my advice they never will; for they can no more improve their +taste by so doing than they could improve their appetite or digestion by +studying a cookery-book.—<i>Southey.</i></p> + +<p>Those internal powers, active and strong, and feelingly alive to each +fine impulse.—<i>Akenside.</i></p> + +<p>All our tastes are but reminiscences.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Teaching.</b>—Count it one of the highest virtues upon earth to educate +faithfully the children of others, which so few, and scarcely any, do by +their own.—<i>Luther.</i></p> + +<p>The best teacher is the one who suggests rather than dogmatizes, and +inspires his listener with the wish to teach himself.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Tears.</b>—The overflow of a softened heart.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the +morning.—<i>Bible.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span></p> + +<p>In woman's eye the unanswerable tear.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Blest tears of soul-felt penitence.—<i>Moore.</i></p> + +<p>God washes the eyes by tears until they can behold the invisible land +where tears shall come no more. O love! O affliction! ye are the guides +that show us the way through the great airy space where our loved ones +walked; and, as hounds easily follow the scent before the dew be risen, +so God teaches us, while yet our sorrow is wet, to follow on and find +our dear ones in heaven.—<i>Beecher.</i></p> + +<p>The kind oblation of a falling tear.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>A penitent's tear is an undeniable ambassador, and never returns from +the throne of grace unsatisfied.—<i>Spencer.</i></p> + +<p>Fate and the dooming gods are deaf to tears.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>We praise the dramatic poet who possesses the art of drawing tears, a +power which he has in common with the meanest onion.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Her tears her only eloquence.—<i>Rogers.</i></p> + +<p>Eye-offending brine.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The tears which flow, and the honors that are paid, when the founders of +the republic die, give hope that the republic itself may be +immortal.—<i>Daniel Webster.</i></p> + +<p>All my mother came into mine eyes, and gave me up to +tears.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The tear that is wiped with a little address may be followed, perhaps, +by a smile.—<i>Cowper.</i></p> + +<p>Virtue is the daughter of Religion. Her sole treasure is her +tears.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing dries sooner than a tear.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>My plenteous joys, wanton in fullness, seek to hide themselves in drops +of sorrow.—<i>Shakespeare.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span></p> + +<p>Bright as young diamonds in their infant dew.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Tears are sometimes the happiest smiles of love.—<i>Stendhal.</i></p> + +<p><b>Tediousness.</b>—The sin of excessive length.—<i>Shirley.</i></p> + +<p>Life is as tedious as a twice-told tale, vexing the dull ear of a drowsy +man.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Teeth.</b>—Teeth like falling snow for white.—<b>Cowley.</b></p> + +<p>Such a pearly row of teeth that sovereignty would have pawned her jewels +for them.—<i>Sterne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Temperance.</b>—Temperance puts wood on the fire, meal in the barrel, flour +in the tub, money in the purse, credit in the country, contentment in +the house, clothes on the back, and vigor in the body.—<i>Franklin.</i></p> + +<p>I consider the temperance cause the foundation of all social and +political reform.—<i>Cobden.</i></p> + +<p>If temperance prevails, then education can prevail; if temperance fails, +then education must fail.—<i>Horace Mann.</i></p> + +<p>Temperance to be a virtue must be free and not forced. Virtue may be +defended, as vice may be withstood, by a statute, but no virtue is or +can be created by a law, any more than by a battering ram a temple or +obelisk can be reared.—<i>Bartol.</i></p> + +<p>If you wish to keep the mind clear and the body healthy, abstain from +all fermented liquors.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>Use, do not abuse; neither abstinence nor excess ever renders man +happy.—<i>Voltaire.</i></p> + +<p>He who would keep himself to himself should imitate the dumb animals, +and drink water.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Temptation.</b>—No man is matriculated to the art of life till he has been +well tempted.—<b>George Eliot.</b><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span></p> + +<p>Temptation is a fearful word. It indicates the beginning of a possible +series of infinite evils. It is the ringing of an alarm bell, whose +melancholy sounds may reverberate through eternity. Like the sudden, +sharp cry of "Fire!" under our windows by night, it should rouse us to +instantaneous action, and brace every muscle to its highest +tension.—<i>Horace Mann.</i></p> + +<p>Most confidence has still most cause to doubt.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>It is a most fearful fact to think of, that in every heart there is some +secret spring that would be weak at the touch of temptation, and that is +liable to be assailed. Fearful, and yet salutary to think of, for the +thought may serve to keep our moral nature braced. It warns us that we +can never stand at ease, or lie down in the field of life, without +sentinels of watchfulness and camp-fires of prayer.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>Love cries victory when the tears of a woman become the sole defense of +her virtue.—<i>La Fontaine.</i></p> + +<p>When devils will their blackest sins put on, they do suggest at first +with heavenly shows.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The devil tempts us not: it is we tempt him, beckoning his skill with +opportunity.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Better shun the bait than struggle in the snare.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>There are times when it would seem as if God fished with a line, and the +devil with a net.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Tenderness.</b>—When death, the great reconciler, has come, it is never our +tenderness that we repent of, but our severity.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p><b>Theatre.</b>—A man who enters the theatre is immediately struck with the +view of so great a multitude, participating of one common amusement; and +experiences, from their very aspect, a superior sensi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>bility or +disposition of being affected with every sentiment which he shares with +his fellow-creatures.—<i>Hume.</i></p> + +<p>The theatre has often been at variance with the pulpit; they ought not +to quarrel. How much it is to be wished that the celebration of nature +and of God were intrusted to none but men of noble minds!—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p><b>Theories.</b>—Most men take least notice of what is plain, as if that were +of no use; but puzzle their thoughts, and lose themselves in those vast +depths and abysses which no human understanding can fathom.—<i>Sherlock.</i></p> + +<p>Metaphysicians can unsettle things, but they can erect nothing. They can +pull down a church, but they cannot build a hovel.—<i>Cecil.</i></p> + +<p><b>Thought.</b>—I have asked several men what passes in their minds when they +are thinking, and I could never find any man who could think for two +minutes together. Everybody has seemed to admit that it was a perpetual +deviation from a particular path, and a perpetual return to it; which, +imperfect as the operation is, is the only method in which we can +operate with our minds to carry on any process of thought.—<i>Sydney +Smith.</i></p> + +<p>A delicate thought is a flower of the mind.—<i>Rollin.</i></p> + +<p>Earnest men never think in vain though their thoughts may be +errors.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>Though an inheritance of acres may be bequeathed, an inheritance of +knowledge and wisdom cannot. The wealthy man may pay others for doing +his work for him, but it is impossible to get his thinking done for him +by another, or to purchase any kind of self-culture.—<i>Samuel Smiles.</i></p> + +<p>Thoughts shut up want air, and spoil like bales unopened to the +sun.—<i>Young.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span></p> + +<p>Good thoughts are blessed guests, and should be heartily welcomed, well +fed, and much sought after. Like rose leaves, they give out a sweet +smell if laid up in the jar of memory.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>Thought is invisible nature—nature is invisible thought.—<i>Heinrich +Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Ingenious philosophers tell you, perhaps, that the great work of the +steam-engine is to create leisure for mankind. Do not believe them, it +only creates a vacuum for eager thought to rush in.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Wherever a great mind utters its thoughts,—there is +Golgotha.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>"Give me," said Herder to his son, as he lay in the parched weariness of +his last illness, "give me a great thought, that I may quicken myself +with it."—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>You shall see them on a beautiful quarto page, where a neat rivulet of +text shall meander through a meadow of margin.—<i>Sheridan.</i></p> + +<p>Fully to understand a grand and beautiful thought requires, perhaps, as +much time as to conceive it.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Many men's thoughts are not acorns, but merely pebbles.—<i>Charles +Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>A vivid thought brings the power to paint it; and in proportion to the +depth of its source is the force of its projection.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Threats.</b>—Those that are the loudest in their threats are the weakest in +the execution of them.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>It makes a great difference in the force of a sentence whether a man be +behind it or no.—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Time.</b>—Time's abyss, the common grave of all.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Come what come may, time and the hour run through the roughest +day.—<i>Shakespeare.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span></p> + +<p>Time makes more converts than reason.—<i>Thomas Paine.</i></p> + +<p>Time stoops to no man's lure.—<i>Swinburne.</i></p> + +<p>Time is the wisest councillor.—<i>Pericles.</i></p> + +<p>Time is a wave which never murmurs, because there is no obstacle to its +flow.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>Time hath often cured the wound which reason failed to heal.—<i>Seneca.</i></p> + +<p>The slow sweet hours that bring us all things good.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Part with it as with money, sparing; pay no moment but in purchase of +its worth; and what its worth! ask death-beds, they can tell.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>The crutch of Time accomplishes more than the club of +Hercules.—<i>Balthaser Gracian.</i></p> + +<p>Time is the shower of Danæ; each drop is golden.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p><b>Title.</b>—How impious is the title of "sacred majesty" applied to a worm, +who, in the midst of his splendor, is crumbling into dust!—<i>Thomas +Paine.</i></p> + +<p>The three highest titles that can be given a man are those of martyr, +hero, saint.—<i>Gladstone.</i></p> + +<p><b>Toleration.</b>—The responsibility of tolerance lies with those who have +the wider vision.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Error tolerates, truth condemns.—<i>Fernan Caballero.</i></p> + +<p>Toleration is the best religion.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p><b>Tongue</b>.—When we advance a little into life, we find that the tongue of +man creates nearly all the mischief of the world.—<i>Paxton Hood.</i></p> + +<p><b>Travel.</b>—Rather see the wonders of the world abroad, than, living dully +sluggardized at home wear out thy youth with shapeless +idleness.—<i>Shakespeare.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span></p> + +<p>Of dead kingdoms I recall the soul, sitting amid their ruins.—<i>N. P. +Willis.</i></p> + +<p>The use of traveling is to regulate imagination by reality, and, instead +of thinking how things may be, to see them as they are.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>To see the world is to judge the judges.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>The bee, though it finds every rose has a thorn, comes back loaded with +honey from his rambles, and why should not other tourists do the +same.—<i>Haliburton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Treason.</b>—Treason pleases, but not the traitor.—<i>Cervantes.</i></p> + +<p>The man was noble; but with his last attempt he wiped it out; betrayed +his country; and his name remains to the ensuing age +abhorred.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Trifles.</b>—A snapper-up of unconsidered trifles.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>We are not only pleased but turned by a feather. The history of a man is +a calendar of straws. If the nose of Cleopatra had been shorter, said +Pascal, in his brilliant way, Antony might have kept the +world.—<i>Willmott.</i></p> + +<p>A drop of water is as powerful as a thunderbolt.—<i>Huxley.</i></p> + +<p>Riches may enable us to confer favors; but to confer them with propriety +and with grace requires a something that riches cannot give: even +trifles may be so bestowed as to cease to be trifles. The citizens of +Megara offered the freedom of their city to Alexander; such an offer +excited a smile in the countenance of him who had conquered the world; +but he received this tribute of their respect with complacency on being +informed that they had never offered it to any but to Hercules and +himself.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>There is a kind of latent omniscience not only in every man but in every +particle.—<i>Emerson.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is in those acts called trivialities that the seeds of joy are +forever wasted, until men and women look round with haggard faces at the +devastation their own waste has made, and say, the earth bears no +harvest of sweetness—calling their denial knowledge.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>The chains which cramp us most are those which weigh on us +least.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i></p> + +<p>Little things console us, because little things afflict us.—<i>Pascal.</i></p> + +<p><b>Trouble.</b>—Annoyance is man's leaven; the element of movement, without +which we would grow mouldy.—<i>Feuchtersleben.</i></p> + +<p><b>Truth.</b>—Veracity is a plant of Paradise, and the seeds have never +flourished beyond the walls.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing so beautiful as truth.—<i>Des Cartes.</i></p> + +<p>All high truth is poetry. Take the results of science: they glow with +beauty, cold and hard as are the methods of reaching them.—<i>Charles +Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Truth never turns to rebuke falsehood; her own straightforwardness is +the severest correction.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p>Whenever you look at human nature in masses, you find every truth met by +a counter truth, and both equally true.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Truth need not always be embodied; enough if it hovers around like a +spiritual essence, which gives one peace, and fills the atmosphere with +a solemn sweetness like harmonious music of bells.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Dare to be true; nothing can need a lie.—<i>George Herbert.</i></p> + +<p>We must never throw away a bushel of truth because it happens to contain +a few grains of chaff; on the contrary, we may sometimes profitably +receive a bushel of chaff for the few grains of truth it may +contain.—<i>Dean Stanley.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span></p> + +<p>The first great work is that yourself may to yourself be +true.—<i>Roscommon.</i></p> + +<p>In troubled water you can scarce see your face, or see it very little, +till the water be quiet and stand still: so in troubled times you can +see little truth; when times are quiet and settled, then truth +appears.—<i>Selden.</i></p> + +<p>Men are as cold as ice to the truth, hot as fire to falsehood.—<i>La +Fontaine.</i></p> + +<p>The way of truth is like a great road. It is not difficult to know it. +The evil is only that men will not seek it. Do you go home and search +for it.—<i>Mencius.</i></p> + +<p>Speaking truth is like writing fair, and comes only by practice; it is +less a matter of will than of habit; and I doubt if any occasion can be +trivial which permits the practice and formation of such a +habit.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>Forgetting that the only eternal part for man to act is man, and that +the only immutable greatness is truth.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p>Truth takes the stamp of the souls it enters. It is rigorous and rough +in arid souls, but tempers and softens itself in loving +natures.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Truth severe, by fairy fiction drest.—<i>Gray.</i></p> + +<p>The only amaranthine flower on earth is virtue; the only lasting +treasure, truth.—<i>Cowper.</i></p> + +<p>Blunt truths make more mischief than nice falsehoods do.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Truth has rough flavors if we bite through.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Truth is a torch, but one of enormous size; so that we slink past it in +rather a blinking fashion for fear it should burn us.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>All truths are not to be repeated, still it is well to hear them.—<i>Mme. +du Deffaud.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is only when one is thoroughly true that there can be purity and +freedom. Falsehood always avenges itself.—<i>Auerbach.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing from man's hands, nor law, nor constitution, can be final. Truth +alone is final.—<i>Charles Sumner.</i></p> + +<p>Verity is nudity.—<i>Alfred de Musset.</i></p> + +<p><b>Twilight.</b>—Parting day dies like the dolphin, whom each pang imbues with +a new color as it gasps away, the last still loveliest, till 'tis gone, +and all is gray.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>Softly the evening came. The sun from the western horizon, like a +magician, extended his golden wand o'er the landscape.—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>Twilight gray hath in her sober livery all things clad.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>The day is done; and slowly from the scene the stooping sun upgathers +his spent shafts, and puts them back into his golden +quiver!—<i>Longfellow.</i></p> + +<p>The weary sun hath made a golden set, and, by the bright track of his +fiery car, gives token of a goodly day to-morrow.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + + +<h3>U.</h3> + +<p><b>Ugliness.</b>—I do not know that she was virtuous; but she was always ugly, +and with a woman, that is half the battle.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>Ugliness, after virtue, is the best guardian of a young woman.—<i>Mme. de +Genlis.</i></p> + +<p><b>Understanding.</b>—The eye of the understanding is like the eye of the +sense; for as you may see great objects through small crannies or holes, +so you may see great axioms of nature through small and contemptible +instances.—<i>Bacon.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span></p> + +<p>In its wider acceptation, understanding is the entire power of +perceiving and conceiving, exclusive of the sensibility; the power of +dealing with the impressions of sense, and composing them into wholes, +according to a law of unity: and in its most comprehensive meaning it +includes even simple apprehension.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p><b>Unselfishness.</b>—The essence of true nobility is neglect of self. Let the +thought of self pass in, and the beauty of great action is gone, like +the bloom from a soiled flower.—<i>Froude.</i></p> + +<p><b>Uprightness.</b>—To redeem a world sunk in dishonesty has not been given +thee. Solely over one man therein thou hast quite absolute control. Him +redeem, him make honest.—<i>Thomas Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p><b>Urbanity.</b>—Poor wine at the table of a rich host is an insult without an +apology. Urbanity ushers in water that needs no apology, and gives a +zest to the worst vintage.—<i>Zimmermann.</i></p> + +<p><b>Usefulness.</b>—Nothing in this world is so good as usefulness. It binds +your fellow-creatures to you, and you to them; it tends to the +improvement of your own character; and it gives you a real importance in +society, much beyond what any artificial station can bestow.—<i>Sir B. C. +Brodie.</i></p> + +<p>On the day of his death, in his eightieth year, Elliott, "the Apostle of +the Indians," was found teaching an Indian child at his bed-side. "Why +not rest from your labors now?" asked a friend. "Because," replied the +venerable man, "I have prayed God to render me useful in my sphere, and +He has heard my prayers; for now that I can no longer preach, He leaves +me strength enough to teach this poor child the alphabet."—<i>Rev. J. +Chaplin.</i></p> + +<p>There is but one virtue—the eternal sacrifice of self.—<i>George Sand.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>V.</h3> + +<p><b>Valentine.</b>—Hail to thy returning festival, old Bishop Valentine! Great +is thy name in the rubric. Like unto thee, assuredly, there is no other +mitred father in the calendar.—<i>Charles Lamb.</i></p> + +<p>The fourteenth of February is a day sacred to St. Valentine! It was a +very odd notion, alluded to by Shakespeare, that on this day birds begin +to couple; hence, perhaps, arose the custom of sending on this day +letters containing professions of love and affection.—<i>Noah Webster.</i></p> + +<p><b>Valor.</b>—Valor gives awe, and promises protection to those who want heart +or strength to defend themselves. This makes the authority of men among +women, and that of a master buck in a numerous herd.—<i>Sir W. Temple.</i></p> + +<p>How strangely high endeavors may be blessed, where piety and valor +jointly go.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Those who believe that the praises which arise from valor are superior +to those which proceed from any other virtues have not +considered.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p><b>Vanity.</b>—Verily every man at his best state is altogether +vanity.—<i>Bible.</i></p> + +<p>Our vanities differ as our noses do: all conceit is not the same +conceit, but varies in correspondence with the minutiæ of mental make in +which one of us differs from another.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>One of the few things I have always most wondered at is, that there +should be any such thing as human vanity. If I had any, I had enough to +mortify it a few days ago; for I lost my mind for a whole day.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>Greater mischiefs happen often from folly, meanness, and vanity than +from the greater sins of avarice and ambition.—<i>Burke.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is vanity which makes the rake at twenty, the worldly man at forty, +and the retired man at sixty. We are apt to think that best in general +for which we find ourselves best fitted in particular.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>O frail estate of human things.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>The vainest woman is never thoroughly conscious of her beauty till she +is loved by the man who sets her own passion vibrating in +return.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Vanity is the quicksand of reason.—<i>George Sand.</i></p> + +<p>To be vain is rather a mark of humility than pride. Vain men delight in +telling what honors have been done them, what great company they have +kept, and the like; by which they plainly confess that these honors were +more than their due and such as their friends would not believe if they +had not been told. Whereas a man truly proud thinks the greatest honors +below his merits, and consequently scorns to boast. I, therefore, +deliver it as a maxim, that whoever desires the character of a proud man +ought to conceal his vanity.—<i>Swift.</i></p> + +<p><b>Vexations.</b>—Petty vexations may at times be petty, but still they are +vexations. The smallest and most inconsiderable annoyances are the most +piercing. As small letters weary the eye most, so also the smallest +affairs disturb us most.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p><b>Vice.</b>—As to the general design of providence, the two extremes of vice +may serve (like two opposite biases) to keep up the balance of things. +When we speak against one capital vice, we ought to speak against its +opposite; the middle betwixt both is the point for virtue.—<i>Pope.</i></p> + +<p>This is the essential evil of vice; it debases a man.—<i>Chapin.</i></p> + +<p>It is only in some corner of the brain which we leave empty that Vice +can obtain a lodging. When she knocks at your door be able to say: "No +room for your ladyship: pass on."—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span></p> + +<p>I ne'er heard yet that any of these bolder vices wanted less impudence +to gainsay what they did, than to perform it first.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Wise men will apply their remedies to vices, not to names; to the causes +of evil which are permanent, not the occasional organs by which they +act, and the transitory modes in which they appear.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>One vice worn out makes us wiser than fifty tutors.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Vicissitudes.</b>—We do not marvel at the sunrise of a joy, only at its +sunset! Then, on the other hand, we are amazed at the commencement of a +sorrow-storm; but that it should go off in gentle showers we think quite +natural.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Who ordered toil as the condition of life, ordered weariness, ordered +sickness, ordered poverty, failure, success,—to this man a foremost +place, to the other a nameless struggle with the crowd; to that a +shameful fall, or paralyzed limb, or sudden accident; to each some work +upon the ground he stands on, until he is laid beneath it.—<i>Thackeray.</i></p> + +<p><b>Victory.</b>—Victory or Westminster Abbey.—<i>Nelson.</i></p> + +<p>Victory may be honorable to the arms, but shameful to the counsels, of a +nation.—<i>Bolingbroke.</i></p> + +<p>Victory belongs to the most persevering.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>It is more difficult to look upon victory than upon battle.—<i>Walter +Scott.</i></p> + +<p><b>Villainy.</b>—Villainy, when detected, never gives up, but boldly adds +impudence to imposture.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>Villainy that is vigilant will be an overmatch for virtue, if she +slumber at her post.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Violence.</b>—Nothing good comes of violence.—<i>Luther.</i></p> + +<p>Violence does even justice unjustly.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>Vehemence without feeling is rant.—<i>H. Lewes.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Virtue.</b>—I willingly confess that it likes me better when I find virtue +in a fair lodging than when I am bound to seek it in an ill-favored +creature.—<i>Sir P. Sidney.</i></p> + +<p>This is the tax a man must pay to his virtues—they hold up a torch to +his vices, and render those frailties notorious in him which would have +passed without observation in another.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>True greatness is sovereign wisdom. We are never deceived by our +virtues.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p>It would not be easy, even for an unbeliever, to find a better +translation of the rule of virtue from the abstract into the concrete, +than to endeavor so to live that Christ would approve our life.—<i>John +Stuart Mill.</i></p> + +<p>Most men admire virtue, who follow not her lore.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>To be able under all circumstances to practice five things constitutes +perfect virtue: these five are gravity, generosity of soul, sincerity, +earnestness, and kindness.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p>Of the two, I prefer those who render vice lovable to those who degrade +virtue.—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>No man can purchase his virtue too dear, for it is the only thing whose +value must ever increase with the price it has cost us. Our integrity is +never worth so much as when we have parted with our all to keep +it.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Virtue can see to do what virtue would by her own radiant light, though +sun and moon were in the flat sea sunk.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>Virtue is voluntary, vice involuntary.—<i>Plato.</i></p> + +<p>Virtue is a rough way but proves at night a bed of down.—<i>Wotton.</i></p> + +<p>Is virtue a thing remote? I wish to be virtuous, and lo! virtue is at +hand.—<i>Confucius.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span></p> + +<p>Virtues that shun the day and lie concealed in the smooth seasons and +the calm of life.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>That virtue which requires to be ever guarded is scarce worth the +sentinel.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>Why expect that extraordinary virtues should be in one person united, +when one virtue makes a man extraordinary? Alexander is eminent for his +courage; Ptolemy for his wisdom; Scipio for his continence; Trajan for +his love of truth; Constantius for his temperance.—<i>Zimmermann.</i></p> + +<p>Virtue dwells at the head of a river, to which we cannot get but by +rowing against the stream.—<i>Feltham.</i></p> + +<p>Our virtues live upon our income, our vices consume our capital.—<i>J. +Petit Senn.</i></p> + +<p>Wealth is a weak anchor, and glory cannot support a man; this is the law +of God, that virtue only is firm, and cannot be shaken by a +tempest.—<i>Pythagoras.</i></p> + +<p>All bow to virtue and then walk away.—<i>De Finod.</i></p> + +<p>Virtue is an angel; but she is a blind one, and must ask of Knowledge to +show her the pathway that leads to her goal. Mere knowledge, on the +other hand, like a Swiss mercenary, is ready to combat either in the +ranks of sin or under the banners of righteousness,—ready to forge +cannon-balls or to print New Testaments, to navigate a corsair's vessel +or a missionary ship.—<i>Horace Mann.</i></p> + +<p><b>Vulgarity.</b>—The vulgarity of inanimate things requires time to get +accustomed to; but living, breathing, bustling, plotting, planning, +human vulgarity is a species of moral ipecacuanha, enough to destroy any +comfort.—<i>Carlyle.</i></p> + +<p>Dirty work wants little talent and no conscience.—<i>George Eliot.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>W.</h3> + +<p><b>Waiting.</b>—It is the slowest pulsation which is the most vital. The hero +will then know how to wait, as well as to make haste. All good abides +with him who waiteth wisely.—<i>Thoreau.</i></p> + +<p><b>Want.</b>—Nothing makes men sharper than want.—<i>Addison.</i></p> + +<p>Hundreds would never have known <i>want</i> if they had not first known +<i>waste</i>.—<i>Spurgeon.</i></p> + +<p>It is not from nature, but from education and habits, that our wants are +chiefly derived.—<i>Fielding.</i></p> + +<p>If any one say that he has seen a just man in want of bread, I answer +that it was in some place where there was no other just man.—<i>St. +Clement.</i></p> + +<p><b>War.</b>—Take my word for it, if you had seen but one day of war, you would +pray to Almighty God that you might never see such a thing +again.—<i>Wellington.</i></p> + +<p>Wherever there is war, there must be injustice on one side or the other, +or on both. There have been wars which were little more than trials of +strength between friendly nations, and in which the injustice was not to +each other, but to the God who gave them life. But in a malignant war +there is injustice of ignobler kind at once to God and man, which must +be stemmed for both their sakes.—<i>Ruskin.</i></p> + +<p>Civil wars leave nothing but tombs.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p>The fate of war is to be exalted in the morning, and low enough at +night! There is but one step from triumph to ruin.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>Woe to the man that first did teach the cursed steel to bite in his own +flesh, and make way to the living spirit.—<i>Spenser.</i></p> + +<p>Providence for war is the best prevention of it.—<i>Bacon.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span></p> + +<p>The bodies of men, munition, and money, may justly be called the sinews +of war.—<i>Sir W. Raleigh.</i></p> + +<p>War is the matter which fills all history, and consequently the only or +almost the only view in which we can see the external of political +society is in a hostile shape; and the only actions to which we have +always seen, and still see, all of them intent, are such as tend to the +destruction of one another.—<i>Burke.</i></p> + +<p>As long as mankind shall continue to bestow more liberal applause on +their destroyers than on their benefactors, the thirst of military glory +will ever be the vice of the most exalted characters.—<i>Gibbon.</i></p> + +<p>The fate of a battle is the result of a moment,—of a thought: the +hostile forces advance with various combinations, they attack each other +and fight for a certain time; the critical moment arrives, a mental +flash decides, and the least reserve accomplishes the +object.—<i>Napoleon.</i></p> + +<p>The feast of vultures, and the waste of life.—<i>Byron.</i></p> + +<p>I abhor bloodshed, and every species of terror erected into a system, as +remedies equally ferocious, unjust, and inefficacious against evils that +can only be cured by the diffusion of liberal ideas.—<i>Mazzini.</i></p> + +<p><b>Weakness.</b>—Weakness is thy excuse, and I believe it; weakness to resist +Philistian gold: what murderer, what traitor, parricide, incestuous, +sacrilegious, but may plead it? All wickedness is weakness.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p>The strength of man sinks in the hour of trial; but there doth live a +Power that to the battle girdeth the weak.—<i>Joanna Baillie.</i></p> + +<p>How many weak shoulders have craved heavy burdens?—<i>Joubert.</i></p> + +<p>Weakness is born vanquished.—<i>Madame Swetchine.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Wealth.</b>—An accession of wealth is a dangerous predicament for a man. At +first he is stunned, if the accession be sudden; he is very humble and +very grateful. Then he begins to speak a little louder, people think him +more sensible, and soon he thinks himself so.—<i>Cecil.</i></p> + +<p>If Wealth come, beware of him, the smooth, false friend! There is +treachery in his proffered hand; his tongue is eloquent to tempt; lust +of many harms is lurking in his eye; he hath a hollow heart; use him +cautiously.—<i>Tupper.</i></p> + +<p>Men pursue riches under the idea that their possession will set them at +ease, and above the world. But the law of association often makes those +who begin by loving gold as a servant, finish by becoming themselves its +slaves; and independence without wealth is at least as common as wealth +without independence.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Weeping.</b>—What women would do if they could not cry, nobody knows! What +poor, defenseless creatures they would be!—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i></p> + +<p><b>Welcome.</b>—Heaven opened wide her ever-during gates, harmonious sound! on +golden hinges turning.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Wickedness.</b>—The happiness of the wicked passes away like a +torrent.—<i>Racine.</i></p> + +<p>The hatred of the wicked is only roused the more from the impossibility +of finding any just grounds on which it can rest; and the very +consciousness of their own injustice is only a grievance the more +against him who is the object of it.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p>Wickedness is a wonderfully diligent architect of misery, of shame, +accompanied with terror and commotion, and remorse, and endless +perturbation.—<i>Plutarch.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span></p> + +<p>What rein can hold licentious wickedness, when down the hill he holds +his fierce career?—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Wife.</b>—Thy wife is a constellation of virtues; she's the moon, and thou +art the man in the moon.—<i>Congreve.</i></p> + +<p>A light wife doth make a heavy husband.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>O woman! thou knowest the hour when the goodman of the house will +return, when the heat and burden of the day are past; do not let him at +such time, when he is weary with toil and jaded with discouragement, +find upon his coming to his habitation that the foot which should hasten +to meet him is wandering at a distance, that the soft hand which should +wipe the sweat from his brow is knocking at the door of other +houses.—<i>Washington Irving.</i></p> + +<p>Her pleasures are in the happiness of her family.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p> + +<p>Hanging and wiving goes by destiny.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>The wife safest and seemliest by her husband stays.—<i>Milton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Will.</b>—In the schools of the wrestling master, when a boy falls he is +bidden to get up again, and to go on wrestling day by day till he has +acquired strength; and we must do the same, and not be like those poor +wretches who, after one failure, suffer themselves to be swept along as +by a torrent. You need but <i>will</i>, and it is done; but if you relax your +efforts, you will be ruined; for ruin and recovery are both from +within.—<i>Epictetus.</i></p> + +<p><b>Winter.</b>—After summer ever more succeeds the barren winter with his +nipping cold.—<i>Shakespeare.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span></p> + +<p>Winter binds our strengthened bodies in a cold embrace +constringent.—<i>Thomson.</i></p> + +<p><b>Wisdom.</b>—Wisdom for a man's self is, in many branches thereof, a +depraved thing: it is the wisdom of rats, that will be sure to leave a +house some time before it fall; it is the wisdom of the fox, that +thrusts out the badger, who digged and made room for him; it is the +wisdom of the crocodiles, that shed tears when they would +devour.—<i>Bacon.</i></p> + +<p>Common sense in an uncommon degree is what the world calls +wisdom.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>Human wisdom makes as ill use of her talent when she exercises it in +rescinding from the number and sweetness of those pleasures that are +naturally our due, as she employs it favorably, and well, in +artificially disguising and tricking out the ills of life to alleviate +the sense of them.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>It may be said, almost without qualification, that true wisdom consists +in the ready and accurate perception of analogies. Without the former +quality, knowledge of the past is uninstructive; without the latter, it +is deceptive.—<i>Whately.</i></p> + +<p>You read of but one wise man, and all that he knew was—that he knew +nothing.—<i>Congreve.</i></p> + +<p>To be wiser than other men is to be honester than they; and strength of +mind is only courage to see and speak the truth.—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p> + +<p>Knowledge comes but wisdom lingers.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Seize wisdom ere 'tis torment to be wise; that is, seize wisdom ere she +seizes thee.—<i>Young.</i></p> + +<p>Wisdom married to immortal verse.—<i>Wordsworth.</i></p> + +<p>No man can be wise on an empty stomach.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Among mortals second thoughts are wisest.—<i>Euripides.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>Wishes.</b>—The apparently irreconcilable dissimilarity between our wishes +and our means, between our hearts and this world, remains a +riddle.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p><b>Wit.</b>—I have no more pleasure in hearing a man attempting wit, and +failing, than in seeing a man trying to leap over a ditch, and tumbling +into it.—<i>Johnson.</i></p> + +<p>Thy wit is a very bitter sweeting; it is a most sharp +sauce.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Wit must grow like fingers. If it be taken from others 'tis like plums +stuck upon blackthorns; there they are for a while, but they come to +nothing.—<i>Selden.</i></p> + +<p>If he who has little wit needs a master to inform his stupidity, he who +has much frequently needs ten to keep in check his worldly wisdom, which +might otherwise, like a high-mettled charger, toss him to the +ground.—<i>Scriver.</i></p> + +<p>To place wit above sense is to place superfluity above utility.—<i>Madame +de Maintenon.</i></p> + +<p><b>Woe.</b>—No scene of mortal life but teems with mortal woe.—<i>Walter +Scott.</i></p> + +<p>Thus woe succeeds a woe, as wave a wave.—<i>Herrick.</i></p> + +<p>So many miseries have crazed my voice, that my woe-wearied tongue is +still.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Woman.</b>—Who does know the bent of woman's fantasy?—<i>Spenser.</i></p> + +<p>Pretty women without religion are like flowers without +perfume.—<i>Heinrich Heine.</i></p> + +<p>The happiest women, like the happiest nations, have no history.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>To a gentleman every woman is a lady in right of her +sex.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span></p> + +<p>They never reason, or, if they do, they either draw correct inferences +from wrong premises, or wrong inferences from correct premises; and they +always poke the fire from the top.—<i>Bishop Whately.</i></p> + +<p>The woman must not belong to herself; she is bound to alien destinies. +But she performs her part best who can take freely, of her own choice, +the alien to her heart, can bear and foster it with sincerity and +love.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>God has placed the genius of women in their hearts; because the works of +this genius are always works of love.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p>Women for the most part do not love us. They do not choose a man because +they love him, but because it pleases them to be loved by him. They love +love of all things in the world, but there are very few men whom they +love personally.—<i>Alphonse Karr.</i></p> + +<p>Woman is the Sunday of man; not his repose only, but his joy; the salt +of his life.—<i>Michelet.</i></p> + +<p>Women see through and through each other; and often we most admire her +whom they most scorn.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>It goes far to reconciling me to being a woman when I reflect that I am +thus in no danger of ever marrying one.—<i>Lady Montague.</i></p> + +<p>Men are women's playthings; woman is the devil's.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p>Sing of the nature of woman, and the song shall be surely full of +variety,—old crotchets and most sweet closes,—it shall be humorous, +grave, fantastic, amorous, melancholy, sprightly,—one in all, and all +in one!—<i>Beaumont.</i></p> + +<p>Her step is music and her voice is song.—<i>Bailey.</i></p> + +<p>Woman is a miracle of divine contradictions.—<i>Michelet.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span></p> + +<p>Woman, sister! there are some things which you do not execute as well as +your brother, man; no, nor ever will. Pardon me, if I doubt whether you +will ever produce a great poet from your choirs, or a Mozart, or a +Phidias, or a Michael Angelo, or a great philosopher, or a great +scholar. By which last is meant, not one who depends simply on an +infinite memory, but also on an infinite and electrical power of +combination; bringing together from the four winds, like the angel of +the resurrection, what else were dust from dead men's bones, into the +unity of breathing life. If you can create yourselves into any of these +grand creators, why have you not?—<i>De Quincey.</i></p> + +<p>There are three things a wise man will not trust: the wind, the sunshine +of an April day, and woman's plighted faith.—<i>Southey.</i></p> + +<p>Woman is mistress of the art of completely embittering the life of the +person on whom she depends.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Women generally consider consequences in love, seldom in +resentment.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p>Just corporeal enough to attest humanity, yet sufficiently transparent +to let the celestial origin shine through.—<i>Ruffini.</i></p> + +<p>There are female women, and there are male women.—<i>Charles Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>To think of the part one little woman can play in the life of a man, so +that to renounce her may be a very good imitation of heroism, and to win +her may be a discipline!—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Men at most differ as heaven and earth; but women, worst and best, as +heaven and hell.—<i>Tennyson.</i></p> + +<p>Women of forty always fancy they have found the Fountain of Youth, and +that they remain young in the midst of the ruins of their day.—<i>Arsène +Houssaye.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span></p> + +<p>A woman's hopes are woven of sunbeams; a shadow annihilates +them.—<i>George Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>There remains in the faces of women who are naturally serene and +peaceful, and of those rendered so by religion, an after-spring, and +later, an after-summer, the reflex of their most beautiful +bloom.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>Women see without looking; their husbands often look without +seeing.—<i>Louis Desnoyeas.</i></p> + +<p>She was in the lovely bloom and spring-time of womanhood; at that age +when, if ever, angels be for God's good purposes enthroned in mortal +forms, they may be, without impiety, supposed to abide in such as hers. +Cast in so slight and exquisite a mould, so mild and gentle, so pure and +beautiful, that earth seemed not her element, nor its rough creatures +her fit companions.—<i>Dickens.</i></p> + +<p>There is a woman at the beginning of all great things.—<i>Lamartine.</i></p> + +<p>There is something still more to be dreaded than a Jesuit, and that is a +Jesuitess.—<i>Eugene Sue.</i></p> + +<p>The honor of woman is badly guarded when it is guarded by keys and +spies. No woman is honest who does not wish to be.—<i>Adrian Dupuy.</i></p> + +<p><b>Words.</b>—There are words which sever hearts more than sharp swords; there +are words, the point of which sting the heart through the course of a +whole life.—<i>Fredrika Bremer.</i></p> + +<p>Words are often everywhere as the minute-hands of the soul, more +important than even the hour-hands of action.—<i>Richter.</i></p> + +<p>"The last word" is the most dangerous of infernal machines; and husband +and wife should no more fight to get it than they would struggle for the +possession of a lighted bomb-shell.—<i>Douglas Jerrold.</i></p> + +<p>Words, like glass, darken whatever they do not help us to +see.—<i>Joubert.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span></p> + +<p>If we use common words on a great occasion they are the more striking, +because they are felt at once to have a particular meaning, like old +banners, or every-day clothes, hung up in a sacred place.—<i>George +Eliot.</i></p> + +<p>Words are but the signs and counters of knowledge, and their currency +should be strictly regulated by the capital which they +represent.—<i>Colton.</i></p> + +<p><b>World.</b>—The world is a comedy to those who think, a tragedy to those who +feel.—<i>Horace Walpole.</i></p> + +<p>Creation's heir, the world, the world is mine.—<i>Goldsmith.</i></p> + +<p>Contact with the world either breaks or hardens the heart.—<i>Chamfort.</i></p> + +<p>Why, then the world's mine oyster, which I with sword will +open.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p><b>Worship.</b>—Worship as though the Deity were present. If my mind is not +engaged in my worship, it is as though I worshiped not.—<i>Confucius.</i></p> + +<p><b>Writing.</b>—Writing, after all, is a cold and coarse interpreter of +thought. How much of the imagination, how much of the intellect, +evaporates and is lost while we seek to embody it in words! Man made +language and God the genius.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p>We must write as Homer wrote, not what he wrote.—<i>Théophile Vian.</i></p> + +<p><b>Wrong.</b>—There is no sort of wrong deed of which a man can bear the +punishment alone; you can't isolate yourself and say that the evil that +is in you shall not spread. Men's lives are as thoroughly blended with +each other as the air they breathe: evil spreads as necessarily as +disease.—<i>George Eliot.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span></p> + +<p>My soul is sick with every day's report of wrong and outrage with which +earth is filled.—<i>Cowper.</i></p> + + +<h3>Y.</h3> + +<p><b>Youth.</b>—The canker galls the infants of the spring, too oft before their +buttons be disclosed; and in the morn and liquid dew of youth contagious +blastments are most imminent.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + +<p>Reckless youth makes rueful age.—<i>Moore.</i></p> + +<p>In general, a man in his younger years does not easily cast off a +certain complacent self-conceit, which principally shows itself in +despising what he has himself been a little time before.—<i>Goethe.</i></p> + +<p>Too young for woe, though not for tears.—<i>Washington Irving.</i></p> + +<p>O youth! thou often tearest thy wings against the thorns of +voluptuousness.—<i>Victor Hugo.</i></p> + +<p>O youth! ephemeral song, eternal canticle! The world may end, the +heavens fall, yet loving voices would still find an echo in the ruins of +the universe.—<i>Jules Janin.</i></p> + +<p>The youthful freshness of a blameless heart.—<i>Washington Irving.</i></p> + +<p>The heart of youth is reached through the senses; the senses of age are +reached through the heart.—<i>Rétif de la Bretonne.</i></p> + +<p>Agreeable surprises are the perquisites of youth.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + + +<h3>Z.</h3> + +<p><b>Zeal.</b>—I like men who are temperate and moderate in everything. An +excessive zeal for that which is good, though it may not be offensive to +me, at all events raises my wonder, and leaves me in a difficulty how I +should call it.—<i>Montaigne.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span></p> + +<p>In the ardor of pursuit men soon forget the goal from which they +start.—<i>Schiller.</i></p> + +<p>Experience shows that success is due less to ability than to zeal. The +winner is he who gives himself to his work, body and soul.—<i>Charles +Buxton.</i></p> + +<p>Tell zeal it lacks devotion.—<i>Sir W. Raleigh.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing to build and all things to destroy.—<i>Dryden.</i></p> + +<p>Nothing can be fairer, or more noble, than the holy fervor of true +zeal.—<i>Molière.</i></p> + +<p>People give the name of zeal to their propensity to mischief and +violence, though it is not the cause, but their interest, that inflames +them.—<i>Montaigne.</i></p> + +<p>The frenzy of nations is the statesmanship of fate.—<i>Bulwer-Lytton.</i></p> + +<p><b>Zealot.</b>—When we see an eager assailant of one of these wrongs, a +special reformer, we feel like asking him, What right have you, sir, to +your one virtue? Is virtue piecemeal?—<i>Emerson.</i></p> + +<p>What I object to Scotch philosophers in general is, that they reason +upon man as they would upon a divinity; they pursue truth without caring +if it be useful truth.—<i>Sydney Smith.</i></p> + +<p>I have never known a trader in philanthropy who was not wrong in his +head or heart somewhere or other.—<i>Coleridge.</i></p> + +<p>They have an idol, to which they consecrate themselves high-priests, and +deem it holy work to offer sacrifices of whatever is most +precious.—<i>Hawthorne.</i></p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p class="center">The end crowns all; and that old common arbitrator, Time, will one day +end all.—<i>Shakespeare.</i></p> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearls of Thought, by Maturin M. 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Ballou + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Pearls of Thought + +Author: Maturin M. Ballou + +Release Date: September 13, 2008 [EBook #26604] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEARLS OF THOUGHT *** + + + + +Produced by Julia Miller and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + +---------------------------------+ + |Transcriber's note: In this etext| + | | + |~ represents bold and | + |_ represents italic. | + +---------------------------------+ + + + + + PEARLS OF THOUGHT. + + BY + + MATURIN M. BALLOU, + + AUTHOR OF THE "TREASURY OF THOUGHT," "HISTORY OF CUBA," "BIOGRAPHY OF + HOSEA BALLOU," ETC., ETC. + + _Infinite riches in a little room._--MARLOWE. + + BOSTON: HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY. The Riverside Press, Cambridge. + 1881. + + COPYRIGHT, 1880, + + By MATURIN M. BALLOU. + + _All rights reserved._ + + _The Riverside Press, Cambridge:_ Electrotyped and Printed by H. O. + Houghton & Co. + + * * * * * + + To + + MY WIFE, + + THE PATIENT AND CHEERFUL ASSOCIATE OF MY STUDIES, + + AFTER MORE THAN FORTY YEARS OF + + HAPPY COMPANIONSHIP, + + This Volume + + IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED + + BY + + THE COMPILER. + + Writers of an abler sort, + Whose wit well managed, and whose classic style, + Give Truth a lustre, and make Wisdom smile. + + COWPER. + + General observations drawn from particulars are the jewels of + knowledge, comprehending great store in a little room. + + LOCKE. + + Out of monuments, names, wordes, proverbs, traditions, private + recordes, and evidences, fragments of stories, passages of bookes, + and the like, we doe save and recover somewhat from the deluge of + time. + + BACON. + + I would fain coin wisdom,--mould it, I mean, into maxims, proverbs, + sentences, that can easily be retained and transmitted. + + JOUBERT. + + + + +PREFACE. + + A verse may find him whom a sermon flies. + + GEORGE HERBERT. + + +The volume herewith presented is the natural result of the compiler's +habit of transferring and classifying significant passages from known +authors. No special course of reading has been pursued, the thoughts +being culled from foreign and native tongues--from the moss-grown tomes +of ancient literature and the verdant fields of to-day. The terse +periods of others, appropriately quoted, become in a degree our own; and +a just estimation is very nearly allied to originality, or, as the +author of _Vanity Fair_ tells us, "Next to excellence is the +appreciation of it." Without indorsing the idea of a modern authority +that the multiplicity of facts and writings is becoming so great that +every available book must soon be composed of extracts only, still it is +believed that such a volume as "Pearls of Thought" will serve the +interest of general literature, and especially stimulate the mind of the +thoughtful reader to further research. The pleasant duty of the +compiler has been to follow the expressive idea of Colton, and he has +made the same use of books as a bee does of flowers,--she steals the +sweets from them, but does not injure them. + +To the observant reader many familiar quotations will naturally occur, +the absence of which may seem a singular omission in such a connection +and classification, but doubtless such excerpts will be found in the +"Treasury of Thought," a much more extended work by the same author, to +which this volume is properly a supplement. Of course care has been +taken not to repeat any portion of the previous collection. + + M. M. B. + + + + +PEARLS OF THOUGHT. + + +A. + +~Ability.~--Natural abilities can almost compensate for the want of every +kind of cultivation, but no cultivation of the mind can make up for the +want of natural abilities.--_Schopenhaufer._ + +Words must be fitted to a man's mouth,--'twas well said of the fellow +that was to make a speech for my Lord Mayor, when he desired to take +measure of his lordship's mouth.--_Selden._ + +~Absence.~--Absence in love is like water upon fire; a little quickens, +but much extinguishes it.--_Hannah More._ + +Absence from those we love is self from self! A deadly +banishment.--_Shakespeare._ + +Short retirement urges sweet return.--_Milton._ + +Whatever is genuine in social relations endures despite of time, error, +absence, and destiny; and that which has no inherent vitality had better +die at once. A great poet has truly declared that constancy is no +virtue, but a fact.--_Tuckerman._ + +Frozen by distance.--_Wordsworth._ + +Short absence quickens love, long absence kills it.--_Mirabeau._ + +We often wish most for our friends when they are absent. Even in married +life love is not diminished by distance. A man, like a burning-glass, +should be placed at a certain distance from the object he wishes to +dissolve, in order that the proper focus may be obtained.--_Richter._ + +~Abstinence.~--Refrain to-night, and that shall lend a hand of easiness to +the next abstinence; the next more easy; for use almost can change the +stamp of nature, and either curb the devil, or throw him out with +wondrous potency.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Abuse.~--Abuse is not so dangerous when there is no vehicle of wit or +delicacy, no subtle conveyance. The difference between coarse and +refined abuse is as the difference between being bruised by a club and +wounded by a poisoned arrow.--_Johnson._ + +~Accident.~--What reason, like the careful ant, draws laboriously +together, the wind of accident collects in one brief +moment.--_Schiller._ + +What men call accident is God's own part.--_P. J. Bailey._ + +~Acquirements.~--Every noble acquisition is attended with its risks: he +who fears to encounter the one must not expect to obtain the +other.--_Metastasio._ + +~Action.~--Action can have no effect upon reasonable minds. It may augment +noise, but it never can enforce argument. If you speak to a dog, you use +action; you hold up your hand thus, because he is a brute; and in +proportion as men are removed from brutes, action will have the less +influence upon them.--_Johnson._ + +Heaven ne'er helps the man who will not act.--_Sophocles._ + +When Demosthenes was asked what was the first part of an orator, what +the second, and what the third? he answered, "Action." The same may I +say. If any should ask me what is the first, the second, the third part +of a Christian, I must answer, "Action."--_T. Brooks._ + +Our best conjectures, as to the true spring of actions, are very +uncertain; the actions themselves are all we must pretend to know from +history. That Caesar was murdered by twenty-four conspirators, I doubt +not; but I very much doubt whether their love of liberty was the sole +cause.--_Chesterfield._ + +Action is generally defective, and proves an abortion without previous +contemplation. Contemplation generates, action propagates.--_Owen +Feltham._ + +Remember you have not a sinew whose law of strength is not action; you +have not a faculty of body, mind, or soul, whose law of improvement is +not energy.--_E. B. Hall._ + +Our actions must clothe us with an immortality loathsome or +glorious.--_Colton._ + +Outward actions can never give a just estimate of us, since there are +many perfections of a man which are not capable of appearing in +actions.--_Addison._ + +Mark this well, ye proud men of action! Ye are, after all, nothing but +unconscious instruments of the men of thought.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +~Actors.~--Players, sir! I look upon them as no better than creatures set +upon tables and joint stools to make faces and produce laughter, like +dancing dogs. But, sir, you will allow that some players are better than +others? Yes, sir; as some dogs dance better than others.--_Johnson._ + +Each under his borrowed guise the actor belongs to himself. He has put +on a mask, beneath it his real face still exists; he has thrown himself +into a foreign individuality, which in some sense forms a shelter to the +integrity of his own character; he may indeed wear festive attire, but +his mourning is beneath it; he may smile, divert, act, his soul is still +his own; his inner life is undisturbed; no indiscreet question will lift +the veil, no coarse hand will burst open the gates of the +sanctuary.--_Countess de Gasparin._ + +Oh, there be players that I have seen play, and heard others praise, and +that highly, not to speak it profanely, that, neither having the accent +of Christians, nor the gait of Christian, pagan, or man, have so +strutted and bellowed, that I have thought some of Nature's journeymen +had made men, and not made them well, they imitated humanity so +abominably!--_Shakespeare._ + +An actor should take lessons from a painter and a sculptor. For an actor +to represent a Greek hero it is imperative he should have thoroughly +studied those antique statues which have lasted to our day, and mastered +the particular grace they exhibited in their postures, whether sitting, +standing, or walking. Nor should he make attitude his only study. He +should highly develop his mind by an assiduous study of the best +writers, ancient and modern, which will enable him not only to +understand his parts, but to communicate a nobler coloring to his +manners and mien.--_Goethe._ + +~Admiration.~--Admiration and love are like being intoxicated with +champagne; judgment and friendship like being enlivened.--_Johnson._ + +Season your admiration for awhile.--_Shakespeare._ + +I wonder whether the subtle measuring of forces will ever come to +measuring the force there would be in one beautiful woman whose mind was +as noble as her face was beautiful--who made a man's passion for her +rush in one current with all the great aims of his life.--_George +Eliot._ + +Admiration is the base of ignorance.--_Balthasar Gracian._ + +It is better in some respects to be admired by those with whom you live, +than to be loved by them. And this not on account of any gratification +of vanity, but because admiration is so much more tolerant than +love.--_Arthur Helps._ + +Admiration is a forced tribute, and to extort it from mankind (envious +and ignorant as they are) they must be taken unawares.--_James +Northcote._ + +~Adversity.~--If adversity hath killed his thousands, prosperity hath +killed his ten thousands; therefore adversity is to be preferred. The +one deceives, the other instructs; the one miserably happy, the other +happily miserable; and therefore many philosophers have voluntarily +sought adversity and so much commend it in their precepts.--_Burton._ + +Adversity borrows its sharpest sting from our impatience.--_Bishop +Horne._ + +Adversity is like the period of the former and of the latter +rain,--cold, comfortless, unfriendly to man and to animal; yet from that +season have their birth the flower and the fruit, the date, the rose, +and the pomegranate.--_Walter Scott._ + +Two powerful destroyers: Time and Adversity.--_A. de Musset._ + +Our dependence upon God ought to be so entire and absolute that we +should never think it necessary, in any kind of distress, to have +recourse to human consolation.--_Thomas a Kempis._ + +Adversity, like winter weather, is of use to kill those vermin which the +summer of prosperity is apt to produce and nourish.--_Arrowsmith._ + +Adversity, how blunt are all the arrows of thy quiver in comparison with +those of Guilt!--_Blair._ + +~Advice.~--People are sooner reclaimed by the side wind of a surprise than +by downright admonition.--_L'Estrange._ + +Agreeable advice is seldom useful advice.--_Massillon._ + +~Affectation.~--All affectation proceeds from the supposition of +possessing something better than the rest of the world possesses. Nobody +is vain of possessing two legs and two arms, because that is the +precise quantity of either sort of limb which everybody +possesses.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Affectation is certain deformity.--_Blair._ + +~Affection.~--None of the affections have been noted to fascinate and +bewitch, but love and envy.--_Bacon._ + +None are so desolate but something dear, dearer than self, possesses or +possess'd.--_Byron._ + +Those childlike caresses which are the bent of every sweet woman, who +has begun by showering kisses on the hard pate of her bald doll, +creating a happy soul within that woodenness from the wealth of her own +love.--_George Eliot._ + +God give us leisure for these rights of love.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Afflictions.~--Before an affliction is digested, consolation comes too +soon; and after it is digested, it comes too late; but there is a mark +between these two, as fine, almost, as a hair, for a comforter to take +aim at.--_Sterne._ + +Stars shine brightest in the darkest night; torches are better for +beating; grapes come not to the proof till they come to the press; +spices smell best when bruised; young trees root the faster for shaking; +gold looks brighter for scouring; juniper smells sweetest in the fire; +the palm-tree proves the better for pressing; chamomile, the more you +tread it, the more you spread it. Such is the condition of all God's +children: they are then most triumphant when most tempted; most glorious +when most afflicted.--_Bogatzky._ + +That which thou dost not understand when thou readest, thou shalt +understand in the day of thy visitation. For many secrets of religion +are not perceived till they be felt, and are not felt but in the day of +a great calamity.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Nothing so much increases one's reverence for others as a great sorrow +to one's self. It teaches one the depths of human nature. In happiness +we are shallow, and deem others so.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Affliction, like the iron-smith, shapes as it smites.--_Bovee._ + +Afflictions sent by Providence melt the constancy of the noble-minded +but confirm the obduracy of the vile. The same furnace that hardens clay +liquefies gold; and in the strong manifestations of divine power Pharoah +found his punishment, but David his pardon.--_Colton._ + +Though all afflictions are evils in themselves, yet they are good for +us, because they discover to us our disease and tend to our +cure.--_Tillotson._ + +To love all mankind, from the greatest to the lowest (or meanest), a +cheerful state of being is required; but in order to see into mankind, +into life, and, still more, into ourselves, suffering is +requisite.--_Richter._ + +Count up man's calamities and who would seem happy? But in truth, +calamity leaves fully half of your life untouched.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Age.~--Wrinkles are the tomb of love.--_Sarros in._ + +It cuts one sadly to see the grief of old people; they've no way o' +working it off; and the new spring brings no new shoots out on the +withered tree.--_George Eliot._ + +Autumnal green.--_Dryden._ + +Ye old men, brief is the space of life allotted to you; pass it as +pleasantly as ye can, not grieving from morning till eve. Since time +knows not how to preserve our hopes, but, attentive to its own concerns, +flies away.--_Euripides._ + +The Grecian ladies counted their age from their marriage, not their +birth.--_Homer._ + +The vices of old age have the stiffness of it too; and as it is the +unfittest time to learn in, so the unfitness of it to unlearn will be +found much greater.--_South._ + +Old men's eyes are like old men's memories; they are strongest for +things a long way off.--_George Eliot._ + +Serene, and safe from passion's stormy rage, how calm they glide into +the port of age!--_Shenstone._ + +Providence gives us notice by sensible declensions, that we may +disengage from the world by degrees.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +Age oppresses by the same degrees that it instructs us, and permits not +that our mortal members, which are frozen with our years, should retain +the vigor of our youth.--_Dryden._ + +Old age adds to the respect due to virtue, but it takes nothing from the +contempt inspired by vice, for age whitens only the hair.--_J. Petit +Senn._ + +Up to forty a woman has only forty springs in her heart. After that age +she has only forty winters.--_Arsene Houssaye._ + +I love everything that's old. Old friends, old times, old manners, old +books, old wine.--_Goldsmith._ + +Let us respect gray hairs, especially our own.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +There are two things which grow stronger in the breast of man, in +proportion as he advances in years: the love of country and religion. +Let them be never so much forgotten in youth, they sooner or later +present themselves to us arrayed in all their charms, and excite in the +recesses of our hearts an attachment justly due to their +beauty.--_Chateaubriand._ + +~Agitation.~--Agitation is the marshaling of the conscience of a nation to +mould its laws.--_Sir R. Peel._ + +Agitation is the method that plants the school by the side of the +ballot-box.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +Agitation prevents rebellion, keeps the peace, and secures progress. +Every step she gains is gained forever. Muskets are the weapons of +animals. Agitation is the atmosphere of the brains.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +~Agriculture.~--Agriculture is the foundation of manufactures, since the +productions of nature are the materials of art.--_Gibbon._ + +Agriculture not only gives riches to a nation but the only riches she +can call her own.--_Johnson._ + +Let the farmer for evermore be honored in his calling, for they who +labor in the earth are the chosen people of God.--_Thomas Jefferson._ + +~Allegory.~--Allegories and spiritual significations, when applied to +faith, and that seldom, are laudable; but when they are drawn from the +life and conversation, they are dangerous, and, when men make too many +of them, pervert the doctrine of faith. Allegories are fine ornaments, +but not of proof.--_Luther._ + +The allegory of a sophist is always screwed; it crouches and bows like a +snake, which is never straight, whether she go, creep, or lie still; +only when she is dead, she is straight enough.--_Luther._ + +~Ambition.~--It was not till after the terrible passage of the bridge of +Lodi that the idea entered my mind that I might become a decisive actor +in the political arena. Then arose for the first time the spark of great +ambition.--_Napoleon._ + +Well is it known that ambition can creep as well as soar. The pride of +no person in a flourishing condition is more justly to be dreaded than +that of him who is mean and cringing under a doubtful and unprosperous +fortune.--_Burke._ + +If there is ever a time to be ambitious, it is not when ambition is +easy, but when it is hard. Fight in darkness; fight when you are down; +die hard, and you won't die at all.--_Beecher._ + +By that sin angels fell.--_Shakespeare._ + +Where ambition can be so happy as to cover its enterprises, even to the +person himself, under the appearance of principle, it is the most +incurable and inflexible of all human passions.--_Hume._ + +An ardent thirst of honor; a soul unsatisfied with all it has done, and +an unextinguished desire of doing more.--_Dryden._ + +Ambition is but the evil shadow of aspiration.--_George MacDonald._ + +Think not ambition wise, because 'tis brave.--_Sir W. Davenant._ + +Soar not too high to fall, but stoop to rise.--_Massinger._ + +~America.~--Child of the earth's old age.--_L. E. Langdon._ + +The name--American, must always exalt the pride of +patriotism.--_Washington._ + +In America we see a country of which it has been truly said that in no +other are there so few men of great learning and so few men of great +ignorance.--_Buckle._ + +America is as yet in the youth and gristle of her strength.--_Burke._ + +If all Europe were to become a prison, America would still present a +loop-hole of escape; and, God be praised! that loop-hole is larger than +the dungeon itself.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Ere long, thine every stream shall find a tongue, land of the many +waters.--_Hoffman._ + +America is rising with a giant's strength. Its bones are yet but +cartilages.--_Fisher Ames._ + +~Amusement.~--Amusement is the waking sleep of labor. When it absorbs +thought, patience, and strength that might have been seriously employed, +it loses its distinctive character, and becomes the task-master of +idleness.--_Willmott._ + +~Analogy.~--Analogy, although it is not infallible, is yet that telescope +of the mind by which it is marvelously assisted in the discovery of both +physical and moral truth.--_Colton._ + +~Anarchy.~--The choking, sweltering, deadly, and killing rule of no rule; +the consecration of cupidity and braying of folly, and dim stupidity and +baseness, in most of the affairs of men. Slop-shirts attainable +three-half-pence cheaper by the ruin of living bodies and immortal +souls.--_Carlyle._ + +~Ancestry.~--We take rank by descent. Such of us as have the longest +pedigree, and are therefore the furthest removed from the first who made +the fortune and founded the family, we are the noblest. The nearer to +the fountain the fouler the stream: and that first ancestor who has +soiled his fingers by labor is no better than a parvenu.--_Froude._ + +Breed is stronger than pasture.--_George Eliot._ + +The glory of ancestors sheds a light around posterity; it allows neither +their good nor bad qualities to remain in obscurity.--_Sallust._ + +Nobility of birth does not always insure a corresponding nobility of +mind; if it did, it would always act as a stimulus to noble actions; but +it sometimes acts as a clog rather than a spur.--_Colton._ + +Honorable descent is in all nations greatly esteemed; besides, it is to +be expected that the children of men of worth will be like their +fathers, for nobility is the virtue of a family.--_Aristotle._ + +A long series of ancestors shows the native lustre with advantage; but +if he any way degenerate from his line, the least spot is visible on +ermine.--_Dryden._ + +The happiest lot for a man, as far as birth is concerned, is that it +should be such as to give him but little occasion to think much about +it.--_Whately._ + +~Ancients.~--In tragedy and satire I maintain, against some critics, that +this age and the last have excelled the ancients; and I would instance +in Shakespeare of the former, in Dorset of the latter.--_Dryden._ + +Though the knowledge they have left us be worth our study, yet they +exhausted not all its treasures; they left a great deal for the industry +and sagacity of after-ages.--_Locke._ + +~Angels.~--In old days there were angels who came and took men by the hand +and led them away from the city of destruction. We see no white-winged +angels now. But yet men are led away from threatening destruction: a +hand is put in theirs, which leads them forth gently towards a calm and +bright land, so that they look no more backward; and the hand may be a +little child's.--_George Eliot._ + +Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth unseen, both when we wake +and when we sleep.--_Milton._ + +~Anger.~--If a man meets with injustice, it is not required that he shall +not be roused to meet it; but if he is angry after he has had time to +think upon it, that is sinful. The flame is not wrong, but the coals +are.--_Beecher._ + +Temperate anger well becomes the wise.--_Philemon._ + +When anger rushes, unrestrained, to action, like a hot steed, it +stumbles in its way.--_Savage._ + +Bad temper is its own scourge. Few things are bitterer than to feel +bitter. A man's venom poisons himself more than his victim.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +Above all, gentlemen, no heat.--_Talleyrand._ + +Anger ventilated often hurries towards forgiveness; anger concealed +often hardens into revenge.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Keep cool and you command everybody.--_St. Just._ + +I never work better than when I am inspired by anger; when I am angry I +can write, pray, and preach well; for then my whole temperament is +quickened, my understanding sharpened, and all mundane vexations and +temptations depart.--_Luther._ + +When one is in a good sound rage, it is astonishing how calm one can +be.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Angling.~--I give up fly-fishing; it is a light, volatile, dissipated +pursuit. But ground-bait with a good steady float that never bobs +without a bite is an occupation for a bishop, and in no way interferes +with sermon-making.--_Sydney Smith._ + +He that reads Plutarch shall find that angling was not contemptible in +the days of Mark Antony and Cleopatra.--_Izaak Walton._ + +Idle time not idly spent.--_Sir Henry Wotton._ + +To see the fish cut with her golden oars the silver stream and greedily +devour the treacherous bait.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Anticipation.~--It has been well said that no man ever sank under the +burden of the day. It is when to-morrow's burden is added to the burden +of to-day that the weight is more than a man can bear.--_George +MacDonald._ + +The craving for a delicate fruit is pleasanter than the fruit +itself.--_Herder._ + +The hours we pass with happy prospects in view are more pleasing than +those crowned with fruition. In the first instance, we cook the dish to +our own appetite; in the latter, nature cooks it for us.--_Goldsmith._ + +We are apt to rely upon future prospects, and become really expensive +while we are only rich in possibility. We live up to our expectations, +not to our possessions, and make a figure proportionable to what we may +be, not what we are. We outrun our present income, as not doubting to +disburse ourselves out of the profits of some future place, project, or +reversion that we have in view.--_Addison._ + +Nothing is so good as it seems beforehand.--_George Eliot._ + +~Antiquarian.~--A thorough-paced antiquarian not only remembers what all +other people have thought proper to forget, but he also forgets what all +other people think it proper to remember.--_Colton._ + +The earliest and the longest has still the mastery over us.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Antithesis.~--Young people are dazzled by the brilliancy of antithesis, +and employ it.--_Bruyere._ + +Antithesis may be the blossom of wit, but it will never arrive at +maturity unless sound sense be the trunk, and truth the root.--_Colton._ + +~Apology.~--An apology in the original sense was a pleading off from some +charge or imputation, by explaining or defending principles or conduct. +It therefore amounted to a vindication.--_Crabbe._ + +Brother, brother, we are both in the wrong.--_Gay._ + +~Apothegms.~--Nor do apothegms only serve for ornament and delight, but +also for action and civil use, as being the edge tools of speech, which +cut and penetrate the knots of business and affairs.--_Bacon._ + +Exclusively of the abstract sciences, the largest and worthiest portion +of our knowledge consists of aphorisms, and the greatest and best of men +is but an aphorism.--_Coleridge._ + +Proverbs are potted wisdom.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Appeal.~--Seeing all men are not [OE]dipuses to read the riddle of +another man's inside, and most men judge by appearances, it behooves a +man to barter for a good esteem, even from his clothes and outside. We +guess the goodness of the pasture by the mantle we see it +wears.--_Feltham._ + +~Appearances.~--It is the appearances that fill the scene; and we pause +not to ask of what realities they are the proxies. When the actor of +Athens moved all hearts as he clasped the burial urn, and burst into +broken sobs, how few then knew that it held the ashes of his +son!--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +What waste, what misery, what bankruptcy, come from all this ambition to +dazzle others with the glare of apparent worldly success, we need not +describe. The mischievous results show themselves in a thousand ways--in +the rank frauds committed by men who dare to be dishonest, but do not +dare to seem poor; and in the desperate dashes at fortune, in which the +pity is not so much for those who fail, as for the hundreds of innocent +families who are so often involved in their ruin.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Foolish men mistake transitory semblances for eternal fact, and go +astray more and more.--_Carlyle._ + +What is a good appearance? It is not being pompous and starchy; for +proud looks lose hearts, and gentle words win them. It is not wearing +fine clothes; for such dressing tells the world that the outside is the +better part of the man. You cannot judge a horse by his harness; but a +modest, gentlemanly appearance, in which the dress is such as no one +could comment upon, is the right and most desirable thing.--_Spurgeon._ + +He was a man who stole the livery of the court of heaven to serve the +devil in.--_Pollok._ + +I more and more see this, that we judge men's abilities less from what +they say or do, than from what they look. 'T is the man's face that +gives him weight. His doings help, but not more than his brow.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +~Appetite.~--Some people have a foolish way of not minding, or pretending +not to mind, what they eat. For my part, I mind very studiously; for I +look upon it, that he who does not mind this, will hardly mind anything +else.--_Johnson._ + +Here's neither want of appetite nor mouths; pray Heaven we be not scant +of meat or mirth.--_Shakespeare._ + +This dish of meat is too good for any but anglers, or very honest +men.--_Izaak Walton._ + +And do as adversaries do in law,--strive mightily, but eat and drink as +friends.--_Shakespeare._ + +The table is the only place where we do not get weary during the first +hour.--_Brillat Savarin._ + +~Appreciation.~--Contemporaries appreciate the man rather than the merit; +but posterity will regard the merit rather than the man.--_Colton._ + +It so falls out that what we have we prize not to the worth while we +enjoy it; but being lacked and lost, why, then we rack the +value.--_Shakespeare._ + +A man is known to his dog by the smell--to the tailor by the coat--to +his friend by the smile; each of these know him, but how little or how +much depends on the dignity of the intelligence. That which is truly and +indeed characteristic of man is known only to God.--_Ruskin._ + +He who seems not to himself more than he is, is more than he +seems.--_Goethe._ + +Light is above us, and color surrounds us; but if we have not light and +color in our eyes, we shall not perceive them outside us.--_Goethe._ + +When a nation gives birth to a man who is able to produce a great +thought, another is born who is able to understand and admire +it.--_Joubert._ + +No story is the same to us after a lapse of time; or rather we who read +it are no longer the same interpreters.--_George Eliot._ + +Next to invention is the power of interpreting invention; next to beauty +the power of appreciating beauty.--_Margaret Fuller._ + +You will find poetry nowhere unless you bring some with you.--_Joubert._ + +~Architecture.~--Architecture is the art which so disposes and adorns the +edifices raised by man, for whatsoever uses, that the sight of them may +contribute to his mental health, power, and pleasure.--_Ruskin._ + +~Argument.~--There is no arguing with Johnson; for if his pistol misses +fire he knocks you down with the butt end of it.--_Goldsmith._ + +Weak arguments are often thrust before my path; but although they are +most unsubstantial, it is not easy to destroy them. There is not a more +difficult feat known than to cut through a cushion with a +sword.--_Bishop Whately._ + +Treating your adversary with respect is giving him an advantage to which +he is not entitled. The greatest part of men cannot judge of reasoning, +and are impressed by character; so that if you allow your adversary a +respectable character, they will think that, though you differ from him, +you may be in the wrong. Treating your adversary with respect is +striking soft in a battle.--_Johnson._ + +The soundest argument will produce no more conviction in an empty head +than the most superficial declamation; as a feather and a guinea fall +with equal velocity in a vacuum.--_Colton._ + +An ill argument introduced with deference will procure more credit than +the profoundest science with a rough, insolent, and noisy +management.--_Locke._ + +One may say, generally, that no deeply rooted tendency was ever +extirpated by adverse argument. Not having originally been founded on +argument, it cannot be destroyed by logic.--_G. H. Lewes._ + +A reason is often good, not because it is conclusive, but because it is +dramatic,--because it has the stamp of him who urges it, and is drawn +from his own resources. For there are arguments _ex homine_ as well as +_ad hominem_.--_Joubert._ + +If I were to deliver up my whole self to the arbitrament of special +pleaders, to-day I might be argued into an atheist, and to-morrow into a +pickpocket.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Aristocracy.~--And lords, whose parents were the Lord knows who.--_De +Foe._ + +What can they see in the longest kingly line in Europe, save that it +runs back to a successful soldier?--_Walter Scott._ + +If in an aristocracy the people be virtuous, they will enjoy very nearly +the same happiness as in a popular government, and the state will become +powerful.--_Montesquieu._ + +An aristocracy is the true, the only support of a monarchy. Without it +the State is a vessel without a rudder--a balloon in the air. A true +aristocracy, however, must be ancient. Therein consists its real +force,--its talismanic charm.--_Napoleon._ + +I never could believe that Providence had sent a few men into the world, +ready booted and spurred to ride, and millions ready saddled and bridled +to be ridden.--_Richard Rumbold._ + +~Armor.~--The best armor is to keep out of gunshot.--_Lord Bacon._ + +Our armor all is strong, our cause the best; then reason wills our +hearts should be as good.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Art.~--Rules may teach us not to raise the arms above the head; but if +passion carries them, it will be well done: passion knows more than +art.--_Baron._ + +It is a great mortification to the vanity of man that his utmost art and +industry can never equal the meanest of nature's productions, either for +beauty or value. Art is only the underworkman, and is employed to give a +few strokes of embellishment to those pieces which come from the hand of +the master.--_Hume._ + +The mission of art is to represent nature; not to imitate her.--_W. M. +Hunt._ + +True art is not the caprice of this or that individual, it is a solemn +page either of history or prophecy; and when, as always in Dante and +occasionally in Byron, it combines and harmonizes this double mission, +it reaches the highest summit of power.--_Mazzini._ + +Art is the right hand of Nature. The latter has only given us being, the +former has made us men.--_Schiller._ + +Art does not imitate nature, but it founds itself on the study of +nature--takes from nature the selections which best accord with its own +intention, and then bestows on them that which nature does not possess, +namely, the mind and the soul of man.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The mother of useful arts is necessity; that of the fine arts is +luxury.--_Schopenhaufer._ + +He who seeks popularity in art closes the door on his own genius, as he +must needs paint for other minds and not for his own.--_Washington +Allston._ + +In art, form is everything; matter, nothing.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Strange thing art, especially music. Out of an art a man may be so +trivial you would mistake him for an imbecile, at best a grown infant. +Put him into his art, and how high he soars above you! How quietly he +enters into a heaven of which he has become a denizen, and, unlocking +the gates with his golden key, admits you to follow, an humble, reverent +visitor.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Art does not imitate, but interpret.--_Mazzini._ + +The artist is the child in the popular fable, every one of whose tears +was a pearl. Ah! the world, that cruel step-mother, beats the poor child +the harder to make him shed more pearls.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +In art there is a point of perfection, as of goodness or maturity in +nature; he who is able to perceive it, and who loves it, has perfect +taste; he who does not feel it, or loves on this side or that, has an +imperfect taste.--_Bruyere._ + +Never judge a work of art by its defects.--_Washington Allston._ + +~Asceticism.~--I recommend no sour ascetic life. I believe not only in the +thorns on the rosebush, but in the roses which the thorns defend. +Asceticism is the child of sensuality and superstition. She is the +secret mother of many a secret sin. God, when he made man's body, did +not give us a fibre too much, nor a passion too many. I would steal no +violet from the young maiden's bosom; rather would I fill her arms with +more fragrant roses. But a life merely of pleasure, or chiefly of +pleasure, is always a poor and worthless life, not worth the living; +always unsatisfactory in its course, always miserable in its +end.--_Theodore Parker._ + +In hope to merit heaven by making earth a hell.--_Byron._ + +Three forms of asceticism have existed in this weak world. Religious +asceticism, being the refusal of pleasure and knowledge for the sake--as +supposed--of religion; seen chiefly in the Middle Ages. Military +asceticism, being the refusal of pleasure and knowledge for the sake of +power; seen chiefly in the early days of Sparta and Rome. And monetary +asceticism, consisting in the refusal of pleasure and knowledge for the +sake of money; seen in the present days of London and +Manchester.--_Ruskin._ + +~Aspiration.~--The negro king desired to be portrayed as white. But do not +laugh at the poor African; for every man is but another negro king, and +would like to appear in a color different from that with which Fate has +bedaubed him.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +There is no sorrow I have thought more about than that--to love what is +great, and try to reach it, and yet to fail.--_George Eliot._ + +The heart is a small thing, but desireth great matters. It is not +sufficient for a kite's dinner, yet the whole world is not sufficient +for it.--_Quarles._ + +There must be something beyond man in this world. Even on attaining to +his highest possibilities, he is like a bird beating against his cage. +There is something beyond, O deathless soul, like a sea-shell, moaning +for the bosom of the ocean to which you belong!--_Chapin._ + +Oh for a muse of fire, that would ascend the brightest heaven of +invention! A kingdom for a stage, princes to act, and monarchs to behold +the swelling scene.--_Shakespeare._ + +The heavens are as deep as our aspirations are high.--_Thoreau._ + +It seems to me we can never give up longing and wishing while we are +thoroughly alive. There are certain things we feel to be beautiful and +good, and we _must_ hunger after them.--_George Eliot._ + +~Associates.~--Costly followers are not to be liked; lest while a man +maketh his train longer, he makes his wings shorter.--_Bacon._ + +Be very circumspect in the choice of thy company. In the society of +thine equals thou shall enjoy more pleasure; in the society of thy +superiors thou shalt find more profit. To be the best in the company is +the way to grow worse; the best means to grow better is to be the worst +there.--_Quarles._ + +A man should live with his superiors as he does with his fire: not too +near, lest he burn; nor too far off, lest he freeze.--_Diogenes._ + +As there are some flowers which you should smell but slightly to extract +all that is pleasant in them, and which, if you do otherwise, emit what +is unpleasant and noxious, so there are some men with whom a slight +acquaintance is quite sufficient to draw out all that is agreeable; a +more intimate one would be unsatisfactory and unsafe.--_Landor._ + +Those who are unacquainted with the world take pleasure in the intimacy +of great men; those who are wiser dread the consequences.--_Horace._ + +~Atheism.~--By burning an atheist, you have lent importance to that which +was absurd, interest to that which was forbidding, light to that which +was the essence of darkness. For atheism is a system which can +communicate neither warmth nor illumination except from those fagots +which your mistaken zeal has lighted up for its destruction.--_Colton._ + +One of the most daring beings in creation, a contemner of God, who +explodes his laws by denying his existence.--_John Foster._ + +~Authority.~--Reasons of things are rather to be taken by weight than +tale.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +The world is ruled by the subordinates, not by their chiefs.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +~Authors.~--Authors may be divided into falling stars, planets, and fixed +stars: the first have a momentary effect. The second have a much longer +duration. But the third are unchangeable, possess their own light, and +work for all time.--_Schopenhaufer._ + +Satire lies about men of letters during their lives, and eulogy after +their death.--_Voltaire._ + +It is commonly the personal character of a writer which gives him his +public significance. It is not imparted by his genius. Napoleon said of +Corneille, "Were he living I would make him a king;" but he did not read +him. He read Racine, yet he said nothing of the kind of Racine. It is +for the same reason that La Fontaine is held in such high esteem among +the French. It is not for his worth as a poet, but for the greatness of +his character which obtrudes in his writings.--_Goethe._ + +Choose an author as you choose a friend.--_Roscommon._ + +Herder and Schiller both in their youth intended to study as surgeons, +but Destiny said: "No, there are deeper wounds than those of the +body,--heal the deeper!" and they wrote.--_Richter._ + +A woman who writes commits two sins: she increases the number of books, +and decreases the number of women.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +Thanks and honor to the glorious masters of the pen.--_Hood._ + +The society of dead authors has this advantage over that of the living: +they never flatter us to our faces, nor slander us behind our backs, nor +intrude upon our privacy, nor quit their shelves until we take them +down.--_Colton._ + +Clear writers, like clear fountains, do not seem so deep as they are, +the turbid looks most profound.--_Landor._ + +When we look back upon human records, how the eye settles upon writers +as the main landmarks of the past.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Autumn.~--Season of mist and mellow fruitfulness.--_Keats._ + +The Sabbath of the year.--_Logan._ + +~Avarice.~--Though avarice will preserve a man from being necessitously +poor, it generally makes him too timorous to be wealthy.--_Thomas +Paine._ + +Avarice is more unlovely than mischievous.--_Landor._ + +The German poet observes that the Cow of Isis is to some the divine +symbol of knowledge, to others but the milch cow, only regarded for the +pounds of butter she will yield. O tendency of our age, to look on Isis +as the milch cow!--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Worse poison to men's souls, doing more murders in this loathsome world +than any mortal drug.--_Shakespeare._ + +Avarice is generally the last passion of those lives of which the first +part has been squandered in pleasure, and the second devoted to +ambition. He that sinks under the fatigue of getting wealth, lulls his +age with the milder business of saving it.--_Johnson._ + + +B. + +~Babblers.~--Who think too little, and who talk too much.--_Dryden._ + +They always talk who never think.--_Prior._ + +Talkers are no good doers.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Babe.~--It is curious to see how a self-willed, haughty girl, who sets +her father and mother and all at defiance, and can't be managed by +anybody, at once finds her master in a baby. Her sister's child will +strike the rock and set all her affections flowing.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Bargain.~--What is the disposition which makes men rejoice in good +bargains? There are few people who will not be benefited by pondering +over the morals of shopping.--_Beecher._ + +A dear bargain is always disagreeable, particularly as it is a +reflection upon the buyer's judgment.--_Pliny._ + +~Bashfulness.~--Bashfulness may sometimes exclude pleasure, but seldom +opens any avenue to sorrow or remorse.--_Johnson._ + +Bashfulness is a great hindrance to a man, both in uttering his +sentiments and in understanding what is proposed to him; 'tis therefore +good to press forward with discretion, both in discourse and company of +the better sort.--_Bacon._ + +~Beauty.~--The beautiful is always severe.--_Segur._ + +For converse among men, beautiful persons have less need of the mind's +commending qualities. Beauty in itself is such a silent orator, that it +is ever pleading for respect and liking, and, by the eyes of others is +ever sending to their hearts for love. Yet even this hath this +inconvenience in it--that it makes its possessor neglect the furnishing +of the mind with nobleness. Nay, it oftentimes is a cause that the mind +is ill.--_Feltham._ + +Man has still more desire for beauty than knowledge of it; hence the +caprices of the world.--_X. Doudan._ + +No better cosmetics than a severe temperance and purity, modesty and +humility, a gracious temper and calmness of spirit; no true beauty +without the signature of these graces in the very countenance.--_John +Ray._ + +An appearance of delicacy, and even of fragility, is almost essential to +beauty.--_Burke._ + +I am of opinion that there is nothing so beautiful but that there is +something still more beautiful, of which this is the mere image and +expression,--a something which can neither be perceived by the eyes, the +ears, nor any of the senses; we comprehend it merely in the +imagination.--_Cicero._ + +A lovely girl is above all rank.--_Charles Buxton._ + +There is more or less of pathos in all true beauty. The delight it +awakens has an indefinable, and, as it were, luxurious sadness, which is +perhaps one element of its might.--_Tuckerman._ + +Beauty is the first present nature gives to women and the first it takes +away.--_Mere._ + +In ourselves, rather than in material nature, lie the true source and +life of the beautiful. The human soul is the sun which diffuses light on +every side, investing creation with its lovely hues, and calling forth +the poetic element that lies hidden in every existing thing.--_Mazzini._ + +Beauty is God's handwriting, a wayside sacrament.--_Milton._ + +Beauty deceives women in making them establish on an ephemeral power the +pretensions of a whole life.--_Bignicout._ + +If there is a fruit that can be eaten raw, it is beauty.--_Alphonse +Karr._ + +Those critics who, in modern times, have the most thoughtfully analyzed +the laws of aesthetic beauty, concur in maintaining that the real +truthfulness of all works of imagination--sculpture, painting, written +fiction--is so purely in the imagination, that the artist never seeks to +represent the positive truth, but the idealized image of a +truth.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +An outward gift which is seldom despised, except by those to whom it has +been refused.--_Gibbon._ + +It is impossible that beauty should ever distinctly apprehend +itself.--_Goethe._ + +~Bed.~--The bed is a bundle of paradoxes: we go to it with reluctance, yet +we quit it with regret; we make up our minds every night to leave it +early, but we make up our bodies every morning to keep it +late.--_Colton._ + +What a delightful thing rest is! The bed has become a place of luxury to +me! I would not exchange it for all the thrones in the +world.--_Napoleon._ + +~Beggars.~--He is never out of the fashion, or limpeth awkwardly behind +it. He is not required to put on court mourning. He weareth all colors, +fearing none. His costume hath undergone less change than the Quaker's. +He is the only man in the universe who is not obliged to study +appearances.--_Lamb._ + +Aspiring beggary is wretchedness itself.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Benevolence.~--There cannot be a more glorious object in creation than a +human being, replete with benevolence, meditating in what manner he +might render himself most acceptable to his Creator by doing most good +to his creatures.--_Fielding._ + +Genuine benevolence is not stationary but peripatetic. It _goeth_ about +doing good.--_Nevins._ + +It is an argument of a candid, ingenuous mind to delight in the good +name and commendations of others; to pass by their defects and take +notice of their virtues; and to speak or hear willingly of the latter; +for in this indeed you may be little less guilty than the evil speaker, +in taking pleasure in evil, though you speak it not.--_Leighton._ + +The root of all benevolent actions is filial piety and fraternal +love.--_Confucius._ + +True benevolence is to love all men. Recompense injury with justice, and +kindness with kindness.--_Confucius._ + +It is in contemplating man at a distance that we become +benevolent.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Bible.~--As those wines which flow from the first treading of the grapes +are sweeter and better than those forced out by the press, which gives +them the roughness of the husk and the stone, so are those doctrines +best and sweetest which flow from a gentle crush of the Scriptures and +are not wrung into controversies and commonplaces.--_Bacon._ + +They who are not induced to believe and live as they ought by those +discoveries which God hath made in Scripture, would stand out against +any evidence whatever; even that of a messenger sent express from the +other world.--_Atterbury._ + +But what is meant, after all, by _uneducated_, in a time when books have +come into the world--come to be household furniture in every habitation +of the civilized world? In the poorest cottage are books--is one book, +wherein for several thousands of years the spirit of man has found light +and nourishment and an interpreting response to whatever is deepest in +him.--_Carlyle._ + +A stream where alike the elephant may swim and the lamb may +wade.--_Gregory the Great._ + +All human discoveries seem to be made only for the purpose of confirming +more strongly the truths come from on high, and contained in the sacred +writings.--_Herschel._ + +I am heartily glad to witness your veneration for a book which, to say +nothing of its holiness or authority, contains more specimens of genius +and taste than any other volume in existence.--_Landor._ + +~Bigotry.~--A proud bigot, who is vain enough to think that he can deceive +even God by affected zeal, and throwing the veil of holiness over vices, +damns all mankind by the word of his power.--_Boileau._ + +Persecuting bigots may be compared to those burning lenses which +Lenhenhoeck and others composed from ice; by their chilling apathy they +freeze the suppliant; by their fiery zeal they burn the +sufferer.--_Colton._ + +A man must be excessively stupid, as well as uncharitable, who believes +there is no virtue but on his own side.--_Addison._ + +The worst of mad men is a saint run mad.--_Pope._ + +~Biography.~--As in the case of painters, who have undertaken to give us a +beautiful and graceful figure, which may have some slight blemishes, we +do not wish them to pass over such blemishes altogether, nor yet to mark +them too prominently. The one would spoil the beauty, and the other +destroy the likeness of the picture.--_Plutarch._ + +Biographies of great, but especially of good men, are most instructive +and useful as helps, guides, and incentives to others. Some of the best +are almost equivalent to gospels--teaching high living, high thinking, +and energetic action for their own and the world's good.--_Samuel +Smiles._ + +It is rarely well executed. They only who live with a man can write his +life with any genuine exactness and discrimination; and few people, who +have lived with a man, know what to remark about him.--_Johnson._ + +History can be formed from permanent monuments and records; but lives +can only be written from personal knowledge, which is growing every day +less, and in a short time is lost forever.--_Johnson._ + +Occasionally a single anecdote opens a character; biography has its +comparative anatomy, and a saying or a sentiment enables the skillful +hand to construct the skeleton.--_Willmott._ + +To be ignorant of the lives of the most celebrated men of antiquity is +to continue in a state of childhood all our days.--_Plutarch._ + +~Birth.~--Noble in appearance, but this is mere outside; many noble born +are base.--_Euripides._ + +~Blessings.~--The good things of life are not to be had singly, but come +to us with a mixture; like a schoolboy's holiday, with a task affixed to +the tail of it.--_Charles Lamb._ + +Blessedness consists in the accomplishment of our desires, and in our +having only regular desires.--_St. Augustine._ + +We mistake the gratuitous blessings of Heaven for the fruits of our own +industry.--_L'Estrange._ + +Health, beauty, vigor, riches, and all the other things called goods, +operate equally as evils to the vicious and unjust as they do as +benefits to the just.--_Plato._ + +How blessings brighten as they take their flight!--_Young._ + +Reflect upon your present blessings, of which every man has many: not on +your past misfortunes, of which all men have some.--_Charles Dickens._ + +~Blush.~--The ambiguous livery worn alike by modesty and shame.--_Mrs. +Balfour._ + +I have mark'd a thousand blushing apparitions to start into her face; a +thousand innocent shames, in angel whiteness, bear away those +blushes.--_Shakespeare._ + +The glow of the angel in woman.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Such blushes as adorn the ruddy welkin or the purple morn.--_Ovid._ + +Luminous escapes of thought.--_Moore._ + +~Blustering.~--Because half a dozen grasshoppers under a fern make the +field ring with their importunate chink, whilst thousands of great +cattle, reposing beneath the shadow of the British oak, chew the cud and +are silent, pray do not imagine that those who make the noise are the +only inhabitants of the field--that, of course, they are many in +number,--or, that, after all, they are other than the little, shriveled, +meagre, hopping, though loud and troublesome, insects of the +hour.--_Burke._ + +There are braying men in the world as well as braying asses; for what is +loud and senseless talking any other than a way of +braying.--_L'Estrange._ + +Wine and the sun will make vinegar without any shouting to help +them.--_George Eliot._ + +~Boasting.~--Usually the greatest boasters are the smallest workers. The +deep rivers pay a larger tribute to the sea than shallow brooks, and yet +empty themselves with less noise.--_W. Secker._ + +With all his tumid boasts, he's like the sword-fish, who only wears his +weapon in his mouth.--_Madden._ + +Every braggart shall be found an ass.--_Shakespeare._ + +Self-laudation abounds among the unpolished, but nothing can stamp a man +more sharply as ill-bred.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Boldness.~--Who bravely dares must sometimes risk a fall.--_Smollett._ + +Women like brave men exceedingly, but audacious men still +more.--_Lemesles._ + +~Bondage.~--The iron chain and the silken cord, both equally are +bonds.--_Schiller._ + +~Books.~--If a secret history of books could be written, and the author's +private thoughts and meanings noted down alongside of his story, how +many insipid volumes would become interesting, and dull tales excite the +reader!--_Thackeray._ + +When a new book comes out I read an old one.--_Rogers._ + +Be as careful of the books you read as of the company you keep; for your +habits and character will be as much influenced by the former as the +latter.--_Paxton Hood._ + +Homeliness is almost as great a merit in a book as in a house, if the +reader would abide there. It is next to beauty, and a very high +art.--_Thoreau._ + +A book _is_ good company. It is full of conversation without loquacity. +It comes to your longing with full instruction, but pursues you never. +It is not offended at your absent-mindedness, nor jealous if you turn to +other pleasures. It silently serves the soul without recompense, not +even for the hire of love. And yet more noble,--it seems to pass from +itself, and to enter the memory, and to hover in a silvery +transfiguration there, until the outward book is but a body, and its +soul and spirit are flown to you, and possess your memory like a +spirit.--_Beecher._ + +If the crowns of all the kingdoms of Europe were laid down at my feet in +exchange for my books and my love of reading, I would spurn them +all.--_Fenelon._ + +We ought to regard books as we do sweetmeats, not wholly to aim at the +pleasantest, but chiefly to respect the wholesomest; not forbidding +either, but approving the latter most.--_Plutarch._ + +To buy books only because they were published by an eminent printer, is +much as if a man should buy clothes that did not fit him, only because +made by some famous tailor.--_Pope._ + +The medicine of the mind.--_Diodorus._ + +Let every man, if possible, gather some good books under his +roof.--_Channing._ + +Wise books for half the truths they hold are honored tombs.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Bores.~--I am constitutionally susceptible of noises. A carpenter's +hammer, in a warm summer's noon, will fret me into more than midsummer +madness. But those unconnected, unset sounds are nothing to the measured +malice of music.--_Lamb._ + +These, wanting wit, affect gravity, and go by the name of solid +men.--_Dryden._ + +If we engage into a large acquaintance and various familiarities, we set +open our gates to the invaders of most of our time; we expose our life +to a quotidian ague of frigid impertinences which would make a wise man +tremble to think of.--_Cowley._ + +The symptoms of compassion and benevolence, in some people, are like +those minute guns which warn you that you are in deadly peril!--_Madame +Swetchine._ + +~Borrowing.~--You should only attempt to borrow from those who have but +few of this world's goods, as their chests are not of iron, and they +are, besides, anxious to appear wealthier than they really +are.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +According to the security you offer to her, Fortune makes her loans easy +or ruinous.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Bravery.~--True bravery is shown by performing without witnesses what one +might be capable of doing before all the world.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +'Tis late before the brave despair.--_Thompson._ + +The bravest men are subject most to chance.--_Dryden._ + +The truly brave are soft of heart and eyes.--_Byron._ + +People glorify all sorts of bravery except the bravery they might show +on behalf of their nearest neighbors.--_George Eliot._ + +~Brevity.~--To make pleasures pleasant shorten them.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Was there ever anything written by mere man that was wished longer by +its readers, excepting Don Quixote, Robinson Crusoe, and the Pilgrim's +Progress?--_Johnson._ + +A sentence well couched takes both the sense and understanding. I love +not those cart-rope speeches that are longer than the memory of man can +fathom.--_Feltham._ + +I saw one excellency was within my reach--it was brevity, and I +determined to obtain it.--_Jay._ + +Be brief; for it is with words as with sunbeams--the more they are +condensed, the deeper they burn.--_Southey._ + +Concentration alone conquers.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The more an idea is developed, the more concise becomes its expression: +the more a tree is pruned, the better is the fruit.--_Alfred Bougeart._ + +Oratory, like the Drama, abhors lengthiness; like the Drama, it must be +kept doing. It avoids, as frigid, prolonged metaphysical soliloquy. +Beauties themselves, if they delay or distract the effect which should +be produced on the audience, become blemishes.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The fewer words the better prayer.--_Luther._ + +~Business.~--Not because of any extraordinary talents did he succeed, but +because he had a capacity on a level for business and not above +it.--_Tacitus._ + + +C. + +~Calumny.~--Neglected calumny soon expires; show that you are hurt, and +you give it the appearance of truth.--_Tacitus._ + +Calumny crosses oceans, scales mountains, and traverses deserts with +greater ease than the Scythian Abaris, and, like him, rides upon a +poisoned arrow.--_Colton._ + +~Cant.~--The affectation of some late authors to introduce and multiply +cant words is the most ruinous corruption in any language.--_Swift._ + +There is such a thing as a peculiar word or phrase cleaving, as it were, +to the memory of the writer or speaker, and presenting itself to his +utterance at every turn. When we observe this, we call it a cant word or +a cant phrase.--_Paley._ + +~Caution.~--Whenever our neighbor's house is on fire, it cannot be amiss +for the engines to play a little on our own. Better to be despised for +too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a +security.--_Burke._ + +~Censure.~--Censure pardons the ravens, but rebukes the doves.--_Juvenal._ + +We do not like our friends the worse because they sometimes give us an +opportunity to rail at them heartily. Their faults reconcile us to their +virtues.--_Hazlitt._ + +Censure is like the lightning which strikes the highest +mountains.--_Balthasar Gracian._ + +~Chance.~--There must be chance in the midst of design; by which we mean +that events which are not designed necessarily arise from the pursuit of +events which are designed.--_Paley._ + +Chance generally favors the prudent.--_Joubert._ + +It is strictly and philosophically true in nature and reason that there +is no such thing as chance or accident; it being evident that these +words do not signify anything really existing, anything that is truly an +agent or the cause of any event; but they signify merely men's ignorance +of the real and immediate cause.--_Adam Clarke._ + +What can be more foolish than to think that all this rare fabric of +heaven and earth could come by chance, when all the skill of art is not +able to make an oyster!--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +He who distrusts the security of chance takes more pains to effect the +safety which results from labor. To find what you seek in the road of +life, the best proverb of all is that which says: "Leave no stone +unturned."--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Change.~--The great world spins forever down the ringing grooves of +change.--_Tennyson._ + +A change came o'er the spirit of my dream.--_Byron._ + +In this world of change, naught which comes stays, and naught which goes +is lost.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Character.~--As there is much beast and some devil in man, so is there +some angel and some God in him. The beast and the devil may be +conquered, but in this life never destroyed.--_Coleridge._ + +Character is not cut in marble--it is not something solid and +unalterable. It is something living and changing, and may become +diseased as our bodies do.--_George Eliot._ + +Grit is the grain of character. It may generally be described as heroism +materialized,--spirit and will thrust into heart, brain, and backbone, +so as to form part of the physical substance of the man.--_Whipple._ + +Depend upon it, you would gain unspeakably if you would learn with me to +see some of the poetry and the pathos, the tragedy and the comedy, lying +in the experience of a human soul that looks out through dull gray eyes, +and that speaks in a voice of quite ordinary tones.--_George Eliot._ + +Character is the diamond that scratches every other stone--_Bartol._ + +Character is human nature in its best form. It is moral order embodied +in the individual. Men of character are not only the conscience of +society, but in every well-governed state they are its best motive +power; for it is moral qualities in the main which rule the +world.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +He whose life seems fair, if all his errors and follies were articled +against him would seem vicious and miserable.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +In common discourse we denominate persons and things according to the +major part of their character: he is to be called a wise man who has but +few follies.--_Watts._ + +Never does a man portray his own character more vividly than in his +manner of portraying another.--_Richter._ + +We are not that we are, nor do we treat or esteem each other for such, +but for that we are capable of being.--_Thoreau._ + +~Charity.~--Charity is a principle of prevailing love to God and good-will +to men, which effectually inclines one endued with it to glorify God, +and to do good to others.--_Cruden._ + +The highest exercise of charity is charity towards the +uncharitable.--_Buckminster._ + +The charities that soothe, and heat, and bless, lie scattered at the +feet of men like flowers.--_Wordsworth._ + +Prayer carries us half way to God, fasting brings us to the door of his +palace, and alms-giving procures us admission.--_Koran._ + +Shall we repine at a little misplaced charity, we who could no way +foresee the effect,--when an all-knowing, all-wise Being showers down +every day his benefits on the unthankful and undeserving?--_Atterbury._ + +As the purse is emptied the heart is filled.--_Victor Hugo._ + +What we employ in charitable uses during our lives is given away from +ourselves: what we bequeath at our death is given from others only, as +our nearest relations.--_Atterbury._ + +Goodness answers to the theological virtue of charity, and admits no +excess but error; the desire of power in excess caused the angels to +fall; the desire of knowledge in excess caused man to fall; but in +charity there is no excess: neither can angel or man come into danger by +it.--_Bacon._ + +Poplicola's doors were opened on the outside, to save the people even +the common civility of asking entrance; where misfortune was a powerful +recommendation, and where want itself was a powerful +mediator.--_Dryden._ + +When thy brother has lost all that he ever had, and lies languishing, +and even gasping under the utmost extremities of poverty and distress, +dost thou think to lick him whole again only with thy tongue?--_South._ + +What we frankly give, forever is our own.--_Granville._ + +Faith and hope themselves shall die, while deathless charity +remains.--_Prior._ + +The place of charity, like that of God, is everywhere.--_Professor +Vinet._ + +People do not care to give alms without some security for their money; +and a wooden leg or a withered arm is a sort of draftment upon heaven +for those who choose to have their money placed to account +there.--_Mackenzie._ + +~Chastity.~--Chastity enables the soul to breathe a pure air in the +foulest places; continence makes her strong, no matter in what condition +the body may be; her sway over the senses makes her queenly; her light +and peace render her beautiful.--_Joubert._ + +~Cheerfulness.~--Cheerfulness is also an excellent wearing quality. It has +been called the bright weather of the heart.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +There is no Christian duty that is not to be seasoned and set off with +cheerishness,--which in a thousand outward and intermitting crosses may +yet be done well, as in this vale of tears.--_Milton._ + +Such a man, truly wise, creams of nature, leaving the sour and the dregs +for philosophy and reason to lap up.--_Swift._ + +Be thou like the bird perched upon some frail thing, although he feels +the branch bending beneath him, yet loudly sings, knowing full well that +he has wings.--_Mme. de Gasparin._ + +~Children.~--With children we must mix gentleness with firmness; they must +not always have their own way, but they must not always be thwarted. If +we never have headaches through rebuking them, we shall have plenty of +heartaches when they grow up. Be obeyed at all costs. If you yield up +your authority once, you will hardly ever get it again.--_Spurgeon._ + +The smallest children are nearest to God, as the smallest planets are +nearest the sun.--_Richter._ + +The death of a child occasions a passion of grief and frantic tears, +such as your end, brother reader, will never inspire.--_Thackeray._ + +Childhood has no forebodings; but then, it is soothed by no memories of +outlived sorrow.--_George Eliot._ + +Children are excellent physiognomists and soon discover their real +friends. Luttrell calls them all lunatics, and so in fact they are. What +is childhood but a series of happy delusions?--_Sydney Smith._ + +The clew of our destiny, wander where we will, lies at the cradle +foot.--_Richter._ + +A house is never perfectly furnished for enjoyment unless there is a +child in it rising three years old, and a kitten rising three +weeks.--_Southey._ + +Children have more need of models than of critics.--_Joubert._ + +The bearing and training of a child is woman's wisdom.--_Tennyson._ + +One of the greatest pleasures of childhood is found in the mysteries +which it hides from the skepticism of the elders, and works up into +small mythologies of its own.--_Holmes._ + +Do not shorten the beautiful veil of mist covering childhood's futurity, +by too hastily drawing away; but permit that joy to be of early +commencement and of long duration, which lights up life so beautifully. +The longer the morning dew remains hanging in the blossoms of flowers, +the more beautiful the day.--_Richter._ + +Where children are there is the golden age.--_Novalis._ + +In the man whose childhood has known caresses there is always a fibre of +memory that can be touched to gentle issues.--_George Eliot._ + +The first duty towards children is to make them happy. If you have not +made them happy, you have wronged them; no other good they may get can +make up for that.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Christ.~--Our religion sets before us, not the example of a stupid stoic +who had by obstinate principles hardened himself against all sense of +pain beyond the common measures of humanity, but an example of a man +like ourselves, that had a tender sense of the least suffering, and yet +patiently endured the greatest.--_Tillotson._ + +However consonant to reason his precepts appeared, nothing could have +tempted men to acknowledge him as their God and Saviour but their being +firmly persuaded of the miracles he wrought.--_Addison._ + +Imitate Jesus Christ.--_Franklin._ + +The history of Christ is as surely poetry as it is history, and in +general, only that history is history which might also be +fable.--_Novalis._ + +~Christianity.~--Christianity is within a man, even as he is gifted with +reason; it is associated with your mother's chair, and with the first +remembered tones of her blessed voice.--_Coleridge._ + +There was never law, or sect, or opinion, did so much magnify goodness +as the Christian religion doth.--_Bacon._ + +No religion ever appeared in the world whose natural tendency was so +much directed to promote the peace and happiness of mankind. It makes +right reason a law in every possible definition of the word. And +therefore, even supposing it to have been purely a human invention, it +had been the most amiable and the most useful invention that was ever +imposed on mankind for their good.--_Lord Bolingbroke._ + +Far beyond all other political powers of Christianity is the demiurgic +power of this religion over the kingdoms of human opinion.--_De +Quincey._ + +Christianity is the companion of liberty in all its conflicts,--the +cradle of its infancy and the divine source of its claims.--_De +Tocqueville._ + +Nature never gives to a living thing capacities not particularly meant +for its benefit and use. If nature gives to us capacities to believe +that we have a Creator whom we never saw, of whom we have no direct +proof, who is kind and good and tender beyond all that we know of +kindness and goodness and tenderness on earth, it is because the +endowment of capacities to conceive a Being must be for our benefit and +use; it would not be for our benefit and use if it were a +lie.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +A man can no more be a Christian without facing evil and conquering it +than he can be a soldier without going to battle, facing the cannon's +mouth, and encountering the enemy in the field.--_Chapin._ + +There was never found in any age of the world, either philosophy, or +sect or religion, or law or discipline, which did so highly exalt the +good of communion, and depress good private and particular, as the holy +Christian faith: hence it clearly appears that it was one and the same +God that gave the Christian law to men who gave those laws of nature to +the creatures.--_Bacon._ + +Christianity is intensely practical. She has no trait more striking than +her common sense.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Christianity ruined emperors, but saved peoples. It opened the palaces +of Constantinople to the barbarians, but it opened the doors of cottages +to the consoling angels of the Saviour.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +Always put the best interpretation on a tenet. Why not on Christianity, +wholesome, sweet, and poetic? It is the record of a pure and holy soul, +humble, absolutely disinterested, a truth-speaker, and bent on serving, +teaching, and uplifting men. Christianity taught the capacity, the +element, to love the All-perfect without a stingy bargain for personal +happiness. It taught that to love him was happiness,--to love him in +others' virtues.--_Emerson._ + +Christian faith is a grand cathedral with divinely pictured windows. +Standing without, you see no glory nor can possibly imagine any; +standing within, every ray of light reveals a harmony of unspeakable +splendors.--_Hawthorne._ + +Christians are like the several flowers in a garden, that have each of +them the dew of heaven, which, being shaken with the wind, they let fall +at each other's roots, whereby they are jointly nourished, and become +nourishers of each other.--_Bunyan._ + +~Church.~--The Church is a union of men arising from the fellowship of +religious life; a union essentially independent of, and differing from, +all other forms of human association.--_Rev. Dr. Neander._ + +A place where misdevotion frames a thousand prayers to saints.--_Donne._ + +She may still exist in undiminished vigor, when some traveler from New +Zealand shall, in the midst of a vast solitude, take his stand on a +broken arch of London bridge, to sketch the ruins of St. +Paul's.--_Macaulay._ + +Surely the church is a place where one day's truce ought to be allowed +to the dissensions and animosities of mankind.--_Burke._ + +God never had a house of prayer but Satan had a chapel there.--_De Foe._ + +The church is a sort of hospital for men's souls, and as full of +quackery as the hospital for their bodies. Those who are taken into it +live like pensioners in their Retreat or Sailors' Snug Harbor, where you +may see a row of religious cripples sitting outside in sunny +weather.--_Thoreau._ + +~Circumstances.~--Circumstances are the rulers of the weak; they are but +the instruments of the wise.--_Samuel Lover._ + +What saves the virtue of many a woman is that protecting god, the +impossible.--_Balzac._ + +~Civilization.~--Mankind's struggle upwards, in which millions are +trampled to death, that thousands may mount on their bodies.--_Mrs. +Balfour._ + +The old Hindoo saw, in his dream, the human race led out to its various +fortunes. First men were in chains which went back to an iron hand. Then +he saw them led by threads from the brain, which went upward to an +unseen hand. The first was despotism, iron and ruling by force. The last +was civilization, ruling by ideas.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +Nations, like individuals, live and die; but civilization cannot +die.--_Mazzini._ + +~Clergymen.~--The life of a conscientious clergyman is not easy. I have +always considered a clergyman as the father of a larger family than he +is able to maintain. I would rather have Chancery suits upon my hands +than the cure of souls. I do not envy a clergyman's life as an easy +life, nor do I envy the clergyman who makes it an easy life.--_Johnson._ + +Clergymen consider this world only as a diligence in which they can +travel to another.--_Napoleon._ + +The clergy are as like as peas.--_Emerson._ + +~Commander.~--The right of commanding is no longer an advantage +transmitted by nature like an inheritance; it is the fruit of labors, +the price of courage.--_Voltaire._ + +The trident of Neptune is the sceptre of the world.--_Antoine Lemierre._ + +He who rules must humor full as much as he commands.--_George Eliot._ + +~Commerce.~--She may well be termed the younger sister, for, in all +emergencies, she looks to agriculture both for defense and for +supply.--_Colton._ + +Commerce defies every wind, outrides every tempest, and invades every +zone.--_Bancroft._ + +~Common Sense.~--If common sense has not the brilliancy of the sun it has +the fixity of the stars.--_Fernan Caballero._ + +~Communists.~--One who has yearnings for equal division of unequal +earnings. Idler or bungler, he is willing to fork out his penny and +pocket your shilling.--_Ebenezer Elliott._ + +Your leaders wish to level down as far as themselves; but they cannot +bear leveling up to themselves. They would all have some people under +them; why not then have some people above them.--_Johnson._ + +Communism possesses a language which every people can understand. Its +elements are hunger, envy, death.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +~Comparison.~--All comparisons are odious.--_Cervantes._ + +If we rightly estimate what we call good and evil, we shall find it lies +much in comparison.--_Locke._ + +~Compassion.~--The dew of compassion is a tear.--_Byron._ + +~Compensation.~--Cloud and rainbow appear together. There is wisdom in the +saying of Feltham, that the whole creation is kept in order by discord, +and that vicissitude maintains the world. Many evils bring many +blessings. Manna drops in the wilderness--corn grows in +Canaan.--_Willmott._ + +It is some compensation for great evils that they enforce great +lessons.--_Bovee._ + +~Complaining.~--We do not wisely when we vent complaint and censure. Human +nature is more sensible of smart in suffering than of pleasure in +rejoicing, and the present endurances easily take up our thoughts. We +cry out for a little pain, when we do but smile for a great deal of +contentment.--_Feltham._ + +Our condition never satisfies us; the present is always the worst. +Though Jupiter should grant his request to each, we should continue to +importune him.--_Fontaine._ + +~Conceit.~--Wind puffs up empty bladders; opinion, fools.--_Socrates._ + +Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? there is more hope of a fool +than of him.--_Bible._ + +Nature has sometimes made a fool, but a coxcomb is always of a man's own +making.--_Addison._ + +Everything without tells the individual that he is nothing; everything +within persuades him that he is everything.--_X. Doudan._ + +Apes look down on men as degenerate specimens of their own race, just as +Hollanders regard the German language as a corruption of the +Dutch.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +If its colors were but fast colors, self-conceit would be a most +comfortable quality. But life is so humbling, mortifying, disappointing +to vanity, that a man's great idea of himself gets washed out of him by +the time he is forty.--_Charles Buxton._ + +One's self-satisfaction is an untaxed kind of property which it is very +unpleasant to find depreciated.--_George Eliot._ + +The pious vanity of man makes him adore his own qualities under the +pretense of worshiping those of God.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Confidence.~--Confidence imparts a wondrous inspiration to its possessor. +It bears him on in security, either to meet no danger, or to find matter +of glorious trial.--_Milton._ + +Society is built upon trust, and trust upon confidence of one another's +integrity.--_South._ + +~Conscience.~--Conscience is not law; no, God and reason made the law, and +have placed conscience within you to determine.--_Sterne._ + +There are moments when the pale and modest star, kindled by God in +simple hearts, which men call conscience, illumines our path with truer +light than the flaming comet of genius on its magnificent +course.--_Mazzini._ + +No thralls like them that inward bondage have.--_Sir P. Sidney._ + +Some people have no perspective in their conscience. Their moral +convictions are the same on all subjects. They are like a reader who +speaks every word with equal emphasis.--_Beecher._ + +Conscience enables us not merely to learn the right by experiment and +induction, but intuitively and in advance of experiment; so, in addition +to the experimental way whereby we learn justice from the facts of human +history, we have a transcendental way, and learn it from the facts of +human nature, and from immediate consciousness.--_Theodore Parker._ + +A man's own conscience is his sole tribunal; and he should care no more +for that phantom "opinion" than he should fear meeting a ghost if he +cross the churchyard at dark.--_Lytton._ + +Conscience is a coward, and those faults it has not strength enough to +prevent it seldom has justice enough to accuse.--_Goldsmith._ + +To say that we have a clear conscience is to utter a solecism: had we +never sinned we should have had no conscience.--_Carlyle._ + +The most miserable pettifogging in the world is that of a man in the +court of his own conscience.--_Beecher._ + +Conscience serves us especially to judge of the actions of others.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +It is astonishing how soon the whole conscience begins to unravel if a +single stitch drops; one single sin indulged in makes a hole you could +put your head through.--_Charles Buxton._ + +A still small voice.--_Bible._ + +~Constancy.~--A good man it is not mine to see; could I see a man +possessed of constancy, that would satisfy me.--_Confucius._ + +Constancy is the chimera of love.--_Vauvenargues._ + +Constancy is the complement of all the other human virtues.--_Mazzini._ + +~Contempt.~--No sacred fane requires us to submit to contempt.--_Goethe._ + +There is not in human nature a more odious disposition than a proneness +to contempt, which is a mixture of pride and ill-nature. Nor is there +any which more certainly denotes a bad mind; for in a good and benign +temper there can be no room for this sensation.--_Fielding._ + +~Contentment.~--That happy state of mind, so rarely possessed, in which we +can say, "I have enough," is the highest attainment of philosophy. +Happiness consists, not in possessing much, but in being content with +what we possess. He who wants little always has enough.--_Zimmermann._ + +It is both the curse and blessing of our American life that we are never +quite content. We all expect to go somewhere before we die, and have a +better time when we get there than we can have at home. The bane of our +life is discontent. We say we will work so long, and then we will enjoy +ourselves. But we find it just as Thackeray has expressed it. "When I +was a boy," he said, "I wanted some taffy--it was a shilling--I hadn't +one. When I was a man, I had a shilling, but I didn't want any +taffy."--_Robert Collyer._ + +Submission is the only reasoning between a creature and its Maker; and +contentment in his will is the best remedy we can apply to +misfortunes.--_Sir W. Temple._ + +Where God hath put exquisite tinge upon the shell washed in the surf, +and planted a paradise of bloom in a child's cheek, let us leave it to +the owl to hoot, and the frog to croak, and the fault-finder to +complain.--_De Witt Talmage._ + +~Contrast.~--The lustre of diamonds is invigorated by the interposition of +darker bodies; the lights of a picture are created by the shades. The +highest pleasure which nature has indulged to sensitive perception is +that of rest after fatigue.--_Johnson._ + +~Controversy.~--He that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves and +sharpens our skill. Our antagonist is our helper.--_Burke._ + +What Tully says of war may be applied to disputing,--it should be always +so managed as to remember that the only true end of it is peace: but +generally true disputants are like true sportsmen,--their whole delight +is in the pursuit; and a disputant no more cares for the truth than the +sportsman for the hare.--_Pope._ + +I am yet apt to think that men find their simple ideas agree, though in +discourse they confound one another with different names.--_Locke._ + +A man takes contradiction much more easily than people think, only he +will not bear it when violently given, even though it be well-founded. +Hearts are flowers; they remain open to the softly-falling dew, but shut +up in the violent down-pour of rain.--_Richter._ + +~Conversation.~--They who have the true taste of conversation enjoy +themselves in a communication of each other's excellences, and not in a +triumph over their imperfections.--_Addison._ + +It is good to rub and polish our brain against that of +others.--_Montaigne._ + +Your reasons at dinner have been sharp and sententious; pleasant without +scurrility, witty without affectation, audacious without impudency, +learned without opinion, and strange without heresy.--_Shakespeare._ + +No one will ever shine in conversation who thinks of saying fine things; +to please one must say many things indifferent, and many very +bad.--_Francis Lockier._ + +Conversation warms the mind, enlivens the imagination, and is +continually starting fresh game that is immediately pursued and taken, +and which would never have occurred in the duller intercourse of +epistolary correspondence.--_Franklin._ + +~Coquetry.~--The most effective coquetry is innocence.--_Lamartine._ + +God created the coquette as soon as he had made the fool.--_Victor +Hugo._ + +Affecting to seem unaffected.--_Congreve._ + +Though 'tis pleasant weaving nets, 'tis wiser to make cages.--_Moore._ + +Beautiful tyrant! Fiend angelical!--_Shakespeare._ + +New vows to plight, and plighted vows to break.--_Dryden._ + +~Courage.~--God holds with the strong.--_Mazzini._ + +Courage is generosity of the highest order, for the brave are prodigal +of the most precious things.--_Colton._ + +Courage that grows from constitution often forsakes the man when he has +occasion for it; courage which arises from a sense of duty acts in a +uniform manner.--_Addison._ + +Courage from hearts, and not from numbers, grows.--_Dryden._ + +As to moral courage, I have very rarely met with _the two o'clock in the +morning courage_. I mean unprepared courage, that which is necessary on +an unexpected occasion, and which, in spite of the most unforeseen +events, leaves full freedom of judgment and decision.--_Napoleon._ + +Courage our greatest failings does supply.--_Waller._ + +To bear is to conquer our fate.--_Campbell._ + +Moral courage is more worth having than physical; not only because it is +a higher virtue, but because the demand for it is more constant. +Physical courage is a virtue which is almost always put away in the +lumber room. Moral courage is wanted day by day.--_Charles Buxton._ + +It is only in little matters that men are cowards.--_William Henry +Herbert._ + +Any coward can fight a battle when he's sure of winning; but give me the +man who has pluck to fight when he's sure of losing.--_George Eliot._ + +He who would arrive at fairy land must face the +phantoms.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Courtier.~--The court is like a palace built of marble; I mean that it is +made up of very hard and very polished people.--_La Bruyere._ + +With the people of court the tongue is the artery of their withered +life, the spiral-spring and flag-feather of their souls.--_Richter._ + +~Covetousness.~--Desire of having is the sin of +covetousness.--_Shakespeare._ + +The character of covetousness is what a man generally acquires more +through some niggardness or ill grace, in little and inconsiderable +things, than in expenses of any consequence.--_Pope._ + +The world itself is too small for the covetous.--_Seneca._ + +~Cowardice.~--At the bottom of a good deal of the bravery that appears in +the world there lurks a miserable cowardice. Men will face powder and +steel because they cannot face public opinion.--_Chapin._ + +~Credulity.~--Quick believers need broad shoulders.--_George Herbert._ + +Let us believe what we can and hope for the rest.--_De Finod._ + +When credulity comes from the heart it does no harm to the +intellect.--_Joubert._ + +What believer sees a disturbing omission or infelicity? The text, +whether of prophet or of poet, expands for whatever we can put into it, +and even his bad grammar is sublime.--_George Eliot._ + +Observe your enemies for they first find out your faults.--_Antishenes._ + +Action is generally defective, and proves an abortion without previous +contemplation. Contemplation generates, action propagates.--_Feltham._ + +~Crime.~--If poverty is the mother of crimes, want of sense is the father +of them.--_Bruyere._ + +Crimes lead into one another. They who are capable of being forgers are +capable of being incendiaries.--_Burke._ + +~Criticism.~--Solomon says rightly: "The wounds made by a friend are worth +more than the caresses of a flatterer." Nevertheless, it is better that +the friend wound not at all.--_Joseph de Maistre._ + +The rule in carving holds good as to criticism,--never cut with a knife +what you can cut with a spoon.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The critic eye, that microscope of wit.--_Pope._ + +Men have commonly more pleasure in the criticism which hurts, than in +that which is innocuous; and are more tolerant of the severity which +breaks hearts and ruins fortunes, than of that which falls impotently on +the grave.--_Ruskin._ + +Certain critics resemble closely those people who when they would laugh +show ugly teeth.--_Joubert._ + +Every one is eagle-eyed to see another's faults and his +deformity.--_Dryden._ + +For I am nothing if not critical.--_Shakespeare._ + +He who stabs you in the dark with a pen would do the same with a +penknife, were he equally safe from detection and the +law.--_Quintilian._ + +Silence is the severest criticism.--_Charles Buxton._ + +All the other powers of literature are coy and haughty, they must be +long courted, and at last are not always gained; but criticism is a +goddess easy of access and forward of advance, she will meet the slow +and encourage the timorous. The want of meaning she supplies with words, +and the want of spirit she recompenses with malignity.--_Johnson._ + +It is a barren kind of criticism which tells you what a thing is +not.--_Rufus Griswold._ + +The legitimate aim of criticism is to direct attention to the excellent. +The bad will dig its own grave, and the imperfect may be safely left to +that final neglect from which no amount of present undeserved popularity +can rescue it.--_Bovee._ + +There are some critics who change everything that comes under their +hands to gold, but to this privilege of Midas they join sometimes his +ears!--_J. Petit Senn._ + +~Cruelty.~--Cruelty, the sign of currish kind.--_Spenser._ + +One of the ill effects of cruelty is that it makes the by-standers +cruel. How hard the English people grew in the time of Henry VIII. and +Bloody Mary.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Man's inhumanity to man makes countless thousands mourn.--_Burns._ + +Cruelty, like every other vice, requires no motive outside of itself; it +only requires opportunity.--_George Eliot._ + +~Cultivation.~--Cultivation is the economy of force.--_Liebig._ + +The highest purpose of intellectual cultivation is to give a man a +perfect knowledge and mastery of his own inner self; to render our +consciousness its own light and its own mirror. Hence there is the less +reason to be surprised at our inability to enter fully into the feelings +and characters of others. No one who has not a complete knowledge of +himself will ever have a true understanding of another.--_Novalis._ + +Neither the naked hand, nor the understanding, left to itself, can do +much; the work is accomplished by instruments and helps of which the +need is not less for the understanding than the hand.--_Bacon._ + +... Without art, a nation is a soulless body; without science, a +straying wanderer. Without warmth and light, nature cannot thrive, nor +humanity increase: the light and warmth of humanity is "art and +science."--_Kozlay._ + +~Cunning.~--Cunning has effect from the credulity of others, rather than +from the abilities of those who are cunning. It requires no +extraordinary talents to lie and deceive.--_Johnson._ + +Cleverness and cunning are incompatible. I never saw them united. The +latter is the resource of the weak, and is only natural to them; +children and fools are always cunning, but clever people +never.--_Byron._ + +Discourage cunning in a child; cunning is the ape of wisdom.--_Locke._ + +Cunning signifies especially a habit or gift of overreaching, +accompanied with enjoyment and a sense of superiority. It is associated +with small and dull conceit, and with an absolute want of sympathy or +affection. It is the intensest rendering of vulgarity, absolute and +utter.--_Ruskin._ + +~Curiosity.~--A person who is too nice an observer of the business of the +crowd, like one who is too curious in observing the labor of the bees, +will often be stung for his curiosity.--_Pope._ + +The gratification of curiosity rather frees us from uneasiness than +confers pleasure; we are more pained by ignorance than delighted by +instruction. Curiosity is the thirst of the soul.--_Johnson._ + +~Custom.~--The despotism of custom is on the wane; we are not content to +know that things are; we ask whether they ought to be.--_John Stuart +Mill._ + +Immemorial custom is transcendent law.--_Menu._ + +In this great society wide lying around us, a critical analysis would +find very few spontaneous actions. It is almost all custom and gross +sense.--_Emerson._ + +Custom doth make dotards of us all.--_Carlyle._ + +~Cynics.~--It will be very generally found that those who sneer habitually +at human nature, and affect to despise it, are among its worst and least +pleasant samples.--_Dickens._ + +Cynicism is old at twenty.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + + +D. + +~Dandy.~--A dandy is a clothes-wearing man,--a man whose trade, office, +and existence consist in the wearing of clothes. Every faculty of his +soul, spirit, person, and purse is heroically consecrated to this one +object,--the wearing of clothes wisely and well; so that as others dress +to live, he lives to dress.--_Carlyle._ + +A fool may have his coat embroidered with gold, but it is a fool's coat +still.--_Rivarol._ + +~Danger.~--It is better to meet danger than to wait for it. He that is on +a lee shore, and foresees a hurricane, stands out to sea, and encounters +a storm to avoid a shipwreck.--_Colton._ + +~Death.~--It is not death, it is dying, that alarms me.--_Montaigne._ + +What is death? To go out like a light, and in a sweet trance to forget +ourselves and all the passing phenomena of the day, as we forget the +phantoms of a fleeting dream; to form, as in a dream, new connections +with God's world; to enter into a more exalted sphere, and to make a new +step up man's graduated ascent of creation.--_Zschokke._ + +Heaven gives its favorites early death.--_Byron._ + +Our respect for the dead, when they are _just_ dead, is something +wonderful, and the way we show it more wonderful still. We show it with +black feathers and black horses; we show it with black dresses and black +heraldries; we show it with costly obelisks and sculptures of sorrow, +which spoil half of our beautiful cathedrals. We show it with frightful +gratings and vaults, and lids of dismal stone, in the midst of the quiet +grass; and last, and not least, we show it by permitting ourselves to +tell any number of falsehoods we think amiable or credible in the +epitaph.--_Ruskin._ + +There are remedies for all things but death.--_Carlyle._ + +We understand death for the first time when he puts his hand upon one +whom we love.--_Mme. de Stael._ + +Too early fitted for a better state.--_Dryden._ + +Death, the dry pedant, spares neither the rose nor the thistle, nor does +he forget the solitary blade of grass in the distant waste. He destroys +thoroughly and unceasingly. Everywhere we may see how he crushes to dust +plants and beasts, men and their works. Even the Egyptian pyramids, that +would seem to defy him, are trophies of his power,--monuments of decay, +graves of primeval kings.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +There is no fireside, howsoe'er defended, but has one vacant +chair!--_Longfellow._ + +And though mine arm should conquer twenty worlds, there's a lean fellow +beats all conquerors.--_Thomas Dekker._ + +Death is a commingling of eternity with time.--_Goethe._ + +To the Christian, whose life has been dark with brooding cares that +would not lift themselves, and on whom chilling rains of sorrow have +fallen at intervals through all his years, death is but the clearing-up +shower; and just behind it are the songs of angels, and the serenity and +glory of heaven.--_Beecher._ + +That golden key that opes the palace of eternity.--_Milton._ + +When death gives us a long lease of life, it takes as hostages all those +whom we have loved.--_Madame Necker._ + +Man makes a death which nature never made.--_Young._ + +The golden ripple on the wall came back again, and nothing else stirred +in the room. The old, old fashion! The fashion that came in with our +first garments, and will last unchanged until our race has run its +course, and the wide firmament is rolled up like a scroll. The old, old +fashion--Death! Oh, thank God, all who see it, for that older fashion +yet--of Immortality!--_Dickens._ + +God's finger touched him, and he slept.--_Tennyson._ + +Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was, and the spirit shall +return unto God who gave it.--_Bible._ + +Nature intends that, at fixed periods, men should succeed each other by +the instrumentality of death. We shall never outwit Nature; we shall die +as usual.--_Fontenelle._ + +After life's fitful fever he sleeps well.--_Shakespeare._ + +Flesh is but the glass which holds the dust that measures all our time, +which also shall be crumbled into dust.--_George Herbert._ + +Death expecteth thee everywhere; be wise, therefore, and expect death +everywhere.--_Quarles._ + +The world. Oh, the world is so sweet to the dying!--_Schiller._ + +The world is full of resurrections. Every night that folds us up in +darkness is a death; and those of you that have been out early, and have +seen the first of the dawn, will know it,--the day rises out of the +night like a being that has burst its tomb and escaped into +life.--_George MacDonald._ + +The dissolution of forms is no loss in the mass of matter.--_Pliny._ + +Faith builds a bridge across the gulf of death.--_Young._ + +~Debt.~--He that dies pays all debts.--_Shakespeare._ + +Poverty is hard, but debt is horrible; a man might as well have a smoky +house and a scolding wife, which are said to be the two worst evils of +our life.--_Spurgeon._ + +The first step in debt is like the first step in falsehood, almost +involving the necessity of proceeding in the same course, debt following +debt as lie follows lie. Haydon, the painter, dated his decline from the +day on which he first borrowed money.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Do not accustom yourself to consider debt only as an inconvenience; you +will find it a calamity.--_Johnson._ + +That swamp [of debt] which tempts men towards it with such a pretty +covering of flowers and verdure. It is wonderful how soon a man gets up +to his chin there,--in a condition in which, spite of himself, he is +forced to think chiefly of release, though he had a scheme of the +universe in his soul.--_George Eliot._ + +Youth is in danger until it learns to look upon debts as +furies.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Deceit.~--No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to +himself and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered +as to which may be true.--_Hawthorne._ + +Idiots only may be cozened twice.--_Dryden._ + +It is a double pleasure to deceive the deceiver.--_Fontaine._ + +There is less misery in being cheated than in that kind of wisdom which +perceives, or thinks it perceives, that all mankind are +cheats.--_Chapin._ + +Like unto golden hooks that from the foolish fish their baits do +hide.--_Spenser._ + +Libertines are hideous spiders that often catch pretty +butterflies.--_Diderot._ + +~Decency.~--As beauty of body, with an agreeable carriage, pleases the +eye, and that pleasure consists in that we observe all the parts with a +certain elegance are proportioned to each other; so does decency of +behavior which appears in our lives obtain the approbation of all with +whom we converse, from the order, consistency, and moderation of our +words and actions.--_Steele._ + +Virtue and decency are so nearly related that it is difficult to +separate them from each other but in our imagination.--_Tully._ + +~Declamation.~--Fine declamation does not consist in flowery periods, +delicate allusions, or musical cadences, but in a plain, open, loose +style, where the periods are long and obvious; where the same thought is +often exhibited in several points of view.--_Goldsmith._ + +The art of declamation has been sinking in value from the moment that +speakers were foolish enough to publish, and hearers wise enough to +read.--_Colton._ + +~Deeds.~--A word that has been said may be unsaid: it is but air. But when +a deed is done, it cannot be undone, nor can our thoughts reach out to +all the mischiefs that may follow.--_Longfellow._ + +How oft the sight of means to do ill deeds makes deeds ill +done!--_Shakespeare._ + +Legal deeds were invented to remind men of their promises, or to convict +them of having broken them,--a stigma on the human race.--_Bruyere._ + +Good actions ennoble us, and we are the sons of our own +deeds.--_Cervantes._ + +We should believe only in works; words are sold for nothing +everywhere.--_Rojas._ + +~Delay.~--We do not directly go about the execution of the purpose that +thrills us, but shut our doors behind us, and ramble with prepared +minds, as if the half were already done. Our resolution is taking root +or hold on the earth then, as seeds first send a shoot downward, which +is fed by their own albumen, ere they send one upwards to the +light.--_Thoreau._ + +Time drinketh up the essence of every great and noble action, which +ought to be performed! and is delayed in the execution.--_Veeshnoo +Sarma._ + +~Democracy.~--Democracy will itself accomplish the salutary universal +change from delusive to real, and make a new blessed world of us by and +by.--_Carlyle._ + +The love of democracy is that of equality.--_Montesquieu._ + +~Dependence.~--The beautiful must ever rest in the arms of the sublime. +The gentle needs the strong to sustain it, as much as the rock-flowers +need rocks to grow on, or the ivy the rugged wall which it +embraces.--_Mrs. Stowe._ + +Thou shalt know by experience how salt the savor is of other's bread, +and how sad a path it is to climb and descend another's +stairs.--_Dante._ + +How beautifully is it ordered, that as many thousands work for one, so +must every individual bring his labor to make the whole! The highest is +not to despise the lowest, nor the lowest to envy the highest; each must +live in all and by all. Who will not work, neither shall he eat. So God +has ordered that men, being in need of each other, should learn to love +each other and bear each other's burdens.--_G. A. Sala._ + +We are never without a pilot. When we know not how to steer, and dare +not hoist a sail, we can drift. The current knows the way, though we do +not. The ship of heaven guides itself, and will not accept a wooden +rudder.--_Emerson._ + +~Desire.~--It is easier to suppress the first desire than to satisfy all +that follow it.--_Franklin._ + +Lack of desire is the greatest riches.--_Seneca._ + +Where necessity ends, curiosity begins; and no sooner are we supplied +with everything that nature can demand, than we sit down to contrive +artificial appetites.--_Johnson._ + +The thirst of desire is never filled, nor fully satisfied.--_Cicero._ + +The man's desire is for the woman; but the woman's desire is rarely +other than for the desire of the man.--_Coleridge._ + +Desires are the pulse of the soul.--_Manton._ + +~Despair.~--Considering the unforeseen events of this world, we should be +taught that no human condition should inspire men with absolute +despair.--_Fielding._ + +Leaden-eyed despair.--_Keats._ + +In the lottery of life there are more prizes drawn than blanks, and to +one misfortune there are fifty advantages. Despondency is the most +unprofitable feeling a man can indulge in.--_De Witt Talmage._ + +He that despairs limits infinite power to finite +apprehensions.--_South._ + +It is impossible for that man to despair who remembers that his helper +is omnipotent.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +He that despairs measures Providence by his own little contracted +model.--_South._ + +Juliet was a fool to kill herself, for in three months she'd have +married again, and been glad to be quit of Romeo.--_Charles Buxton._ + +What we call our despair is often only the painful eagerness of unfed +hope.--_George Eliot._ + +~Despotism.~--It is difficult for power to avoid despotism. The possessors +of rude health; the individualities cut out by a few strokes, solid for +the very reason that they are all of a piece; the complete characters +whose fibres have never been strained by a doubt; the minds that no +questions disturb and no aspirations put out of breath,--these, the +strong, are also the tyrants.--_Countess de Gasparin._ + +There is something among men more capable of shaking despotic power than +lightning, whirlwind, or earthquake; that is, the threatened indignation +of the whole civilized world.--_Daniel Webster._ + +~Destiny.~--The scape-goat which we make responsible for all our crimes +and follies; a necessity which we set down for invincible, when we have +no wish to strive against it.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Our deeds determine us, as much as we determine our deeds.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Detention.~--Never hold any one by the button or the hand, in order to be +heard out; for if people are unwilling to hear you, you had better hold +your tongue than them.--_Chesterfield._ + +~Detraction.~--Happy are they that hear their detractions, and can put +them to mending.--_Shakespeare._ + +In some unlucky dispositions there is such an envious kind of pride that +they cannot endure that any but themselves should be set forth for +excellent; so that when they hear one justly praised they will either +seek to dismount his virtues, or, if they be like a clear light, they +will stab him with a _but_ of detraction; as if there were something yet +so foul as did obnubilate even his brightest glory. When their tongue +cannot justly condemn him, they will leave him suspected by their +silence.--_Feltham._ + +~Dew.~--That same dew, which sometimes withers buds, was wont to swell, +like round and orient pearls, stood now within the pretty flow'rets' +eyes, like tears, that did their own disgrace bewail.--_Shakespeare._ + +Earth's liquid jewelry, wrought of air.--_P. J. Bailey._ + +~Diet.~--Regimen is better than physic. Every one should be his own +physician. We ought to assist, and not to force nature: but more +especially we should learn to suffer, grow old, and die. Some things are +salutary, and others hurtful. Eat with moderation what you know by +experience agrees with your constitution. Nothing is good for the body +but what we can digest. What medicine can procure digestion? Exercise. +What will recruit strength? Sleep. What will alleviate incurable evils? +Patience.--_Voltaire._ + +Free-livers on a small scale, who are prodigal within the compass of a +guinea.--_Washington Irving._ + +~Difficulties.~--The greatest difficulties lie where we are not looking +for them.--_Goethe._ + +The weak sinews become strong by their conflict with difficulties. Hope +is born in the long night of watching and tears. Faith visits us in +defeat and disappointment, amid the consciousness of earthly frailty and +the crumbling tombstones of mortality.--_Chapin._ + +How strangely easy difficult things are!--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Diffidence.~--Nothing sinks a young man into low company, both of women +and men, so surely as timidity and diffidence of himself. If he thinks +that he shall not, he may depend upon it he will not, please. But with +proper endeavors to please, and a degree of persuasion that he shall, it +is almost certain that he will.--_Chesterfield._ + +No congress, nor mob, nor guillotine, nor fire, nor all together, can +avail, to cut out, burn, or destroy the offense of superiority in +persons. The superiority in him is inferiority in me.--_Emerson._ + +~Dignity.~--It is at once the thinnest and most effective of all the +coverings under which duncedom sneaks and skulks. Most of the men of +dignity, who awe or bore their more genial brethren, are simply men who +possess the art of passing off their insensibility for wisdom, their +dullness for depth, and of concealing imbecility of intellect under +haughtiness of manner.--_Whipple._ + +~Dirt.~--"Ignorance," says Ajax, "is a painless evil;" so, I should think, +is dirt, considering the merry faces that go along with it.--_George +Eliot._ + +Martin, if dirt was trumps, what hands you would hold.--_Lamb._ + +~Disappointment.~--Life often seems like a long shipwreck, of which the +debris are friendship, glory, and love: the shores of existence are +strewn with them.--_Mme. de Stael._ + +O world! how many hopes thou dost engulf!--_Alfred de Musset._ + +Thirsting for the golden fountain of the fable, from how many streams +have we turned away, weary and in disgust!--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +We mortals, men and women, devour many a disappointment between +breakfast and dinner-time; keep back the tears and look a little pale +about the lips, and in answer to inquiries say, "Oh, nothing!" Pride +helps us; and pride is not a bad thing when it only urges us to hide our +own hurts--not to hurt others.--_George Eliot._ + +Ah! what seeds for a paradise I bore in my heart, of which birds of prey +have robbed me.--_Richter._ + +~Discourtesy.~--Discourtesy does not spring merely from one bad quality, +but from several,--from foolish vanity, from ignorance of what is due to +others, from indolence, from stupidity, from distraction of thought, +from contempt of others, from jealousy.--_La Bruyere._ + +~Discovery.~--Through every rift of discovery some seeming anomaly drops +out of the darkness, and falls as a golden link in the great chain of +order.--_Chapin._ + +~Discretion.~--Be discreet in all things, and go render it unnecessary to +be mysterious about any.--_Wellington._ + +Though a man has all other perfections and wants discretion, he will be +of no great consequence in the world; but if he has this single talent +in perfection, and but a common share of others, he may do what he +pleases in his particular station of life.--_Addison._ + +~Dishonesty.~--So grasping is dishonesty that it is no respecter of +persons: it will cheat friends as well as foes; and, were it possible, +even God himself!--_Bancroft._ + +~Dispatch.~--Use dispatch. Remember that the world only took six days to +create. Ask me for whatever you please except _time_: that is the only +thing which is beyond my power.--_Napoleon._ + +True dispatch is a rich thing; for time is the measure of business, as +money is of wares, and business is bought at a dear hand where there is +small dispatch.--_Bacon._ + +~Disposition.~--A tender-hearted and compassionate disposition, which +inclines men to pity and feel the misfortunes of others, and which is +even for its own sake incapable of involving any man in ruin and misery, +is of all tempers of mind the most amiable; and, though it seldom +receives much honor, is worthy of the highest.--_Fielding._ + +A good disposition is more valuable than gold; for the latter is the +gift of fortune, but the former is the dower of nature.--_Addison._ + +~Distrust.~--As health lies in labor, and there is no royal road to it but +through toil, so there is no republican road to safety but in constant +distrust.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +What loneliness is more lonely than distrust?--_George Eliot._ + +When desperate ills demand a speedy cure, distrust is cowardice, and +prudence folly.--_Johnson._ + +~Doubt.~--Remember Talleyrand's advice, "If you are in doubt whether to +write a letter or not--don't!" The advice applies to many doubts in life +besides that of letter writing.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Doubt is hell in the human soul.--_Gasparin._ + +Doubt springs from the mind; faith is the daughter of the soul.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +Modest doubt is called the beacon of the wise.--_Shakespeare._ + +The doubts of an honest man contain more moral truth than the profession +of faith of people under a worldly yoke.--_X. Doudan._ + +There lives more faith in honest doubt, believe me, than in half the +creeds.--_Tennyson._ + +Every body drags its shadow, and every mind its doubt.--_Victor Hugo._ + +~Dreams.~--Children of night, of indigestion bred.--_Churchill._ + +A world of the dead in the hues of life.--_Mrs. Hemans._ + +The fickle pensioners of Morpheus' train.--_Milton._ + +Dreams always go by contraries, my dear.--_Samuel Lover._ + +We are somewhat more than ourselves in our sleeps, and the slumber of +the body seems to be but the waking of the soul. It is the litigation of +sense, but the liberty of reason; and our waking conceptions do not +match the fancies of our sleeps.--_Sir T. Browne._ + +The mockery of unquiet slumbers.--_Shakespeare._ + +Like a dog, he hunts in dreams.--_Tennyson._ + +~Dress.~--It is well known that a loose and easy dress contributes much to +give to both sexes those fine proportions of body that are observable in +the Grecian statues, and which serve as models to our present +artists.--_Rousseau._ + +~Duty.~--Stern daughter of the voice of God.--_Wordsworth._ + +Duty is a power which rises with us in the morning and goes to rest with +us at night. It is coextensive with the action of our intelligence. It +is the shadow which cleaves to us, go where we will, and which only +leaves us when we leave the light of life.--_Gladstone._ + +Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God and keep his +commandments; for this is the whole duty of man.--_Bible._ + +The idea of duty, that recognition of something to be lived for beyond +the mere satisfaction of self, is to the moral life what the addition of +a great central ganglion is to animal life.--_George Eliot._ + +Do the duty which lies nearest to thee.--_Goethe._ + +Those who do it always would as soon think of being conceited of eating +their dinner as of doing their duty. What honest boy would pride himself +on not picking a pocket? A thief who was trying to reform +would.--_George MacDonald._ + +To what gulfs a single deviation from the track of human duties +leads!--_Byron._ + +The duty of man is not a wilderness of turnpike gates, through which he +is to pass by tickets from one to the other. It is plain and simple, and +consists but of two points: his duty to God, which every man must feel; +and, with respect to his neighbor, to do as he would be done +by.--_Thomas Paine._ + +There is not a moment without some duty.--_Cicero._ + +If doing what ought to be done be made the first business, and success a +secondary consideration,--is not this the way to exalt +virtue?--_Confucius._ + +The path of duty lies in what is near, and men seek for it in what is +remote; the work of duty lies in what is easy, and men seek for it in +what is difficult.--_Mencius._ + +Duty does not consist in suffering everything, but in suffering +everything for duty. Sometimes, indeed, it is our duty not to +suffer.--_Dr. Vinet._ + +He who is false to present duty breaks a thread in the loom, and will +find the flaw when he may have forgotten its cause.--_Beecher._ + +The primal duties shine aloft, like stars; the charities that soothe, +and heal, and bless, are scattered at the feet of man, like +flowers.--_Wordsworth._ + +Can man or woman choose duties? No more than they can choose their +birthplace, or their father and mother.--_George Eliot._ + + +E. + +~Ear.~--A side intelligencer.--_Lamb._ + +Eyes and ears, two traded pilots 'twixt the dangerous shores of will and +judgment.--_Shakespeare._ + +The wicket of the soul.--_Sir J. Davies._ + +The road to the heart.--_Voltaire._ + +~Early-rising.~--Early-rising not only gives us more life in the same +number of our years, but adds likewise to their number; and not only +enables us to enjoy more of existence in the same measure of time, but +increases also the measure.--_Colton._ + +The famous Apollonius being very early at Vespasian's gate, and finding +him stirring, from thence conjectured that he was worthy to govern an +empire, and said to his companion, "This man surely will be emperor, he +is so early."--_Caussin._ + +When one begins to turn in bed, it is time to get up.--_Wellington._ + +The difference between rising at five and seven o'clock in the morning, +for the space of forty years, supposing a man to go to bed at the same +hour at night, is nearly equivalent to the addition of ten years to a +man's life.--_Doddridge._ + +Whoever has tasted the breath of morning knows that the most +invigorating and most delightful hours of the day are commonly spent in +bed; though it is the evident intention of nature that we should enjoy +and profit by them.--_Southey._ + +~Economy.~--Economy is half the battle of life; it is not so hard to earn +money as to spend it well.--_Spurgeon._ + +Ere fancy you consult, consult your purse.--_Franklin._ + +I can get no remedy against this consumption of the purse; borrowing +only lingers and lingers it out; but the disease is +incurable.--_Shakespeare._ + +The back-door robs the house.--_George Herbert._ + +The world abhors closeness, and all but admires extravagance. Yet a +slack hand shows weakness, a tight hand, strength.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Education.~--Education gives fecundity of thought, copiousness of +illustration, quickness, vigor, fancy, words, images, and illustrations; +it decorates every common thing, and gives the power of trifling without +being undignified and absurd.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Still I am learning.--_Motto of Michael Angelo._ + +If we work upon marble, it will perish; if we work upon brass, time will +efface it; if we rear temples, they will crumble into dust; but if we +work upon immortal minds, if we imbue them with principles, with the +just fear of God and love of our fellow-men, we engrave on those tablets +something which will brighten to all eternity.--_Daniel Webster._ + +The education of life perfects the thinking mind, but depraves the +frivolous.--_Mme. de Stael._ + +What sculpture is to a block of marble, education is to a human soul. +The philosopher, the saint, and the hero,--the wise, the good, and the +great man, very often lie hid and concealed in a plebeian, which a +proper education might have disinterred and brought to +light.--_Addison._ + +Very few men are wise by their own counsel, or learned by their own +teaching; for he that was only taught by himself had a fool to his +master.--_Ben Jonson._ + +I am always for getting a boy forward in his learning, for that is sure +good. I would let him at first read _any_ English book which happens to +engage his attention; because you have done a great deal when you have +brought him to have entertainment from a book. He'll get better books +afterwards.--_Johnson._ + +The essential difference between a good and a bad education is this, +that the former draws on the child to learn by making it sweet to him; +the latter drives the child to learn, by making it sour to him if he +does not.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Nothing so good as a university education, nor worse than a university +without its education.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Education is all paint: it does not alter the nature of the wood that is +under it, it only improves its appearance a little. Why I dislike +education so much is that it makes all people alike, until you have +examined into them; and it is sometimes so long before you get to see +under the varnish!--_Lady Hester Stanhope._ + +~Eloquence.~--The poetry of speech.--_Byron._ + +This is that eloquence the ancients represented as lightning, bearing +down every opposer; this the power which has turned whole assemblies +into astonishment, admiration, and awe; that is described by the +torrent, the flame, and every other instance of irresistible +impetuosity.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Eminence.~--I do not hesitate to say that the road to eminence and power +from an obscure condition ought not to be made too easy, nor a thing too +much of course. If rare merit be the rarest of all things, it ought to +pass through some sort of probation. The Temple of Honor ought to be +seated on an eminence. If it be open through virtue, let it be +remembered, too, that virtue is never tried but by some difficulty and +some struggle.--_Burke._ + +~Emotions.~--All loving emotions, like plants, shoot up most rapidly in +the tempestuous atmosphere of life.--_Richter._ + +Emotion has no value in the Christian system save as it stands connected +with right conduct as the cause of it. Emotion is the bud, not the +flower, and never is it of value until it expands into a flower. Every +religious sentiment; every act of devotion which does not produce a +corresponding elevation of life, is worse than useless; it is absolutely +pernicious, because it ministers to self-deception and tends to lower +the line of personal morals.--_W. H. H. Murray._ + +There are three orders of emotions: those of pleasure, which refer to +the senses; those of harmony, which refer to the mind; and those of +happiness, which are the natural result of a union between harmony and +pleasure.--_Chapone._ + +Emotion, whether of ridicule, anger, or sorrow; whether raised at a +puppet-show, a funeral, or a battle, is your grandest of levelers. The +man who would be always superior should be always +apathetic.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Employment.~--The wise prove, and the foolish confess, by their conduct, +that a life of employment is the only life worth leading.--_Paley._ + +Life will frequently languish, even in the hands of the busy, if they +have not some employment subsidiary to that which forms their main +pursuit.--_Blair._ + +~Emulation.~--Emulation embalms the dead; envy, the vampire, blasts the +living.--_Fuseli._ + +~Enemies.~--It is the enemy whom we do not suspect who is the most +dangerous.--_Rojas._ + +~Energy.~--The longer I live, the more deeply am I convinced that that +which makes the difference between one man and another--between the weak +and powerful, the great and insignificant--is energy, invincible +determination; a purpose once formed, and then death or victory. This +quality will do anything that is to be done in the world; and no +two-legged creature can become a man without it.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The truest wisdom is a resolute determination.--_Napoleon._ + +To think we are able is almost to be so; to determine upon attainment is +frequently attainment itself. Thus earnest resolution has often seemed +to have about it almost a savor of omnipotence.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Oh! for a forty parson power.--_Byron._ + +Daniel Webster struck me much like a steam-engine in trousers.--_Sydney +Smith._ + +This world belongs to the energetic.--_Emerson._ + +~Enjoyment.~--Whatever advantage we snatch beyond the certain portion +allotted us by nature is like money spent before it is due, which at the +time of regular payment will be missed and regretted.--_Johnson._ + +~Ennui.~--I have also seen the world, and after long experience have +discovered that ennui is our greatest enemy, and remunerative labor our +most lasting friend.--_Moeser._ + +I am wrapped in dismal thinking.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Enthusiasm.~--Enthusiasts soon understand each other.--_Washington +Irving._ + +Enthusiasm is an evil much less to be dreaded than superstition. +Superstition is the disease of nations; enthusiasm, that of individuals: +the former grows inveterate by time, the latter is cured by it.--_Robert +Hall._ + +Enthusiasm is that temper of mind in which the imagination has got the +better of the judgment.--_Warburton._ + +Great designs are not accomplished without enthusiasm of some sort. It +is the inspiration of everything great. Without it, no man is to be +feared, and with it none despised.--_Bovee._ + +Enthusiasm is supernatural serenity.--_Thoreau._ + +A man conscious of enthusiasm for worthy aims is sustained under petty +hostilities by the memory of great workers who had to fight their way +not without wounds, and who hover in his mind as patron saints, +invisibly helping.--_George Eliot._ + +The insufficient passions of a soul expanding to celestial +limits.--_Sydney Dobell._ + +~Envy.~--A man who hath no virtue in himself ever envieth virtue in +others; for men's minds will either feed upon their own good, or upon +others' evil; and who wanteth the one will prey upon the other.--_Lord +Bacon._ + +Pining and sickening at another's joy.--_Ovid._ + +Many passions dispose us to depress and vilify the merit of one rising +in the esteem of mankind.--_Addison._ + +He who surpasses or subdues mankind must look down on the hate of those +below.--_Byron._ + +An envious fever of pale and bloodless emulation.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Equality.~--Whether I be the grandest genius on earth in a single thing, +and that single thing earthy, or the poor peasant who, behind his plow, +whistles for want of thought, I strongly suspect it will be all one when +I pass to the Competitive Examination yonder! On the other side of the +grave a Raffael's occupation may be gone as well as a +plowman's.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +All the religions known in the world are founded, so far as they relate +to man, or the unity of man, as being all of one degree. Whether in +heaven or in hell, or in whatever state man may be supposed to exist +hereafter, the good and the bad are the only distinctions.--_Thomas +Paine._ + +By the law of God, given by him to humanity, all men are free, are +brothers, and are equals.--_Mazzini._ + +The circle of life is cut up into segments. All lines are equal if they +are drawn from the centre and touch the circumference.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Liberty and equality, lovely and sacred words!--_Mazzini._ + +Society is a more level surface than we imagine. Wise men or absolute +fools are hard to be met with, as there are few giants or +dwarfs.--_Hazlitt._ + +~Equanimity.~--A thing often lost, but seldom found.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +~Error.~--If those alone who "sowed the wind did reap the whirlwind," it +would be well. But the mischief is that the blindness of bigotry, the +madness of ambition, and the miscalculations of diplomacy seek their +victims principally amongst the innocent and the unoffending. The +cottage is sure to suffer for every error of the court, the cabinet, or +the camp. When error sits in the seat of power and of authority, and is +generated in high places, it may be compared to that torrent which +originates indeed in the mountain, but commits its devastation in the +vale.--_Colton._ + +There is a brotherhood of error as close as the brotherhood of +truth.--_Argyll._ + +Errors look so very ugly in persons of small means, one feels they are +taking quite a liberty in going astray; whereas people of fortune may +naturally indulge in a few delinquencies.--_George Eliot._ + +Our follies and errors are the soiled steps to the Grecian temple of our +perfection.--_Richter._ + +But for my part, my lord, I then thought, and am still of the same +opinion, that error, and not truth of any kind, is dangerous; that ill +conclusions can only flow from false propositions; and that, to know +whether any proposition be true or false, it is a preposterous method to +examine it by its apparent consequences.--_Burke._ + +Error in itself is always invisible; its nature is the absence of +light.--_Jacobi._ + +There is no place where weeds do not grow, and there is no heart where +errors are not to be found.--_J. S. Knowles._ + +Our understandings are always liable to error; nature and certainty is +very hard to come at, and infallibility is mere vanity and +pretense.--_Marcus Antoninus._ + +Let error be an infirmity and not a crime.--_Castelar._ + +Errors such as are but acorns in our younger brows grow oaks in our +older heads, and become inflexible.--_Sir Thomas Browne._ + +~Erudition.~--'Tis of great importance to the honor of learning that men +of business should know erudition is not like a lark, which flies high, +and delights in nothing but singing; but that 't is rather like a hawk, +which soars aloft indeed, but can stoop when she finds it convenient, +and seize her prey.--_Bacon._ + +~Estimation.~--A life spent worthily should be measured by a nobler +line,--by deeds, not years.--_Sheridan._ + +To judge of the real importance of an individual, one should think of +the effect his death would produce.--_Leves._ + +~Eternity.~--Upon laying a weight in one of the scales, inscribed +eternity, though I threw in that of time, prosperity, affliction, +wealth, and poverty, which seemed very ponderous, they were not able to +stir the opposite balance.--_Addison._ + +Eternity is a negative idea clothed with a positive name. It supposes in +that to which it is applied a present existence; and is the negation of +a beginning or of an end of that existence.--_Paley._ + +~Etiquette.~--Whoever pays a visit that is not desired, or talks longer +than the listener is willing to attend, is guilty of an injury that he +cannot repair, and takes away that which he cannot give.--_Johnson._ + +The forms required by good breeding, or prescribed by authority, are to +be observed in social or official life.--_Prescott._ + +Good taste rejects excessive nicety; it treats little things as little +things, and is not hurt by them.--_Fenelon._ + +The law of the table is beauty, a respect to the common soul of the +guests. Everything is unreasonable which is private to two or three, or +any portion of the company. Tact never violates for a moment this law; +never intrudes the orders of the house, the vices of the absent, or a +tariff of expenses, or professional privacies; as we say, we never "talk +shop" before company. Lovers abstain from caresses, and haters from +insults, while they sit in one parlor with common friends.--_Emerson._ + +~Events.~--Man reconciles himself to almost any event however trying, if +it happens in the ordinary course of nature. It is the extraordinary +alone that he rebels against. There is a moral idea associated with this +feeling; for the extraordinary appears to be something like an injustice +of Heaven.--_Humboldt._ + +There can be no peace in human life without the contempt of all events. +He that troubles his head with drawing consequences from mere +contingencies shall never be at rest.--_L'Estrange._ + +~Evil.~--Evil is in antagonism with the entire creation.--_Zschokke._ + +Even in evil, that dark cloud which hangs over the creation, we discern +rays of light and hope; and gradually come to see in suffering and +temptation proofs and instruments of the sublimest purposes of wisdom +and love.--_Channing._ + +Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.--_Bible._ + +If we will rightly estimate what we call good and evil, we shall find it +lies much in comparison.--_Locke._ + +Not one false man but does uncountable evil.--_Carlyle._ + +This is the course of every evil deed, that, propagating still, it +brings forth evil.--_Coleridge._ + +The truly virtuous do not easily credit evil that is told them of their +neighbors; for if others may do amiss, then may these also speak amiss: +man is frail, and prone to evil, and therefore may soon fail in +words.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Physical evils destroy themselves, or they destroy us.--_Rousseau._ + +"One soweth, and another reapeth," is a verity that applies to evil as +well as good.--_George Eliot._ + +If you believe in evil, you have done evil.--_A. de Musset._ + +~Example.~--We are all of us more or less echoes, repeating involuntarily +the virtues, the defects, the movements, and the characters of those +among whom we live.--_Joubert._ + +How far that little candle throws its beams! So shines a good deed in a +naughty world.--_Shakespeare._ + +Every great example takes hold of us with the authority of a miracle, +and says to us: "If ye had but faith, ye could also be able to do the +things which I do."--_Jacobi._ + +~Excellence.~--Nothing is such an obstacle to the production of excellence +as the power of producing what is good with ease and rapidity.--_Aikin._ + +~Excelsior.~--Man's life is in the impulse of elevation to something +higher.--_Jacobi._ + +~Excess.~--Too much noise deafens us; too much light blinds us; too great +a distance or too much of proximity equally prevents us from being able +to see; too long and too short a discourse obscures our knowledge of a +subject; too much of truth stuns us.--_Pascal._ + +O fleeting joys of Paradise, dear bought with lasting woes.--_Milton._ + +Excess generally causes reaction, and produces a change in the opposite +direction, whether it be in the seasons, or in individuals, or in +governments.--_Plato._ + +~Excitement.~--There is always something interesting and beautiful about a +universal popular excitement of a generous character, let the object of +it be what it may. The great desiring heart of man, surging with one +strong, sympathetic swell, even though it be to break on the beach of +life and fall backwards, leaving the sands as barren as before, has yet +a meaning and a power in its restlessness with which I must deeply +sympathize.--_Mrs. Stowe._ + +Violent excitement exhausts the mind, and leaves it withered and +sterile.--_Fenelon._ + +The language of excitement is at best but picturesque merely. You must +be calm before you can utter oracles.--_Thoreau._ + +This is so engraven on our nature that it may be regarded as an +appetite. Like all other appetites, it is not sinful, unless indulged +unlawfully, or to excess.--_Dr. Guthrie._ + +~Excuse.~--Of vain things, excuses are the vainest.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Expectation.~--'Tis expectation makes a blessing dear; heaven were not +heaven, if we knew what it were.--_Suckling._ + +It may be proper for all to remember that they ought not to raise +expectations which it is not in their power to satisfy; and that it is +more pleasing to see smoke brightening into flame, than flame sinking +into smoke.--_Johnson._ + +~Expediency.~--When private virtue is hazarded upon the perilous cast of +expediency, the pillars of the republic, however apparent their +stability, are infected with decay at the very centre.--_Chapin._ + +Men in responsible situations cannot, like those in private life, be +governed solely by the dictates of their own inclinations, or by such +motives as can only affect themselves.--_Washington._ + +~Experience.~--Life consists in the alternate process of learning and +unlearning; but it is often wiser to unlearn than to +learn.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Experience, the shroud of illusions.--_De Finod._ + +To have a true idea of man, or of life, one must have stood himself on +the brink of suicide, or on the door-sill of insanity, at least +once.--_Taine._ + +What we learn with pleasure we never forget.--_Alfred Mercier._ + +Who would venture upon the journey of life, if compelled to begin it at +the end?--_Mme. de Maintenon._ + +Experience is the extract of suffering.--_Arthur Helps._ + +Every generous illusion adds a wrinkle in vanishing. Experience is the +successive disenchantment of the things of life. It is reason enriched +by the spoils of the heart.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +~Extravagance.~--Expenses are not rectilinear, but circular. Every inch +you add to the diameter adds three to the circumference.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +~Extremes.~--Extremes are dangerous; a middle estate is safest; as a +middle temper of the sea, between a still calm and a violent tempest, is +most helpful to convey the mariner to his haven.--_Swinnock._ + +Superlatives are diminutives, and weaken.--_Emerson._ + +Extremes are for us as if they were not, and as if we were not in regard +to them; they escape from us, or we from them.--_Pascal._ + +~Eye.~--Stabbed with a white wench's black eye.--_Shakespeare._ + +The eyes of a man are of no use without the observing power. Telescopes +and microscopes are cunning contrivances, but they cannot see of +themselves.--_Paxton Hood._ + +Ladies, whose bright eyes rain influence.--_Milton._ + +Where is any author in the world teaches such beauty as a woman's +eye?--_Shakespeare._ + +Let every eye negotiate for itself and trust no agent.--_Shakespeare._ + +Her eyes are homes of silent prayer.--_Tennyson._ + +The eyes have one language everywhere.--_George Herbert._ + +Glances are the first billets-doux of love.--_Ninon de L'Enclos._ + + +F. + +~Face.~--A February face, so full of frost, of storms, and +cloudiness.--_Shakespeare._ + +Demons in act, but gods at least in face.--_Byron._ + +A girl of eighteen imagines the feelings behind the face that has moved +her with its sympathetic youth, as easily as primitive people imagined +the humors of the gods in fair weather: what is she to believe in, if +not in this vision woven from within?--_George Eliot._ + +The worst of faces still is a human face.--_Lavater._ + +~Fact.~--There should always be some foundation of fact for the most airy +fabric, and pure invention is but the talent of a deceiver.--_Byron._ + +Every day of my life makes me feel more and more how seldom a fact is +accurately stated; how almost invariably when a story has passed through +the mind of a third person it becomes, so far as regards the impression +that it makes in further repetitions, little better than a falsehood; +and this, too, though the narrator be the most truth-seeking person in +existence.--_Hawthorne._ + +~Faction.~--A feeble government produces more factions than an oppressive +one.--_Fisher Ames._ + +It is the demon of discord armed with the power to do endless mischief, +and intent alone on destroying whatever opposes its progress.--_Crabbe._ + +~Failure.~--But screw your courage to the sticking-place, and we'll not +fail!--_Shakespeare._ + +Albeit failure in any cause produces a correspondent misery in the soul, +yet it is, in a sense, the highway to success, inasmuch as every +discovery of what is false leads us to seek earnestly after what is +true, and every fresh experience points out some form of error which we +shall afterward carefully eschew.--_Keats._ + +Every failure is a step to success; every detection of what is false +directs us toward what is true; every trial exhausts some tempting form +of error. Not only so, but scarcely any attempt is entirely a failure; +scarcely any theory, the result of steady thought, is altogether false; +no tempting form of error is without some latent charm derived from +truth.--_Whewell._ + +~Faith.~--In affairs of this world men are saved not by faith but by the +want of it.--_Fielding._ + +All the scholastic scaffolding falls, as a ruined edifice, before one +single word,--_faith_.--_Napoleon._ + +O welcome pure-eyed Faith, white-handed Hope, thou hovering angel, girt +with golden wings!--_Milton._ + +Life grows dark as we go on, till only one clear light is left shining +on it, and that is faith.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +When my reason is afloat, my faith cannot long remain in suspense, and I +believe in God as firmly as in any other truth whatever; in short, a +thousand motives draw me to the consolatory side, and add the weight of +hope to the equilibrium of reason.--_Rousseau._ + +Flatter not thyself in thy faith to God, if thou wantest charity for thy +neighbor; and think not thou hast charity for thy neighbor, if thou +wantest faith to God: where they are not both together, they are both +wanting; they are both dead if once divided.--_Quarles._ + +We cannot live on probabilities. The faith in which we can live bravely +and die in peace must be a certainty, so far as it professes to be a +faith at all, or it is nothing.--_Froude._ + +The great desire of this age is for a doctrine which may serve to +condense our knowledge, guide our researches, and shape our lives, so +that conduct may really be the consequence of belief.--_G. H. Lewes._ + +~Falsehood.~--Falsehood, like a drawing in perspective, will not bear to +be examined in every point of view, because it is a good imitation of +truth, as a perspective is of the reality.--_Colton._ + +Do not let us lie at all. Do not think of one falsity as harmless, and +another as slight, and another as unintended. Cast them all aside: they +may be light and accidental, but they are ugly soot from the smoke of +the pit, for all that: and it is better that our hearts should be swept +clean of them, without one care as to which is largest or +blackest.--_Ruskin._ + +It is more from carelessness about the truth, than from intentional +lying, that there is so much falsehood in the world.--_Johnson._ + +Falsehood and fraud shoot up in every soil, the product of all +climes.--_Addison._ + +Round dealing is the honor of man's nature; and a mixture of falsehood +is like alloy in gold and silver, which may make the metal work the +better, but it embaseth it.--_Lord Bacon._ + +To lapse in fullness is sorer than to lie for need: and falsehood is +worse in king than beggar.--_Shakespeare._ + +A liar would be brave toward God, while he is a coward toward men; for a +lie faces God, and shrinks from man.--_Montaigne._ + +The dull flat falsehood serves for policy, and in the cunning, truth's +itself a lie.--_Pope._ + +No falsehood can endure touch of celestial temper but returns of force +to its own likeness.--_Milton._ + +Figures themselves, in their symmetrical and inexorable order, have +their mistakes like words and speeches. An hour of pleasure and an hour +of pain are alike only on the dial in their numerical arrangement. +Outside the dial they lie sixty times.--_Mery._ + +~Fame.~--Fame, as a river, is narrowest where it is bred, and broadest +afar off; so exemplary writers depend not upon the gratitude of the +world.--_Davenant._ + +Grant me honest fame, or grant me none.--_Pope._ + +Much of reputation depends on the period in which it rises. The Italians +proverbially observe that one half of fame depends on that cause. In +dark periods, when talents appear they shine like the sun through a +small hole in the window-shutter. The strong beam dazzles amid the +surrounding gloom. Open the shutter, and the general diffusion of light +attracts no notice.--_Walpole._ + +Fame confers a rank above that of gentleman and of kings. As soon as she +issues her patent of nobility, it matters not a straw whether the +recipient be the son of a Bourbon or of a +tallow-chandler.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +One Caesar lives,--a thousand are forgot!--_Young._ + +Few people make much noise after their deaths who did not do so while +they were living. Posterity could not be supposed to rake into the +records of past times for the illustrious obscure, and only ratify or +annul the lists of great names handed down to them by the voice of +common fame. Few people recover from the neglect or obloquy of their +contemporaries. The public will hardly be at the pains to try the same +cause twice over, or does not like to reverse its own sentence, at least +when on the unfavorable side.--_Hazlitt._ + +Celebrity sells dearly what we think she gives.--_Emile Souvestre._ + +Fame has no necessary conjunction with praise; it may exist without the +breath of a word: it is a recognition of excellence which must be felt, +but need not be spoken. Even the envious must feel it; feel it, and hate +in silence.--_Washington Allston._ + +Many have lived on a pedestal who will never have a statue when +dead.--_Beranger._ + +I hope the day will never arrive when I shall neither be the object of +calumny nor ridicule, for then I shall be neglected and +forgotten.--_Johnson._ + +A man who cannot win fame in his own age will have a very small chance +of winning it from posterity. True there are some half dozen exceptions +to this truth among millions of myriads that attest it; but what man of +common sense would invest any large amount of hope in so unpromising a +lottery.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Fame is the thirst of youth.--_Byron._ + +Our admiration of a famous man lessens upon our nearer acquaintance with +him; and we seldom hear of a celebrated person without a catalogue of +some notorious weaknesses and infirmities.--_Addison._ + +Even the best things are not equal to their fame.--_Thoreau._ + +~Fanaticism.~--Fanaticism, to which men are so much inclined, has always +served not only to render them more brutalized but more +wicked.--_Voltaire._ + +Painful and corporeal punishments should never be applied to fanaticism; +for, being founded on pride, it glories in persecution.--_Beccaria._ + +The false fire of an overheated mind.--_Cowper._ + +Fanaticism is the child of false zeal and of superstition, the father of +intolerance and of persecution.--_J. Fletcher._ + +~Fashion.~--Fashion is the great governor of this world. It presides not +only in matters of dress and amusement, but in law, physic, politics, +religion, and all other things of the gravest kind. Indeed, the wisest +of men would be puzzled to give any better reason why particular forms +in all these have been at certain times universally received, and at +other times universally rejected, than that they were in or out of +fashion.--_Fielding._ + +Fancy and pride seek things at vast expense.--_Young._ + +A beautiful envelope for mortality, presenting a glittering and polished +exterior, the appearance of which gives no certain indication of the +real value of what is contained therein.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Beauty too often sacrifices to fashion. The spirit of fashion is not the +beautiful, but the willful; not the graceful, but the fantastic; not the +superior in the abstract, but the superior in the worst of all +concretes,--the vulgar.--_Leigh Hunt._ + +~Faults.~--To acknowledge our faults when we are blamed is modesty; to +discover them to one's friends, in ingenuousness, is confidence; but to +preach them to all the world, if one does not take care, is +pride.--_Confucius._ + +The first fault is the child of simplicity, but every other the +offspring of guilt.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Fear.~--It is no ways congruous that God should be frightening men into +truth who were made to be wrought upon by calm evidence and gentle +methods of persuasion.--_Atterbury._ + +Fear is far more painful to cowardice than death to true courage.--_Sir +P. Sidney._ + +Fear is the tax that conscience pays to guilt.--_George Sewell._ + +Fear invites danger; concealed cowards insult known +ones.--_Chesterfield._ + +~Felicity.~--The world produces for every pint of honey a gallon of gall; +for every dram of pleasure a pound of pain; for every inch of mirth an +ell of moan; and as the ivy twines around the oak, so does misery and +misfortune encompass the happy man. Felicity, pure and unalloyed +felicity, is not a plant of earthly growth; her gardens are the +skies.--_Burton._ + +~Fickleness.~--Everything by starts, and nothing long.--_Dryden._ + +It will be found that they are the weakest-minded and the +hardest-hearted men that most love change.--_Ruskin._ + +~Fiction.~--Truth severe, by fairy fiction drest.--_Gray._ + +Every fiction since Homer has taught friendship, patriotism, generosity, +contempt of death. These are the highest virtues; and the fictions which +taught them were therefore of the highest, though not of unmixed, +utility.--_Sir J. Mackintosh._ + +I have often maintained that fiction may be much more instructive than +real history.--_Rev. John Foster._ + +Fiction is of the essence of poetry as well as of painting: there is a +resemblance in one of human bodies, things, and actions which are not +real, and in the other of a true story by fiction.--_Dryden._ + +Fiction is no longer a mere amusement; but transcendent genius, +accommodating itself to the character of the age, has seized upon this +province of literature, and turned fiction from a toy into a mighty +engine.--_Channing._ + +The best portraits are those in which there is a slight mixture of +caricature; and we are not aware that the best histories are not those +in which a little of the exaggeration of fictitious narrative is +judiciously employed. Something is lost in accuracy; but much is gained +in effect. The fainter lines are neglected; but the great characteristic +features are imprinted on the mind forever.--_Macaulay._ + +Those who delight in the study of human nature may improve in the +knowledge of it, and in the profitable application of that knowledge, by +the perusal of such fictions as those before us [Jane Austen's +Novels].--_Archbishop Whately._ + +~Firmness.~--The greatest firmness is the greatest mercy.--_Longfellow._ + +Stand firm and immovable as an anvil when it is beaten upon.--_St. +Ignatius._ + +~Flattery.~--The art of flatterers is to take advantage of the foibles of +the great, to foster their errors, and never to give advice which may +annoy.--_Moliere._ + +He does me double wrong that wounds me with the flatteries of his +tongue.--_Shakespeare._ + +Flattery is often a traffic of mutual meanness, where, although both +parties intend deception, neither are deceived, since words that cost +little are exchanged for hopes that cost less.--_Colton._ + +The most dangerous of all flattery is the inferiority of those about +us.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Though flattery blossoms like friendship, yet there is a great +difference in the fruit.--_Socrates._ + +The coin that is most current among mankind is flattery; the only +benefit of which is that by hearing what we are not we may be instructed +what we ought to be.--_Swift._ + +Blinded as they are to their true character by self-love, every man is +his own first and chiefest flatterer, prepared, therefore, to welcome +the flatterer from the outside, who only comes confirming the verdict of +the flatterer within.--_Plutarch._ + +Flattery is an ensnaring quality, and leaves a very dangerous +impression. It swells a man's imagination, entertains his fancy, and +drives him to a doting upon his own person.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +Because all men are apt to flatter themselves, to entertain the addition +of other men's praises is most perilous.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +Out of the pulpit, I trust none can accuse me of too much plainness of +speech; but there, madame [Queen Mary], I am not my own master, but must +speak that which I am commanded by the King of kings, and dare not, on +my soul, flatter any one on the face of all the earth--_John Knox._ + +~Flowers.~--Luther always kept a flower in a glass on his writing-table; +and when he was waging his great public controversy with Eckius he kept +a flower in his hand. Lord Bacon has a beautiful passage about flowers. +As to Shakspeare, he is a perfect Alpine valley,--he is full of flowers; +they spring, and blossom, and wave in every cleft of his mind. Even +Milton, cold, serene, and stately as he is, breaks forth into exquisite +gushes of tenderness and fancy when he marshals the flowers.--_Mrs. +Stowe._ + +Flowers, leaves, fruit, are the air-woven children of +light.--_Moleschott._ + +Ye pretty daughters of the Earth and Sun.--_Sir Walter Raleigh._ + +I always think the flowers can see us and know what we are thinking +about.--_George Eliot._ + +What a desolate place would be a world without a flower! It would be a +face without a smile,--a feast without a welcome! Are not flowers the +stars of the earth? and are not our stars the flowers of heaven?--_Mrs. +Balfour._ + +What a pity flowers can utter no sound! A singing rose, a whispering +violet, a murmuring honeysuckle,--oh, what a rare and exquisite miracle +would these be!--_Beecher._ + +The bright mosaic, that with storied beauty, the floor of nature's +temple tessellate.--_Horace Smith._ + +~Fools.~--You pity a man who is lame or blind, but you never pity him for +being a fool, which is often a much greater misfortune.--_Sydney Smith._ + +A learned fool is more foolish than an ignorant fool.--_Moliere._ + +Of all thieves fools are the worst; they rob you of time and +temper.--_Goethe._ + +Fortune makes folly her peculiar care.--_Churchill._ + +It would be easier to endow a fool with intellect than to persuade him +that he had none.--_Babinet._ + +There are many more fools in the world than there are knaves, otherwise +the knaves could not exist.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +There are more fools than sages, and among sages there is more folly +than wisdom.--_Chamfort._ + +~Foppery.~--Foppery is never cured; it is the bad stamina of the mind, +which, like those of the body, are never rectified; once a coxcomb and +always a coxcomb.--_Johnson._ + +Foppery is the egotism of clothes.--_Victor Hugo._ + +Nature has sometimes made a fool; but a coxcomb is always of a man's own +making.--_Addison._ + +~Forbearance.~--The little I have seen of the world teaches me to look +upon the errors of others in sorrow, not in anger. When I take the +history of one poor heart that has sinned and suffered, and represent to +myself the struggles and temptations it has passed through, the brief +pulsations of joy, the feverish inquietude of hope and fear, the +pressure of want, the desertion of friends, I would fain leave the +erring soul of my fellow-man with Him from whose hand it +came.--_Longfellow._ + +~Forethought.~--Human foresight often leaves its proudest possessor only a +choice of evils.--_Colton._ + +Whoever fails to turn aside the ills of life by prudent forethought, +must submit to fulfill the course of destiny.--_Schiller._ + +In life, as in chess, forethought wins.--_Charles Buxton._ + +If a man take no thought about what is distant, he will find sorrow near +at hand.--_Confucius._ + +Those old stories of visions and dreams guiding men have their truth: we +are saved by making the future present to ourselves.--_George Eliot._ + +~Forgetfulness.~--There is nothing, no, nothing, innocent or good that +dies and is forgotten: let us hold to that faith or none. An infant, a +prattling child, dying in the cradle, will live again in the better +thoughts of those that loved it, and play its part through them in the +redeeming actions of the world, though its body be burnt to ashes, or +drowned in the deep sea. Forgotten! Oh, if the deeds of human creatures +could be traced to their source, how beautiful would even death appear! +for how much charity, mercy, and purified affection would be seen to +have their growth in dusty graves!--_Dickens._ + +~Forgiveness.~--It is more easy to forgive the weak who have injured us, +than the powerful whom we have injured. That conduct will be continued +by our fears which commenced in our resentment. He that has gone so far +as to cut the claws of the lion will not feel himself quite secure until +he has also drawn his teeth.--_Colton._ + +They never pardon who commit the wrong.--_Dryden._ + +May I tell you why it seems to me a good thing for us to remember wrong +that has been done us? That we may forgive it.--_Dickens._ + +'Tis easier for the generous to forgive than for offense to ask +it.--_Thomson._ + +Life, that ever needs forgiveness, has, for its first duty, to +forgive.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +It is easy enough to forgive your enemies, if you have not the means to +harm them.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +More bounteous run rivers when the ice that locked their flow melts into +their waters. And when fine natures relent, their kindness is swelled by +the thaw.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Fortitude.~--White men should exhibit the same insensibility to moral +tortures that red men do to physical torments.--_Theophile Gautier._ + +There is a strength of quiet endurance as significant of courage as the +most daring feats of prowess.--_Tuckerman._ + +Fortitude is the guard and support of the other virtues.--_Locke._ + +~Fortune.~--Fortune loves only the young.--_Charles V._ + +Ill fortune never crushed that man whom good fortune deceived not.--_Ben +Jonson._ + +It is often the easiest move that completes the game. Fortune is like +the lady whom a lover carried off from all his rivals by putting an +additional lace upon his liveries.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The use we make of our fortune determines its sufficiency. A little is +enough if used wisely, and too much if expended foolishly.--_Bovee._ + +The fortunate circumstances of our lives are generally found at last to +be of our own producing.--_Goldsmith._ + +Fortune has been considered the guardian divinity of fools; and, on this +score, she has been accused of blindness; but it should rather be +adduced as a proof of her sagacity, when she helps those who certainly +cannot help themselves.--_Colton._ + +Fortunes made in no time are like shirts made in no time; it's ten to +one if they hang long together.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +There is some help for all the defects of fortune; for if a man cannot +attain to the length of his wishes, he may have his remedy by cutting of +them shorter.--_Cowley._ + +Fortune, to show us her power in all things, and to abate our +presumption, seeing she could not make fools wise, she has made them +fortunate.--_Montaigne._ + +See'st thou not what various fortunes the Divinity makes man to pass +through, changing and turning them from day to day?--_Euripides._ + +Fortune is but a synonymous word for nature and necessity.--_Bentley._ + +Foolish I deem him who, thinking that his state is blest, rejoices in +security; for Fortune, like a man distempered in his senses, leaps now +this way, now that, and no man is always fortunate.--_Euripides._ + +They say Fortune is a woman and capricious. But sometimes she is a good +woman, and gives to those who merit.--_George Eliot._ + +If Fortune has fairly sat on a man, he takes it for granted that life +consists in being sat upon. But to be coddled on Fortune's knee, and +then have his ears boxed, that is aggravating.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Fraud.~--The more gross the fraud the more glibly will it go down, and +the more greedily will it be swallowed; since folly will always find +faith wherever impostors will find impudence.--_Colton._ + +~Friendship.~--Friendship has steps which lead up to the throne of God, +though all spirits come to the Infinite; only Love is satiable, and like +Truth, admits of no three degrees of comparison; and a simple being +fills the heart.--_Richter._ + +Very pleasant hast thou been unto me: thy love to me was wonderful, +passing the love of women.--_Bible._ + +Fix yourself upon the wealthy. In a word, take this for a golden rule +through life: Never, never have a friend that is poorer than +yourself.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +Experience has taught me that the only friends we can call our own, who +can have no change, are those over whom the grave has closed; the seal +of death is the only seal of friendship.--_Byron._ + +What is commonly called friendship even is only a little more honor +among rogues.--_Thoreau._ + +So great a happiness do I esteem it to be loved, that I fancy every +blessing both from gods and men ready to descend spontaneously upon him +who is loved.--_Xenophon._ + +Nothing makes the earth seem so spacious as to have friends at a +distance; they make the latitudes and longitudes.--_Thoreau._ + +The friendship between great men is rarely intimate or permanent. It is +a Boswell that most appreciates a Johnson. Genius has no brother, no +co-mate; the love it inspires is that of a pupil or a +son.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The firmest friendships have been formed in mutual adversity; as iron is +most strongly united by the fiercest flame.--_Colton._ + +Never contract a friendship with a man that is not better than +thyself.--_Confucius._ + +There are three friendships which are advantageous, and three which are +injurious. Friendship with the upright, friendship with the sincere, and +friendship with the man of much information,--these are advantageous. +Friendship with the man of specious airs, friendship with the +insinuatingly soft, friendship with the glib-tongued,--these are +injurious.--_Confucius._ + +Friendship survives death better than absence.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +This communicating of a man's self to his friend works two contrary +effects, for it redoubleth joys and cutteth griefs in half: for there is +no man that imparteth his joys to his friend, but he joyeth the more; +and no man that imparteth his griefs to his friend, but he grieveth the +less.--_Bacon._ + +Sweet is the memory of distant friends! Like the mellow rays of the +declining sun, it falls tenderly, yet sadly, on the heart.--_Washington +Irving._ + +It may be worth noticing as a curious circumstance, when persons past +forty before they were at all acquainted form together a very close +intimacy of friendship. For grafts of _old_ wood to _take_, there must +be a wonderful congeniality between the trees.--_Whately._ + +An old friend is not always the person whom it is easiest to make a +confidant of.--_George Eliot._ + +~Fun.~--There is nothing like fun, is there? I haven't any myself, and I +do like it in others. Oh, we need it,--we need all the counter-weights +we can muster to balance the sad relations of life. God has made sunny +spots in the heart; why should we exclude the light from +them?--_Haliburton._ + +~Futurity.~--The best preparation for the future is the present well seen +to, the last duty done.--_George MacDonald._ + +We always live prospectively, never retrospectively, and there is no +abiding moment.--_Jacobi._ + +Another life, if it were not better than this, would be less a promise +than a threat.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +The spirit of man, which God inspired, cannot together perish with this +corporeal clod.--_Milton._ + + +G. + +~Gambling.~--Gaming is a kind of tacit confession that the company engaged +therein do, in general, exceed the bounds of their respective fortunes, +and therefore they cast lots to determine upon whom the ruin shall at +present fall, that the rest may be saved a little longer.--_Blackstone._ + +A mode of transferring property without producing any intermediate +good.--_Johnson._ + +~Gems.~--How very beautiful these gems are! It is strange how deeply +colors seem to penetrate one, like scent. I suppose that is the reason +why gems are used as spiritual emblems in the Revelation of St. John. +They look like fragments of heaven.--_George Eliot._ + +~Generosity.~--A friend to everybody is often a friend to nobody, or else +in his simplicity he robs his family to help strangers, and becomes +brother to a beggar. There is wisdom in generosity as in everything +else.--_Spurgeon._ + +Generosity is the accompaniment of high birth; pity and gratitude are +its attendants.--_Corneille._ + +It is good to be unselfish and generous; but don't carry that too far. +It will not do to give yourself to be melted down for the benefit of the +tallow-trade; you must know where to find yourself.--_George Eliot._ + +If cruelty has its expiations and its remorses, generosity has its +chances and its turns of good fortune; as if Providence reserved them +for fitting occasions, that noble hearts may not be +discouraged.--_Lamartine._ + +~Genius.~--Genius is rarely found without some mixture of eccentricity, as +the strength of spirit is proved by the bubbles on its surface.--_Mrs. +Balfour._ + +All great men are in some degree inspired.--_Cicero._ + +This is the highest miracle of genius: that things which are not should +be as though they were; that the imaginations of one mind should become +the personal recollections of another.--_Macaulay._ + +The path of genius is not less obstructed with disappointment than that +of ambition.--_Voltaire._ + +One misfortune of extraordinary geniuses is that their very friends are +more apt to admire than love them.--_Pope._ + +Genius speaks only to genius.--_Stanislaus._ + +A nation does wisely, if not well, in starving her men of genius. Fatten +them, and they are done for.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Genius has no brother.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Genius never grows old; young to-day, mature yesterday, vigorous +to-morrow: always immortal. It is peculiar to no sex or condition, and +is the divine gift to woman no less than to man.--_Juan Lewis._ + +~Gentleman.~--A gentleman's first characteristic is that fineness of +structure in the body which renders it capable of the most delicate +sensation; and of structure in the mind which renders it capable of the +most delicate sympathies; one may say, simply, "fineness of nature." +This is of course compatible with heroic bodily strength and mental +firmness; in fact, heroic strength is not conceivable without such +delicacy.--_Ruskin._ + +It is a grand old name, that of gentleman, and has been recognized as a +rank and power in all stages of society. To possess this character is a +dignity of itself, commanding the instinctive homage of every generous +mind, and those who will not bow to titular rank will yet do homage to +the gentleman. His qualities depend not upon fashion or manners, but +upon moral worth; not on personal possessions, but on personal +qualities. The Psalmist briefly describes him as one "that walketh +uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his +heart."--_Samuel Smiles._ + +There is no man that can teach us to be gentlemen better than Joseph +Addison.--_Thackeray._ + +~Gentleness.~--Fearless gentleness is the most beautiful of feminine +attractions, born of modesty and love.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Gentleness is far more successful in all its enterprises than violence; +indeed, violence generally frustrates its own purpose, while gentleness +scarcely ever fails.--_Locke._ + +Sweet speaking oft a currish heart reclaims.--_Sidney._ + +The golden beams of truth and the silken cords of love, twisted +together, will draw men on with a sweet violence, whether they will or +not.--_Cudworth._ + +~Gifts.~--One must be poor to know the luxury of giving!--_George Eliot._ + +Riches, understanding, beauty, are fair gifts of God.--_Luther._ + +And with them words of so sweet breath composed as made the things more +rich.--_Shakespeare._ + +How can that gift leave a trace which has left no void?--_Madame +Swetchine._ + +The best thing to give to your enemy is forgiveness; to an opponent, +tolerance; to a friend, your heart; to your child, a good example; to a +father, deference; to your mother, conduct that will make her proud of +you; to yourself, respect; to all men, charity.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Examples are few of men ruined by giving. Men are heroes in spending, +very cravens in what they give.--_Bovee._ + +When a friend asks, there is no to-morrow.--_George Herbert._ + +Strange designs lurk under a gift. "Give the horse to his Holiness," +said the cardinal. "I cannot serve you!"--_Zimmermann._ + +~Glory.~--To a father who loves his children victory has no charms. When +the heart speaks, glory itself is an illusion.--_Napoleon._ + +Those who start for human glory, like the mettled hounds of Actaeon, must +pursue the game not only where there is a path, but where there is none. +They must be able to simulate and dissimulate, to leap and to creep; to +conquer the earth like Caesar, or to fall down and kiss it like Brutus; +to throw their sword like Brennus into the trembling scale; or, like +Nelson, to snatch the laurels from the doubtful hand of Victory, while +she is hesitating where to bestow them.--_Colton._ + +Obloquy is a necessary ingredient in the composition of all true +glory.--_Burke._ + +The best kind of glory is that which is reflected from honesty,--such as +was the glory of Cato and Aristides; but it was harmful to them both, +and is seldom beneficial to any man whilst he lives; what it is to him +after his death I cannot say, because I love not philosophy merely +notional and conjectural, and no man who has made the experiment has +been so kind as to come back to inform us.--_Cowley._ + +Nothing is so expensive as glory.--_Sydney Smith._ + +The love of glory can only create a hero, the contempt of it creates a +wise man.--_Talleyrand._ + +~Gluttony.~--Whose god is their belly, and whose glory is in their +shame.--_Bible._ + +The kitchen is their shrine, the cook their priest, the table their +altar, and their belly their god.--_Buck._ + +~God.~--He that doth the ravens feed, yea, providentially caters for the +sparrow, be comfort to my age!--_Shakespeare._ + +To escape from evil, we must be made as far as possible like God; and +this resemblance consists in becoming just and holy and wise.--_Plato._ + +Whenever I think of God I can only conceive him as a Being infinitely +great and infinitely good. This last quality of the divine nature +inspires me with such confidence and joy that I could have written even +a _miserere_ in _tempo allegro_.--_Haydn._ + +All flows out from the Deity, and all must be absorbed in him +again.--_Zoroaster._ + +It were better to have no opinion of God at all than such an opinion as +is unworthy of him; for the one is unbelief, and the other is contumely; +and certainly superstition is the reproach of the Deity.--_Bacon._ + +I have seen two miracles lately. I looked up, and saw the clouds above +me in the noontide; and they looked like the sea that was hanging over +me, and I could see no cord on which they were suspended, and yet they +never fell. And then when the noontide had gone, and the midnight came, +I looked again, and there was the dome of heaven, and it was spangled +with stars, and I could see no pillars that held up the skies, and yet +they never fell. Now He that holds the stars up and moves the clouds in +their course can do all things, and I trust Him in the sight of these +miracles.--_Luther._ + +This avenging God, rancorous torturer who burns his creatures in a slow +fire! When they tell me that God made himself a man, I prefer to +recognize a man who made himself a god.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +This is one of the names which we give to that eternal, infinite, and +incomprehensible being, the Creator of all things, who preserves and +governs everything by his almighty power and wisdom, and is the only +object of our worship.--_Cruden._ + +~Gold.~--Midas longed for gold. He got gold so that whatever he touched +became gold, and he, with his long ears, was little the better for +it.--_Carlyle._ + +A mask of gold hides all deformities.--_Dekker._ + +There are two metals, one of which is omnipotent in the cabinet, and the +other in the camp,--gold and iron. He that knows how to apply them both +may indeed attain the highest station, but he must know something more +to keep it.--_Colton._ + +Thou true magnetic pole, to which all hearts point duly north, like +trembling needles!--_Byron._ + +Judges and senates have been bought for gold.--_Pope._ + +Gold is, in its last analysis, the sweat of the poor, and the blood of +the brave.--_Joseph Napoleon._ + +Gold all is not that doth golden seem.--_Spenser._ + +There is no place so high that an ass laden with gold cannot reach +it.--_Rojas._ + +~Good.~--When what is good comes of age and is likely to live, there is +reason for rejoicing.--_George Eliot._ + +How indestructibly the good grows, and propagates itself, even among the +weedy entanglements of evil!--_Carlyle._ + +Good, the more communicated, more abundant grows.--_Milton._ + +Whatever mitigates the woes or increases the happiness of others is a +just criterion of goodness; and whatever injures society at large, or +any individual in it, is a criterion of iniquity. One should not quarrel +with a dog without a reason sufficient to vindicate one through all the +courts of morality.--_Goldsmith._ + +The true and good resemble gold. Gold seldom appears obvious and solid, +but it pervades invisibly the bodies that contain it.--_Jacobi._ + +He is good that does good to others. If he suffers for the good he does, +he is better still; and if he suffers from them to whom he did good, he +is arrived to that height of goodness that nothing but an increase of +his sufferings can add to it; if it proves his death, his virtue is at +its summit,--it is heroism complete.--_Bruyere._ + +That is good which doth good.--_Venning._ + +The Pythagoreans make good to be certain and finite, and evil infinite +and uncertain. There are a thousand ways to miss the white; there is +only one to hit it.--_Montaigne._ + +~Good-humor.~--Honest good-humor is the oil and wine of a merry meeting, +and there is no jovial companionship equal to that where the jokes are +rather small and the laughter abundant.--_Washington Irving._ + +Affability, mildness, tenderness, and a word which I would fain bring +back to its original signification of virtue,--I mean good-nature,--are +of daily use: they are the bread of mankind and staff of +life.--_Dryden._ + +This portable quality of good-humor seasons all the parts and +occurrences we meet with, in such a manner that there are no moments +lost, but they all pass with so much satisfaction that the heaviest of +loads (when it is a load), that of time, is never felt by +us.--_Steele._ + +Gayety is to good-humor as perfumes to vegetable fragrance: the one +overpowers weak spirits, the other recreates and revives +them.--_Johnson._ + +That inexhaustible good-nature, which is the most precious gift of +Heaven, spreading itself like oil over the troubled sea of thought, and +keeping the mind smooth and equable in the roughest +weather.--_Washington Irving._ + +~Goodness.~--Nothing rarer than real goodness.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +True goodness is like the glow-worm in this, that it shines most when no +eyes except those of Heaven are upon it.--_Archdeacon Hare._ + +Do good by stealth, and blush to find it fame.--_Pope._ + +Goodness thinks no ill where no ill seems.--_Milton._ + +~Gossip.~--A long-tongued babbling gossip.--_Shakespeare._ + +He sits at home until he has accumulated an insupportable load of ennui, +and then he sallies forth to distribute it amongst his +acquaintance.--_Colton._ + +As to people saying a few idle words about us, we must not mind that, +any more than the old church-steeple minds the rooks cawing about +it.--_George Eliot._ + +~Government.~--The proper function of a government is to make it easy for +people to do good and difficult for them to do evil.--_Gladstone._ + +Society cannot exist unless a controlling power upon will and appetite +be placed somewhere; and the less of it there is within, the more there +must be without. It is ordained in the eternal constitution of things +that men of intemperate minds cannot be free. Their passions forge their +fetters.--_Burke._ + +Government is a contrivance of human wisdom to provide for human +wants.--_Burke._ + +Government owes its birth to the necessity of preventing and repressing +the injuries which the associated individuals had to fear from one +another. It is the sentinel who watches, in order that the common +laborer be not disturbed.--_Abbe Raynal._ + +But I say to you, and to our whole country, and to all the crowned heads +and aristocratic powers and feudal systems that exist, that it is to +self-government, the great principle of popular representation and +administration, the system that lets in all to participate in the +counsels that are to assign the good or evil to all, that we may owe +what we are and what we hope to be.--_Daniel Webster._ + +The culminating point of administration is to know well how much power, +great or small, we ought to use in all circumstances.--_Montesquieu._ + +Of governments, that of the mob is the most sanguinary, that of soldiers +the most expensive, and that of civilians the most vexatious.--_Colton._ + +Government, like dress, is the badge of lost innocence; the palaces of +kings are built on the ruins of the bowers of paradise. For were the +impulses of conscience clear, uniform, and irresistibly obeyed, man +would need no other lawgiver; but that not being the case, he finds it +necessary to surrender up a part of his property to furnish means for +the protection of the rest, and this he is induced to do by the same +prudence which in every other case advises him out of two evils to +choose the least.--_Thomas Paine._ + +~Grace.~--As amber attracts a straw, so does beauty admiration, which only +lasts while the warmth continues; but virtue, wisdom, goodness, and real +worth, like the loadstone, never lose their power. These are the true +graces, which, as Homer feigns, are linked and tied hand in hand, +because it is by their influence that human hearts are so firmly united +to each other.--_Burton._ + +The king-becoming graces--devotion, patience, courage, +fortitude.--_Shakespeare._ + +Know you not, master, to some kind of men their graces serve them but as +enemies? No more do yours; your virtues, gentle master, are sanctified +and holy traitors to you. Oh, what a world is this, when what is comely +envenoms him that bears it!--_Shakespeare._ + +How inimitably graceful children are before they learn to +dance!--_Coleridge._ + +That word, grace, in an ungracious mouth, is but +profane.--_Shakespeare._ + +Grace comes as oft clad in the dusky robe of desolation as in white +attire.--_Sir J. Beaumont._ + +~Gratitude.~--Gratitude is a fruit of great cultivation; you do not find +it among gross people.--_Johnson._ + +God is pleased with no music below so much as the thanksgiving songs of +relieved widows and supported orphans; of rejoicing, comforted, and +thankful persons.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +No metaphysician ever felt the deficiency of language so much as the +grateful.--_Colton._ + +Thus love is the most easy and agreeable, and gratitude the most +humiliating, affection of the mind: we never reflect on the man we love +without exulting in our choice, while he who has bound us to him by +benefits alone rises to our ideas as a person to whom we have in some +measure forfeited our freedom.--_Goldsmith._ + +Gratitude is the virtue most deified and most deserted. It is the +ornament of rhetoric and the libel of practical life.--_J. W. Forney._ + +~Grave.~--Since the silent shore awaits at last even those who longest +miss the old Archer's arrow, perhaps the early grave which men weep over +may be meant to save.--_Byron._ + +The grave is, I suspect, the sole commonwealth which attains that dead +flat of social equality that life in its every principle so heartily +abhors; and that equality the grave will perpetuate to the end of +time.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The reconciling grave.--_Southern._ + +The grave where even the great find rest.--_Pope._ + +Oh, how small a portion of earth will hold us when we are dead, who +ambitiously seek after the whole world while we are living!--_Philip, +King of Macedon._ + +The cradle of transformation.--_Mazzini._ + +The graves of those we have loved and lost distress and console +us.--_Arsene Houssaye._ + +~Gravity.~--The very essence of gravity is design, and consequently +deceit; a taught trick to gain credit with the world for more sense and +knowledge than a man is worth.--_Sterne._ + +Gravity is but the rind of wisdom; but it is a preservative +rind.--_Joubert._ + +Gravity must be natural and simple. There must be urbanity and +tenderness in it. A man must not formalize on everything. He who +formalizes on everything is a fool, and a grave fool is perhaps more +injurious than a light fool.--_Cecil._ + +~Greatness.~--There is but one method, and that is hard labor; and a man +who will not pay that price for greatness had better at once dedicate +himself to the pursuit of the fox, or sport with the tangles of Neaera's +hair, or talk of bullocks, and glory in the goad!--_Sidney Smith._ + +A really great man is known by three signs,--generosity in the design, +humanity in the execution, and moderation in success.--_Bismarck._ + +The great men of the earth are but the marking stones on the road of +humanity; they are the priests of its religion.--_Mazzini._ + +A multitude of eyes will narrowly inspect every part of an eminent man, +consider him nicely in all views, and not be a little pleased when they +have taken him in the worst and most disadvantageous lights.--_Addison._ + +What you can manufacture, or communicate, you can lower the price of, +but this mental supremacy is incommunicable; you will never multiply its +quantity, nor lower its price; and nearly the best thing that men can +generally do is--to set themselves, not to the attainment, but the +discovery of this; learning to know gold, when we see it, from +iron-glance, and diamond from flint-sand, being for most of us a more +profitable employment than trying to make diamonds out of our own +charcoal.--_Ruskin._ + +Men in great place are thrice servants: servants of the sovereign or +state, servants of fame, and servants of business; so as they have no +freedom, neither in their persons, nor in their actions, nor in their +times. It is a strange desire to seek power over others, and to lose +power over a man's self.--_Bacon._ + +The difference between one man and another is by no means so great as +the superstitious crowd supposes. But the same feelings which in ancient +Rome produced the apotheosis of a popular emperor, and in modern times +the canonization of a devout prelate, lead men to cherish an illusion +which furnishes them with something to adore.--_Macaulay._ + +Great men never make a bad use of their superiority; they see it, they +feel it, and are not less modest. The more they have, the more they know +their own deficiencies.--_Rousseau._ + +He who is great when he falls is great in his prostration, and is no +more an object of contempt than when men tread on the ruins of sacred +buildings, which men of piety venerate no less than if they +stood.--_Seneca._ + +Greatness lies not in being strong, but in the right using of +strength.--_Beecher._ + +Greatness seems in her [Madame de Maintenon] to take its noblest form, +that of simplicity.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Grief.~--Why destroy present happiness by a distant misery, which may +never come at all, or you may never live to see it? for every +substantial grief has twenty shadows, and most of them shadows of your +own making.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Some griefs are medicinable; and this is one.--_Shakespeare._ + +While grief is fresh, every attempt to divert only irritates. You must +wait till grief be _digested_. And then amusement will dissipate the +remains of it.--_Johnson._ + +Grief hallows hearts, even while it ages heads.--_P. J. Bailey._ + +All the joys of earth will not assuage our thirst for happiness, while a +single grief suffices to shroud life in a sombre veil, and smite it with +nothingness at all points.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Grief has been compared to a hydra, for every one that dies two are +born.--_Calderon._ + +Grief, like night, is salutary. It cools down the soul by putting out +its feverish fires; and if it oppresses her, it also compresses her +energies. The load once gone, she will go forth with greater buoyancy to +new pleasures.--_Dr. Pulsford._ + +What's gone, and what's past help, should be past grief.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Guilt.~--All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little +hand.--_Shakespeare._ + +Think not that guilt requires the burning torches of the Furies to +agitate and torment it. Frauds, crimes, remembrances of the past, +terrors of the future,--these are the domestic Furies that are ever +present to the mind of the impious.--_Cicero._ + +Guiltiness will speak though tongues were out of use.--_Shakespeare._ + +Despair alone makes guilty men be bold.--_Coleridge._ + +The sin lessens in human estimation only as the guilt +increases.--_Schiller._ + +There are no greater prudes than those women who have some secret to +hide.--_George Sand._ + +~Gunpowder.~--If we contrast the rapid progress of this mischievous +discovery with the slow and laborious advances of reason, science, and +the arts of peace, a philosopher, according to his temper, will laugh or +weep at the folly of mankind.--_Gibbon._ + +A coarse-grained powder, used by cross-grained people, playing at +cross-grained purposes.--_Marryatt._ + +Gunpowder is the emblem of politic revenge, for it biteth first, and +barketh afterwards; the bullet being at the mark before the report is +heard, so that it maketh a noise, not by way of warning, but of +triumph.--_Fuller._ + + +H. + +~Habits.~--Habits are soon assumed; but when we strive to strip them off, +'tis being flayed alive.--_Cowper._ + +Vicious habits are so odious and degrading that they transform the +individual who practices them into an incarnate demon.--_Cicero._ + +Unless the habit leads to happiness, the best habit is to contract +none.--_Zimmerman._ + +The law of the harvest is to reap more than you sow. Sow an act and you +reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a character; sow a character and +you reap a destiny.--_George D. Boardman._ + +Habit, if wisely and skillfully formed, becomes truly a second nature, +as the common saying is; but unskillfully and unmethodically directed, +it will be as it were the ape of nature, which imitates nothing to the +life, but only clumsily and awkwardly.--_Bacon._ + +That beneficent harness of routine which enables silly men to live +respectably and unhappy men to live calmly.--_George Eliot._ + +Habits are the daughters of action, but they nurse their mothers, and +give birth to daughters after her image, more lovely and +prosperous.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +~Hair.~--The hair is the finest ornament women have. Of old, virgins used +to wear it loose, except when they were in mourning.--_Luther._ + +Her head was bare, but for her native ornament of hair, which in a +simple knot was tied above; sweet negligence, unheeded bait of +love!--_Dryden._ + +The robe which curious nature weaves to hang upon the head.--_Dekker._ + +Robed in the long night of her deep hair.--_Tennyson._ + +~Hand.~--Other parts of the body assist the speaker, but these speak +themselves. By them we ask, we promise, we invoke, we dismiss, we +threaten, we entreat, we deprecate; we express fear, joy, grief, our +doubts, our assent, our penitence; we show moderation, profusion; we +mark number and time.--_Quintilian._ + +The Greeks adored their gods by the simple compliment of kissing their +hands; and the Romans were treated as atheists if they would not perform +the same act when they entered a temple. This custom, however, as a +religious ceremony, declined with Paganism; but was continued as a +salutation by inferiors to their superiors, or as a token of esteem +among friends. At present it is only practiced as a mark of obedience +from the subject to the sovereign, and by lovers, who are solicitous to +preserve this ancient usage in its full power.--_Disraeli._ + +~Handsome.~--They are as heaven made them, handsome enough if they be good +enough; for handsome is that handsome does.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Happiness.~--The foundation of domestic happiness is faith in the virtue +of woman; the foundation of political happiness is confidence in the +integrity of man; the foundation of all happiness, temporal and eternal, +is reliance on the goodness of God.--_Landor._ + +To remember happiness which cannot be restored is pain, but of a +softened kind. Our recollections are unfortunately mingled with much +that we deplore, and with many actions that we bitterly repent; still, +in the most checkered life, I firmly think there are so many little rays +of sunshine to look back upon that I do not believe any mortal would +deliberately drain a goblet of the waters of Lethe if he had it in his +power.--_Dickens._ + +That man is never happy for the present is so true that all his relief +from unhappiness is only forgetting himself for a little while. Life is +a progress from want to want, not from enjoyment to +enjoyment.--_Johnson._ + +It is a lucky eel that escapes skinning. The best happiness will be to +escape the worst misery.--_George Eliot._ + +That all who are happy are equally happy is not true. A peasant and a +philosopher may be equally _satisfied_, but not equally _happy_. +Happiness consists in the multiplicity of agreeable consciousness. A +peasant has not capacity for having equal happiness with a +philosopher.--_Johnson._ + +Happiness doats on her work, and is prodigal to her favorite. As one +drop of water hath an attraction for another, so do felicities run into +felicities.--_Landor._ + +Sensations sweet, felt in the blood, and felt along the +heart.--_Wordsworth._ + +Great happiness is the fire ordeal of mankind, great misfortune only the +trial by water; for the former opens a large extent of futurity, whereas +the latter circumscribes or closes it.--_Richter._ + +Prospective happiness is perhaps the only real happiness in the +world.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +Nature and individuals are generally best when they are happiest, and +deserve heaven most when they have learnt rightly to enjoy it. Tears of +sorrow are only pearls of inferior value, but tears of joy are pearls or +diamonds of the first water.--_Richter._ + +How many people I have seen who would have plucked cannon-balls out of +the muzzles of guns with their bare hands, and yet had not courage +enough to be happy.--_Theophile Gautier._ + +All mankind are happier for having been happy, so that, if you make them +happy now, you make them happy twenty years hence by the memory of +it.--_Sydney Smith._ + +We are no longer happy so soon as we wish to be happier.--_Lamotte._ + +I have now reigned above fifty years in victory or peace, beloved by my +subjects, dreaded by my enemies, and respected by my allies. Riches and +honors, power and pleasure, have waited on my call, nor does any earthly +blessing appear to have been wanting to my felicity. In this situation, +I have diligently numbered the days of pure and genuine happiness which +have fallen to my lot: they amount to _fourteen_. O man, place not thy +confidence in this present world!--_The Caliph Abdalrahman._ + +If I may speak of myself (the only person of whom I can speak with +certainty), _my_ happy hours have far exceeded, and far exceed, the +scanty numbers of the caliph of Spain; and I shall not scruple to add +that many of them are due to the pleasing labor of the present +composition.--_Gibbon._ + +For which we bear to live, or dare to die.--_Pope._ + +We buy wisdom with happiness, and who would purchase it at such a price? +To be happy we must forget the past, and think not of the future; and +who that has a soul or mind can do this? No one; and this proves that +those who have either know no happiness on this earth. Memory precludes +happiness, whatever Rogers may say or write to the contrary, for it +borrows from the past to embitter the present, bringing back to us all +the grief that has most wounded, or the happiness that has most charmed +us.--_Byron._ + +The happiness you wot of is not a hundredth part of what you +enjoy.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Every human soul has the germ of some flowers within; and they would +open if they could only find sunshine and free air to expand in. I +always told you that not having enough of sunshine was what ailed the +world. Make people happy, and there will not be half the quarreling, or +a tenth part of the wickedness there is.--_Mrs. L. M. Child._ + +Comparison, more than reality, makes men happy, and can make them +wretched.--_Feltham._ + +Happiness and misery are the names of two extremes, the utmost bounds +whereof we know not.--_Locke._ + +There comes forever something between us and what we deem our +happiness.--_Byron._ + +Philosophical happiness is to want little; civil or vulgar happiness is +to want much, and to enjoy much.--_Burke._ + +How sad a sight is human happiness to those whose thoughts can pierce +beyond an hour.--_Young._ + +Plenteous joys, wanton in fullness.--_Shakespeare._ + +Happiness is always the inaccessible castle which sinks in ruin when we +set foot on it.--_Arsene Houssaye._ + +For ages happiness has been represented as a huge precious stone, +impossible to find, which people seek for hopelessly. It is not so; +happiness is a mosaic, composed of a thousand little stones, which +separately and of themselves have little value, but which united with +art form a graceful design.--_Mme. de Girardin._ + +The happiest women, like the happiest nations, have no history.--_George +Eliot._ + +The way to bliss lies not on beds of down.--_Quarles._ + +The use we make of happiness gives us an eternal sentiment of +satisfaction or repentance.--_Rousseau._ + +Happiness is where we find it, but rarely where we seek it.--_J. Petit +Senn._ + +In regard to the affairs of mortals, there is nothing happy +throughout.--_Euripides._ + +~Hardship.~--The beginning of hardship is like the first taste of bitter +food,--it seems for a moment unbearable; yet, if there is nothing else +to satisfy our hunger, we take another bite and find it possible to go +on.--_George Eliot._ + +~Haste.~--Let your haste commend your duty.--_Shakespeare._ + +The more haste ever the worst speed.--_Churchill._ + +Hurry and cunning are the two apprentices of dispatch and skill; but +neither of them ever learn their master's trade.--_Colton._ + +All haste implies weakness.--_George MacDonald._ + +~Hatred.~--We hate some persons because we do not know them; and we will +not know them because we hate them.--_Colton._ + +Were one to ask me in which direction I think man strongest, I should +say, his capacity to hate.--_Beecher._ + +Love is rarely a hypocrite. But hate! how detect, and how guard against +it. It lurks where you least expect it; it is created by causes that you +can the least foresee; and civilization multiplies its varieties whilst +it favors its disguise; for civilization increases the number of +contending interests, and refinement renders more susceptible to the +least irritation the cuticle of self-love.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Hatred is like fire--it makes even light rubbish deadly.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Health.~--Be it remembered that man subsists upon the air more than upon +his meat and drink; but no one can exist for an hour without a copious +supply of air. The atmosphere which some breathe is contaminated and +adulterated, and with its vital principles so diminished, that it cannot +fully decarbonize the blood, nor fully excite the nervous +system.--_Thackeray._ + +Those hypochondriacs, who, like Herodius, give up their whole time and +thoughts to the care of their health, sacrifice unto life every noble +purpose of living; striving to support a frail and feverish being here, +they neglect an hereafter; they continue to patch up and repair their +mouldering tenement of clay, regardless of the immortal tenant that must +survive it; agitated by greater fears than the Apostle, and supported by +none of his hopes, they "die daily."--_Colton._ + +Refuse to be ill. Never tell people you are ill; never own it to +yourself. Illness is one of those things which a man should resist on +principle at the onset.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Health is so necessary to all the duties, as well as pleasures, of life, +that the crime of squandering it is equal to the folly.--_Johnson._ + +There are two things in life that a sage must preserve at every +sacrifice, the coats of his stomach and the enamel of his teeth. Some +evils admit of consolations: there are no comforters for dyspepsia and +the toothache.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Heart.~--The heart is like the tree that gives balm for the wounds of man +only when the iron has pierced it.--_Chauteaubriand._ + +The heart is an astrologer that always divines the truth.--_Calderon._ + +There are treasures laid up in the heart,--treasures of charity, piety, +temperance, and soberness. These treasures a man takes with him beyond +death when he leaves this world.--_Buddhist Scriptures._ + +In aught that tries the heart, how few withstand the proof!--_Byron._ + +The hearts of pretty women are like bonbons, wrapped up in enigmas.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +A loving heart is the truest wisdom.--_Dickens._ + +To judge human character rightly, a man may sometimes have very small +experience, provided he has a very large heart.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The heart has reasons that reason does not understand.--_Bossuet._ + +There are chords in the human heart, strange, varying strings, which are +only struck by accident; which will remain mute and senseless to appeals +the most passionate and earnest, and respond at last to the slightest +casual touch. In the most insensible or childish minds there is some +train of reflection which art can seldom lead, or skill assist, but +which will reveal itself, as great truths have done, by chance, and when +the discoverer has the plainest and simplest end in view.--_Dickens._ + +A willing heart adds feathers to the heel, and makes the clown a winged +Mercury.--_Joanna Baillie._ + +Some people's hearts are shrunk in them like dried nuts. You can hear +'em rattle as they walk.--_Douglas_ _Jerrold._ + +~Heaven.~--The love of heaven makes one heavenly.--_Shakespeare._ + +Where is heaven? I cannot tell. Even to the eye of faith, heaven looks +much like a star to the eye of flesh. Set there on the brow of night, it +shines most bright, most beautiful; but it is separated from us by so +great a distance as to be raised almost as high above our investigations +as above the storms and clouds of earth.--_Rev. Dr. Guthrie._ + +When at eve at the bounding of the landscape the heavens appear to +recline so slowly on the earth, imagination pictures beyond the horizon +an asylum of hope,--a native land of love; and nature seems silently to +repeat that man is immortal.--_Madame de Stael._ + +Few, without the hope of another life, would think it worth their while +to live above the allurements of sense.--_Atterbury._ + +Heaven is a place of restless activity, the abode of never-tiring +thought. David and Isaiah will sweep nobler and loftier strains in +eternity, and the minds of the saints, unclogged by cumbersome clay, +will forever feast on the banquet of rich and glorious +thought.--_Beecher._ + +~Heroes.~--A light supper, a good night's sleep, and a fine morning have +often made a hero of the same man who, by indigestion, a restless night, +and a rainy morning would have proved a coward.--_Chesterfield._ + +In analyzing the character of heroes it is hardly possible to separate +altogether the share of Fortune from their own.--_Hallam._ + +Mankind is not disposed to look narrowly into the conduct of great +victors when their victory is on the right side.--_George Eliot._ + +No one is a hero to his valet.--_Madame de Sevigne._ + +~History.~--The Grecian history is a poem, Latin history a picture, modern +history a chronicle.--_Chauteaubriand._ + +If men could learn from history, what lessons it might teach us! But +passion and party blind our eyes, and the light which experience gives +is a lantern on the stern, which shines only on the waves behind +us!--_Coleridge._ + +History, which is, indeed, little more than the register of the crimes, +follies, and misfortunes of mankind.--_Gibbon._ + +We must consider how very little history there is; I mean real, +authentic history. That certain kings reigned and certain battles were +fought we can depend upon as true; but all the coloring, all the +philosophy of history, is conjecture.--_Johnson._ + +History needs distance, perspective. Facts and events which are too well +attested cease, in some sort, to be malleable.--_Joubert._ + +To be entirely just in our estimate of other ages is not only +difficult,--it is impossible. Even what is passing in our presence we +see but through a glass darkly. The mind as well as the eye adds +something of its own before an image, even of the clearest object, can +be painted upon it; and in historical inquiries the most instructed +thinkers have but a limited advantage over the most illiterate. Those +who know the most approach least to agreement.--_Froude._ + +The impartiality of history is not that of the mirror which merely +reflects objects, but of the judge who sees, listens, and +decides.--_Lamartine._ + +In every human character and transaction there is a mixture of good and +evil: a little exaggeration, a little suppression, a judicious use of +epithets, a watchful and searching skepticism with respect to the +evidence on one side, a convenient credulity with respect to every +report or tradition on the other, may easily make a saint of Laud, or a +tyrant of Henry the Fourth.--_Macaulay._ + +History is but a kind of Newgate calendar, a register of the crimes and +miseries that man has inflicted on his fellow-man.--_Washington Irving._ + +History has its foreground and its background, and it is principally in +the management of its perspective that one artist differs from another. +Some events must be represented on a large scale, others diminished; the +great majority will be lost in the dimness of the horizon, and a general +idea of their joint effect will be given by a few slight +touches.--_Macaulay._ + +Violent natures make history. The instruments they use almost always +kill. Religion and philosophy have their vestments covered with innocent +blood.--_X. Doudan._ + +Each generation gathers together the imperishable children of the past, +and increases them by new sons of light, alike radiant with +immortality.--_Bancroft._ + +What history is not richer, does not contain far more, than they by whom +it is enacted, the present witnesses! What mortal understandeth his +way?--_Jacobi._ + +He alone reads history aright, who, observing how powerfully +circumstances influence the feelings and opinions of men, how often +vices pass into virtues, and paradoxes into axioms, learns to +distinguish what is accidental and transitory in human nature from what +is essential and immutable.--_Macaulay._ + +~Home.~--Home is the grandest of all institutions.--_Spurgeon._ + +The first sure symptom of a mind in health is rest of heart, and +pleasure felt at home.--_Young._ + +To most men their early home is no more than a memory of their early +years, and I'm not sure but they have the best of it. The image is never +marred. There's no disappointment in memory, and one's exaggerations are +always on the good side.--_George Eliot._ + +Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home.--_Payne._ + +Stint yourself, as you think good, in other things; but don't scruple +freedom in brightening home. Gay furniture and a brilliant garden are a +sight day by day, and make life blither.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Home is the seminary of all other institutions.--_Chapin._ + +~Honesty.~--If he does really think that there is no distinction between +virtue and vice, why, sir, when he leaves our houses let us count our +spoons.--_Johnson._ + +Persons lightly dipped, not grained, in generous honesty, are but pale +in goodness.--_Sir T. Browne._ + +Refined policy has ever been the parent of confusion, and ever will be +so, as long as the world endures. Plain good intention, which is as +easily discovered at the first view as fraud is surely detected at last, +is, let me say, of no mean force in the government of mankind. Genuine +simplicity of heart is a healing and cementing principle.--_Burke._ + +Money dishonestly acquired is never worth its cost, while a good +conscience never costs as much as it is worth.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +The honest man is a rare variety of the human species.--_Chamfort._ + +~Honor.~--Keep unscathed the good name, keep out of peril the honor, +without which even your battered old soldier, who is hobbling into his +grave on half pay and a wooden leg, would not change with +Achilles.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Hope.~--Hope warps judgment in council, but quickens energy in +action.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +"I have a fine lot of hopes here in my basket," remarked the New Year; +"they are a sweet-smelling flower--a species of roses."--_Hawthorne._ + +Hope is the most beneficial of all the affections, and doth much to the +prolongation of life, if it be not too often frustrated; but +entertaineth the fancy with an expectation of good.--_Bacon._ + +The mighty hopes that make us men.--_Tennyson._ + +Thou captive's freedom, and thou sick man's health.--_Cowley._ + +I have a knack of hoping, which is as good as an estate in reversion, if +one can keep from the temptation of turning it into certainty, which may +spoil all.--_George Eliot._ + +Hope, folding her wings, looked backward and became regret.--_George +Eliot._ + +Hope is always liberal, and they that trust her promises make little +scruple of reveling to-day on the profits of to-morrow.--_Johnson._ + +It is necessary to hope, though hope should be always deluded; for hope +itself is happiness and its frustrations, however frequent, are yet less +dreadful than its extinction.--_Johnson._ + +Hope is a delusion; no hand can grasp a wave or a shadow.--_Victor +Hugo._ + +~Humanity.~--A man's nature runs either to herbs or weeds: therefore let +him seasonably water the one and destroy the other.--_Bacon._ + +I own that there is a haughtiness and fierceness in human nature which +will cause innumerable broils, place men in what situation you +please.--_Burke._ + +Human nature is not so much depraved as to hinder us from respecting +goodness in others, though we ourselves want it. This is the reason why +we are so much charmed with the pretty prattle of children, and even the +expressions of pleasure or uneasiness in some parts of the brute +creation. They are without artifice or malice; and we love truth too +well to resist the charms of sincerity.--_Steele._ + +I do not know what comfort other people find in considering the weakness +of great men, but 'tis always a mortification to me to observe that +there is no perfection in humanity.--_Montagu._ + +The true proof of the inherent nobleness of our common nature is in the +sympathy it betrays with what is noble wherever crowds are collected. +Never believe the world is base; if it were so, no society could hold +together for a day.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Humility.~--It is from out the depths of our humility that the height of +our destiny looks grandest. Let me truly feel that in myself I am +nothing, and at once, through every inlet of my soul, God comes in, and +is everything in me.--_Mountford._ + +Should any ask me, What is the first thing in religion? I would reply, +The first, second, and third thing therein, nay all, is humility.--_St. +Augustine._ + +Epaminondas, that heathen captain, finding himself lifted up in the day +of his public triumph, the next day went drooping and hanging down his +head; but being asked what was the reason of his so great dejection, +made answer: "Yesterday I felt myself transported with vainglory, +therefore I chastise myself for it to-day."--_Plutarch._ + +In humility imitate Jesus and Socrates.--_Franklin._ + +Believe me, the much-praised lambs of humility would not bear themselves +so meekly if they but possessed tigers' claws.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Trees that, like the poplar, lift upwards all their boughs, give no +shade and no shelter, whatever their height. Trees the most lovingly +shelter and shade us when, like the willow, the higher soar their +summits, the lowlier droop their bows.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +If thou wouldst find much favor and peace with God and man, be very low +in thine own eyes. Forgive thyself little and others much.--_Archbishop +Leighton._ + +~Humor.~--The genius of the Spanish people is exquisitely subtile, without +being at all acute: hence there is so much humor and so little wit in +their literature. The genius of the Italians, on the contrary, is acute, +profound, and sensual, but not subtile; hence what they think to be +humorous is merely witty.--_Coleridge._ + +The oil and wine of merry meeting.--_Washington Irving._ + +These poor gentlemen endeavor to gain themselves the reputation of wits +and humorists, by such monstrous conceits as almost qualify them for +bedlam; not considering that humor should always lie under the check of +reason, and that it requires the direction of the nicest judgment, by so +much the more as it indulges itself in the most boundless +freedoms.--_Addison._ + +~Hyperbole.~--Sprightly natures, full of fire, and whom a boundless +imagination carries beyond all rules, and even what is reasonable, +cannot rest satisfied with hyperbole.--_Bruyere._ + +Let us have done with reproaching; for we may throw out so many +reproachful words on one another that a ship of a hundred oars would not +be able to carry the load.--_Homer._ + +~Hypocrisy.~--Whoever is a hypocrite in his religion mocks God, presenting +to him the outside, and reserving the inward for his enemy.--_Jeremy +Taylor._ + +Hypocrisy has become a fashionable vice, and all fashionable vices pass +for virtue.--_Moliere._ + +Hypocrisy is much more eligible than open infidelity and vice: it wears +the livery of religion, and is cautious of giving scandal.--_Swift._ + +Sin is not so sinful as hypocrisy.--_Mme. de Maintenon._ + +As a man loves gold, in that proportion he hates to be imposed upon by +counterfeits; and in proportion as a man has regard for that which is +above price and better than gold, he abhors that hypocrisy which is but +its counterfeit.--_Cecil._ + +Hypocrisy, the only evil that walks invisible, except to God +alone.--_Milton._ + +Hypocrisy, detest her as we may, and no man's hatred ever wronged her +yet, may claim this merit still: that she admits the worth of what she +mimics with such care.--_Cowper._ + +I hate hypocrites, who put on their virtues with their white +gloves.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +Such a man will omit neither family worship, nor a sneer at his +neighbor. He will neither milk his cows on the first day of the week +without a Sabbath mask on his face, nor remove it while he waters the +milk for his customers.--_George Mac Donald._ + +The fatal fact in the case of a hypocrite is that he is a +hypocrite.--_Chapin._ + +'Tis a cowardly and servile humor to hide and disguise a man's self +under a vizor, and not to dare to show himself what he is. By that our +followers are train'd up to treachery. Being brought up to speak what is +not true, they make no conscience of a lie.--_Montaigne._ + + +I. + +~Ideas.~--After all has been said that can be said about the widening +influence of ideas, it remains true that they would hardly be such +strong agents unless they were taken in a solvent of feeling. The great +world-struggle of developing thought is continually foreshadowed in the +struggle of the affections, seeking a justification for love and +hope.--_George Eliot._ + +Our ideas are transformed sensations.--_Condillac._ + +In these days we fight for ideas, and newspapers are our +fortresses.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Many ideas grow better when transplanted into another mind than in the +one where they sprung up. That which was a weed in one intelligence +becomes a flower in the other, and a flower again dwindles down to a +mere weed by the same change. Healthy growths may become poisonous by +falling upon the wrong mental soil, and what seemed a night-shade in one +mind unfolds as a morning-glory in the other.--_Holmes._ + +A fixed idea is like the iron rod which sculptors put in their statues. +It impales and sustains.--_Taine._ + +Old ideas are prejudices, and new ones caprices.--_X. Doudan._ + +We live in an age in which superfluous ideas abound and essential ideas +are lacking.--_Joubert._ + +Ideas are like beards; men do not have them until they grow +up.--_Voltaire._ + +Our ideas, like orange-plants, spread out in proportion to the size of +the box which imprisons the roots.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Idleness.~--If idleness do not produce vice or malevolence, it commonly +produces melancholy.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Idleness is the key of beggary, and the root of all evil.--_Spurgeon._ + +In idleness there is perpetual despair.--_Carlyle._ + +Doing nothing with a deal of skill.--_Cowper._ + +From its very inaction, idleness ultimately becomes the most active +cause of evil; as a palsy is more to be dreaded than a fever. The Turks +have a proverb, which says, that the devil tempts all other men, but +that idle men tempt the devil.--_Colton._ + +The first external revelations of the dry-rot in men is a tendency to +lurk and lounge; to be at street corners without intelligible reason; to +be going anywhere when met; to be about many places rather than any; to +do nothing tangible but to have an intention of performing a number of +tangible duties to-morrow or the day after.--_Dickens._ + +Idleness is only the refuge of weak minds, and the holiday of +fools.--_Chesterfield._ + +So long as idleness is quite shut out from our lives, all the sins of +wantonness, softness, and effeminacy are prevented; and there is but +little room for temptation.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Let but the hours of idleness cease, and the bow of Cupid will become +broken and his torch extinguished.--_Ovid._ + +~Ignorance.~--Have the _courage_ to be ignorant of a great number of +things, in order to avoid the calamity of being ignorant of +everything.--_Sydney Smith._ + +There is no calamity like ignorance.--_Richter._ + +'Tis sad work to be at that pass, that the best trial of truth must be +the multitude of believers, in a crowd where the number of fools so much +exceeds that of the wise. As if anything were so common as +ignorance!--_Montaigne._ + +Ignorance, which in behavior mitigates a fault, is, in literature, a +capital offense.--_Joubert._ + +There is no slight danger from general ignorance; and the only choice +which Providence has graciously left to a vicious government is either +to fall _by_ the people, if they are suffered to become enlightened, or +_with_ them, if they are kept enslaved and ignorant.--_Coleridge._ + +To be ignorant of one's ignorance is the malady of ignorance.--_Alcott._ + +The true instrument of man's degradation is his ignorance.--_Lady +Morgan._ + +Ignorance is not so damnable as humbug, but when it prescribes pills it +may happen to do more harm.--_George Eliot._ + +The ignorant hath an eagle's wings and an owl's eyes.--_George Herbert._ + +Ignorance is mere privation, by which nothing can be produced; it is a +vacuity in which the soul sits motionless and torpid for want of +attraction.--_Johnson._ + +~Illusion.~--In youth we feel richer for every new illusion; in maturer +years, for every one we lose.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Illusion is the first of all pleasures.--_Voltaire._ + +~Imagination.~--We are all of us imaginative in some form or other, for +images are the brood of desire.--_George Eliot._ + +A vile imagination, once indulged, gets the key of our minds, and can +get in again very easily, whether we will or no, and can so return as to +bring seven other spirits with it more wicked than itself; and what may +follow no one knows.--_Spurgeon._ + +He who has imagination without learning has wings and no +feet.--_Joubert._ + +No man will be found in whose mind airy notions do not sometimes +tyrannize, and force him to hope or fear beyond the limits of sober +probability.--_Johnson._ + +~Imitation.~--Imitators are a servile race.--_Fontaine._ + +Imitation causes us to leave natural ways to enter into artificial ones; +it therefore makes slaves.--_Dr. Vinet._ + +"Name to me an animal, though never so skillful, that I cannot imitate!" +So bragged the ape to the fox. But the fox replied, "And do thou name to +me an animal so humble as to think of imitating thee."--_Lessing._ + +~Immortality.~--When I consider the wonderful activity of the mind, so +great a memory of what is past, and such a capacity of penetrating into +the future; when I behold such a number of arts and sciences, and such a +multitude of discoveries thence arising; I believe and am firmly +persuaded that a nature which contains so many things within itself +cannot be mortal.--_Cicero._ + +Whatsoever that be within us that feels, thinks, desires, and animates, +is something celestial, divine, and consequently +imperishable.--_Aristotle._ + +The spirit of man, which God inspired, cannot together perish with this +corporeal clod.--_Milton._ + +All men's souls are immortal, but the souls of the righteous are +immortal and divine.--_Socrates._ + +What springs from earth dissolves to earth again, and heaven-born things +fly to their native seat.--_Marcus Antoninus._ + +The seed dies into a new life, and so does man.--_George MacDonald._ + +~Impatience.~--Impatience turns an ague into a fever, a fever to the +plague, fear into despair, anger into rage, loss into madness, and +sorrow to amazement.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +~Impossibility.~--One great difference between a wise man and a fool is, +the former only wishes for what he may possibly obtain; the latter +desires impossibilities.--_Democritus._ + +~Improvement.~--Slumber not in the tents of your fathers. The world is +advancing. Advance with it.--_Mazzini._ + +People seldom improve when they have no other model but themselves to +copy after.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Improvidence.~--How full or how empty our lives, depends, we say, on +Providence. Suppose we say, more or less on improvidence.--_Bovee._ + +~Income.~--Our incomes are like our shoes; if too small, they gall and +pinch us; but if too large, they cause us to stumble and to +trip.--_Colton._ + +~Inconsistency.~--Men talk as if they believed in God, but they live as if +they thought there was none: their vows and promises are no more than +words of course.--_L'Estrange._ + +People are so ridiculous with their illusions, carrying their fool's +caps unawares, thinking their own lies opaque while everybody else's are +transparent, making themselves exceptions to everything, as if when all +the world looked yellow under a lamp they alone were rosy.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Inconstancy.~--The catching court disease.--_Otway._ + +Nothing that is not a real crime makes a man appear so contemptible and +little in the eyes of the world as inconstancy.--_Addison._ + +~Indifference.~--Nothing for preserving the body like having no +heart.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +Indifference is the invincible giant of the world.--_Ouida._ + +~Indigestion.~--Old friendships are destroyed by toasted cheese, and hard +salted meat has led to suicide. Unpleasant feelings of the body produce +correspondent sensations in the mind, and a great scene of wretchedness +is sketched out by a morsel of indigestible and misguided food.--_Sydney +Smith._ + +~Individuality.~--There are men of convictions whose very faces will light +up an era, and there are believing women in whose eyes you may almost +read the whole plan of salvation.--_T. Fields._ + +Individuality is everywhere to be spared and respected as the root of +everything good.--_Richter._ + +The epoch of individuality is concluded, and it is the duty of reformers +to initiate the epoch of association. Collective man is omnipotent upon +the earth he treads.--_Mazzini._ + +~Indolence.~--I look upon indolence as a sort of suicide; for the man is +effectually destroyed, though the appetite of the brute may +survive.--_Chesterfield._ + +Lives spent in indolence, and therefore sad.--_Cowper._ + +Days of respite are golden days.--_South._ + +So long as he must fight his way, the man of genius pushes forward, +conquering and to conquer. But how often is he at last overcome by a +Capua! Ease and fame bring sloth and slumber.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Nothing ages like laziness.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Indulgence.~--One wishes to be happy before becoming wise.--_Mme. +Necker._ + +~Industry.~--Mankind are more indebted to industry than ingenuity; the +gods set up their favors at a price, and industry is the +purchaser.--_Addison._ + +Application is the price to be paid for mental acquisition. To have the +harvest we must sow the seed.--_Bailey._ + +~Infidelity.~--There is but one thing without honor; smitten with eternal +barrenness, inability to do or to be,--insincerity, unbelief. He who +believes no _thing_, who believes only the shows of things, is not in +relation with nature and fact at all.--_Carlyle._ + +I would rather dwell in the dim fog of superstition than in air rarefied +to nothing by the air-pump of unbelief; in which the panting breast +expires, vainly and convulsively gasping for breath.--_Richter._ + +If on one side there are fair proofs, and no pretense of proof on the +other, and that the difficulties are more pressing on that side which is +destitute of proof, I desire to know whether this be not upon the matter +as satisfactory to a wise man as a demonstration.--_Tillotson._ + +The nurse of infidelity is sensuality.--_Cecil._ + +Men always grow vicious before they become unbelievers; but if you would +once convince profligates by topics drawn from the view of their own +quiet, reputation, and health, their infidelity would soon drop +off.--_Swift._ + +Infidelity gives nothing in return for what it takes away. What, then, +is it worth? Everything valuable has a compensating power. Not a blade +of grass that withers, or the ugliest weed that is flung away to rot and +die, but reproduces something.--_Dr. Chalmers._ + +~Infirmities.~--Never mind what a man's virtues are; waste no time in +learning them. Fasten at once on his infirmities.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Influence.~--He who wishes to exert a useful influence must be careful to +insult nothing. Let him not be troubled by what seems absurd, but let +him consecrate his energies to the creation of what is good. He must not +demolish, but build. He must raise temples where mankind may come and +partake of the purest pleasures.--_Goethe._ + +If I can put one touch of a rosy sunset into the life of any man or +woman, I shall feel that I have worked with God.--_George MacDonald._ + +The city reveals the moral ends of being, and sets the awful problem of +life. The country soothes us, refreshes us, lifts us up with religious +suggestion.--_Chapin._ + +It is the age that forms the man, not the man that forms the age. Great +minds do indeed react on the society which has made them what they are, +but they only pay with interest what they have received.--_Macaulay._ + +In families well ordered there is always one firm, sweet temper, which +controls without seeming to dictate. The Greeks represented Persuasion +as crowned.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Ingratitude.~--The great bulk of mankind resemble the swine, which in +harvest gather and fatten upon the acorns beneath the oak, but show to +the tree which bore them no other thanks than rubbing off its bark, and +tearing up the sod around it.--_Scriver._ + +One great cause of our insensibility to the goodness of our Creator is +the very extensiveness of his bounty.--_Paley._ + +~Injustice.~--The injustice of men subserves the justice of God, and often +his mercy.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Ink.~--A drop of ink may make a million think.--_Byron._ + +Let there be gall enough in thy ink; though thou write with a goose-pen, +no matter.--_Shakespeare._ + +The colored slave that waits upon thought.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +Oh, she is fallen into a pit of ink, that the wide sea hath drops too +few to wash her clean again!--_Shakespeare._ + +My ways are as broad as the king's high road, and my means lie in an +inkstand.--_Southey._ + +~Innocence.~--He's armed without that's innocent within.--_Pope._ + +There is no courage but in innocence.--_Southern._ + +There is no man so good who, were he to submit all his thoughts and +actions to the law, would not deserve hanging ten times in his +life.--_Montaigne._ + +~Innovation.~--The ridiculous rage for innovation, which only increases +the weight of the chains it cannot break, shall never fire my +blood!--_Schiller._ + +Dislike of innovation proceeds sometimes from the disgust excited by +false humanity, canting hypocrisy, and silly enthusiasm.--_Sydney +Smith._ + +~Insanity.~--Insanity is not a distinct and separate empire; our ordinary +life borders upon it, and we cross the frontier in some part of our +nature.--_Taine._ + +~Inspiration.~--Do we not all agree to call rapid thought and noble +impulse by the name of inspiration? After our subtlest analysis of the +mental process, we must still say that our highest thoughts and our best +deeds are all given to us.--_George Eliot._ + +Contagious enthusiasm.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +~Instinct.~--The instinct of brutes and insects can be the effect of +nothing else than the wisdom and skill of a powerful ever-living +agent.--_Newton._ + +Instinct harmonizes the interior of animals as religion does the +interior of men.--_Jacobi._ + +All our first movements are good, generous, heroical; reflection weakens +and kills them.--_Aime Martin._ + +An instinct is a propensity prior to experience, and independent of +instruction.--_Paley._ + +~Insult.~--It is only the vulgar who are always fancying themselves +insulted. If a man treads on another's toe in good society do you think +it is taken as an insult?--_Lady Hester Stanhope._ + +I once met a man who had forgiven an injury. I hope some day to meet the +man who has forgiven an insult.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Insurrection.~--Insurrection unusually gains little; usually wastes how +much! One of its worst kind of wastes, to say nothing of the rest, is +that of irritating and exasperating men against each other by violence +done; which is always sure to be injustice done, for violence does even +justice unjustly.--_Carlyle._ + +~Intellect.~--The commerce of intellect loves distant shores. The small +retail dealer trades only with his neighbor; when the great merchant +trades, he links the four quarters of the globe.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Intelligence.~--The higher feelings, when acting in harmonious +combination, and directed by enlightened intellect, have a boundless +scope for gratification; their least indulgence is delightful, and their +highest activity is bliss.--_Combe._ + +Some men of a secluded and studious life have sent forth from their +closet or their cloister, rays of intellectual light that have agitated +courts and revolutionized kingdoms; like the moon which, though far +removed from the ocean, and shining upon it with a serene and sober +light, is the chief cause of all those ebbings and flowings which +incessantly disturb that restless world of waters.--_Colton._ + +Light has spread, and even bayonets think.--_Kossuth._ + +Intelligence is a luxury, sometimes useless, sometimes fatal. It is a +torch or a fire-brand according to the use one makes of it.--_Fernan +Caballero._ + +~Intemperance.~--The body, overcharged with the excess of yesterday, +weighs down the mind together with itself, and fixes to the earth that +particle of the divine spirit.--_Horace._ + +Intemperance is a great decayer of beauty.--_Junius._ + +~Intolerance.~--Nothing dies so hard, and rallies so often, as +intolerance.--_Beecher._ + +Intolerance is the curse of every age and state.--_Dr. Davies._ + +~Invective.~--Invective may be a sharp weapon, but over-use blunts its +edge. Even when the denunciation is just and true, it is an error of art +to indulge in it too long.--_Tyndall._ + +~Invention.~--Invention is a kind of muse, which, being possessed of the +other advantages common to her sisters, and being warmed by the fire of +Apollo, is raised higher than the rest.--_Dryden._ + +Invention, strictly speaking, is little more than a new combination of +those images which have been previously gathered and deposited in the +memory. Nothing can be made of nothing: he who has laid up no materials +can produce no combinations.--_Sir J. Reynolds._ + +~Irony.~--Irony is to the high-bred what billingsgate is to the vulgar; +and when one gentleman thinks another gentleman an ass, he does not say +it point-blank, he implies it in the politest terms he can +invent.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Irresolution.~--Irresolution is a worse vice than rashness. He that +shoots best may sometimes miss the mark; but he that shoots not at all +can never hit it. Irresolution loosens all the joints of a state; like +an ague, it shakes not this nor that limb, but all the body is at once +in a fit. The irresolute man is lifted from one place to another; so +hatcheth nothing, but addles all his actions.--_Feltham._ + +Irresolution on the schemes of life which offer themselves to our +choice, and inconstancy in pursuing them, are the greatest causes of all +our unhappiness.--_Addison._ + +Irresolute people let their soup grow cold between the plate and the +mouth.--_Cervantes._ + +~Irritability.~--Irritability urges us to take a step as much too soon as +sloth does too late.--_Cecil._ + +An irritable man lies like a hedgehog rolled up the wrong way, +tormenting himself with his own prickles.--_Hood._ + +~Ivy.~--The stateliest building man can raise is the ivy's food at +last.--_Dickens._ + +The ivy, like the spider, takes hold with her hands in king's palaces, +as every twig is furnished with innumerable little fingers, by which it +draws itself close, as it were, to the very heart of the old rough +stone. Its clinging and beautiful tenacity has given rise to an +abundance of conceits about fidelity, friendship, and woman's love, +which have become commonplace simply from their appropriateness. It +might also symbolize the higher love, unconquerable and unconquered, +which has embraced this ruined world from age to age, silently spreading +its green over the rents and fissures of our fallen nature.--_Mrs. +Stowe._ + + +J. + +~Jealousy.~--What frenzy dictates, jealousy believes.--_Gay._ + +Jealousy sees things always with magnifying glasses which make little +things large, of dwarfs giants, suspicions truths.--_Cervantes._ + +'Tis a monster begot upon itself, born on itself.--_Shakespeare._ + +Women detest a jealous man whom they do not love, but it angers them +when a man they do love is not jealous.--_Ninon de L'Enclos._ + +A jealous man always finds more than he looks for.--_Mlle. de Scudery._ + +Jealousy is the sister of love, as the devil is the brother of +angels.--_Boufflers._ + +~Jesting.~--Jests--Brain fleas that jump about among the slumbering +ideas.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +The jest loses its point when the wit is the first to +laugh.--_Schiller._ + +And generally, men ought to find the difference between saltness and +bitterness. Certainly, he that hath a satirical vein, as he maketh +others afraid of his wit, so he had need be afraid of other's +memory.--_Bacon._ + +~Jewelry.~--Jewels! It's my belief that when woman was made, jewels were +invented only to make her the more mischievous.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +~Jews.~--Talk what you will of the Jews; that they are cursed: they thrive +wherever they come; they are able to oblige the prince of their country +by lending him money; none of them beg; they keep together; and as for +their being hated, why Christians hate one another as much.--_Selden._ + +They are a piece of stubborn antiquity, compared with which Stonehenge +is in its nonage. They date beyond the Pyramids.--_Lamb._ + +~Joy.~--The soul's calm sunshine, and the heartfelt joy.--_Pope._ + +Worldly joy is like the songs which peasants sing, full of melodies and +sweet airs.--_Beecher._ + +Redundant joy, like a poor miser, beggar'd by his store.--_Young._ + +We lose the peace of years when we hunt after the rapture of +moments.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Joy is the best of wine.--_George Eliot._ + +Joy in this world is like a rainbow, which in the morning only appears +in the west, or towards the evening sky; but in the latter hours of day +casts its triumphal arch over the east, or morning sky.--_Richter._ + +~Judgment.~--The more one judges, the less one loves.--_Balzac._ + +I mistrust the judgment of every man in a case in which his own wishes +are concerned.--_Wellington._ + +Judgment and reason have been grand jurymen since before Noah was a +sailor.--_Shakespeare._ + +A flippant, frivolous man may ridicule others, may controvert them, +scorn them; but he who has any respect for himself seems to have +renounced the right of thinking meanly of others.--_Goethe._ + +In judging of others a man laboreth in vain, often erreth, and easily +sinneth; but in judging and examining himself, he always laboreth +fruitfully.--_Thomas a Kempis._ + +I have seen, when after execution judgment hath repented o'er his +doom.--_Shakespeare._ + +Foolish men imagine that because judgment for an evil thing is delayed, +there is no justice, but an accident alone, here below. Judgment for an +evil thing is many times delayed some day or two, some century or two, +but it is sure as life, it is sure as death!--_Carlyle._ + +Human judgment, like Luther's drunken peasant, when saved from falling +on one side, topples over on the other.--_Mazzini._ + +The contemporary mind may in rare cases be taken by storm; but posterity +never. The tribunal of the present is accessible to influence; that of +the future is incorrupt.--_Gladstone._ + +Upon any given point, contradictory evidence seldom puzzles the man who +has mastered the laws of evidence, but he knows little of the laws of +evidence who has not studied the unwritten law of the human heart; and +without this last knowledge a man of action will not attain to the +practical, nor will a poet achieve the ideal.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +How little do they see what is, who frame their hasty judgment upon that +which seems.--_Southey._ + +~Justice.~--It is the pleasure of the gods--that what is in conformity +with justice shall also be in conformity to the laws.--_Socrates._ + +Justice delayed is justice denied.--_Gladstone._ + +Justice advances with such languid steps that crime often escapes from +its slowness. Its tardy and doubtful course causes too many tears to be +shed.--_Corneille._ + +Justice is truth in action.--_Joubert._ + +At present we can only reason of the divine justice from what we know of +justice in man. When we are in other scenes we may have truer and nobler +ideas of it; but while we are in this life we can only speak from the +volume that is laid open before us.--_Pope._ + +Strike if you will, but hear.--_Themistocles._ + +When Infinite Wisdom established the rule of right and honesty, He saw +to it that justice should be always the highest expediency.--_Wendell +Phillips._ + +But Justice shines in smoky cottages, and honors the pious. Leaving with +averted eyes the gorgeous glare obtained by polluted hands, she is wont +to draw nigh to holiness, not reverencing wealth when falsely stamped +with praise, and assigning each deed its righteous doom.--_AEschylus._ + +God's mill grinds slow but sure.--_George Herbert._ + +Who shall put his finger on the work of justice, and say, "It is there?" +Justice is like the kingdom of God--it is not without us as a fact, it +is within us as a great yearning.--_George Eliot._ + +Justice claims what is due, polity what is seemly; justice weighs and +decides, polity surveys and orders; justice refers to the individual, +polity to the community.--_Goethe._ + + +K. + +~Kindness.~--Yes! you may find people ready enough to do the Samaritan +without the oil and twopence.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Paradise is open to all kind hearts.--_Beranger._ + +Kind words produce their own image in men's souls; and a beautiful image +it is. They soothe and quiet and comfort the hearer. They shame him out +of his sour, morose, unkind feelings. We have not yet begun to use kind +words in such abundance as they ought to be used.--_Pascal._ + +To cultivate kindness is a valuable part of the business of +life.--_Johnson._ + +To remind a man of a kindness conferred is little less than a +reproach.--_Demosthenes._ + +Kindness is the only charm permitted to the aged; it is the coquetry of +white hair.--_O. Feuillet._ + +Sow good services; sweet remembrances will grow from them.--_Mme. de +Stael._ + +~Kings.~--Kings wish to be absolute, and they are sometimes told that +their best way to become so is to make themselves beloved by the people. +This maxim is doubtless a very admirable one, and in some respects true; +but unhappily it is laughed at in court.--_Rousseau._ + +Implements of war and subjugation are the last arguments to which kings +resort.--_Patrick Henry._ + +A king ought not fall from the throne except with the throne itself; +under its lofty ruins he alone finds an honored death and an honored +tomb.--_Alfieri._ + +One of the strongest natural proofs of the folly of hereditary right in +kings is, that nature disapproves it; otherwise she would not so +frequently turn it into ridicule by giving mankind an ass in place of a +lion.--_Thomas Paine._ + +He on whom Heaven confers a sceptre knows not the weight till he bears +it.--_Corneille._ + +Kings' titles commonly begin by force which time wears off, and mellows +into right; and power which in one age is tyranny is ripened in the next +to true succession.--_Dryden._ + +~Kisses.~--It is as old as the creation, and yet as young and fresh as +ever. It preexisted, still exists, and always will exist. Depend upon +it, Eve learned it in Paradise, and was taught its beauties, virtues, +and varieties by an angel, there is something so transcendent in +it.--_Haliburton._ + +Dear as remembered kisses after death.--_Tennyson._ + +Or leave a kiss but in the cup, and I'll not look for wine.--_Ben +Jonson._ + +He kissed her and promised. Such beautiful lips! Man's usual fate--he +was lost upon the coral reefs.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +Eden revives in the first kiss of love.--_Byron._ + +You would think that, if our lips were made of horn, and stuck out a +foot or two from our faces, kisses at any rate would be done for. Not +so. No creatures kiss each other so much as birds.--_Charles Buxton._ + +That farewell kiss which resembles greeting, that last glance of love +which becomes the sharpest pang of sorrow.--_George Eliot._ + +Stolen kisses are always sweetest.--_Leigh Hunt._ + +Sharp is the kiss of the falcon's beak.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Four sweet lips, two pure souls, and one undying affection,--these are +love's pretty ingredients for a kiss.--_Bovee._ + +~Knavery.~--Unluckily the credulity of dupes is as inexhaustible as the +invention of knaves. They never give people possession; but they always +keep them in hope.--_Burke._ + +After long experience in the world I affirm, before God, I never knew a +rogue who was not unhappy.--_Junius._ + +By fools knaves fatten; by bigots priests are well clothed; every knave +finds a gull.--_Zimmerman._ + +~Knowledge.~--The sure foundations of the state are laid in knowledge, not +in ignorance; and every sneer at education, at culture, at book +learning, which is the recorded wisdom of the experience of mankind, is +the demagogue's sneer at intelligent liberty, inviting national +degeneracy and ruin.--_G. W. Curtis._ + +Knowledge, like religion, must be "experienced," in order to be +known.--_Whipple._ + +The pleasure and delight of knowledge far surpasseth all other in +nature. We see in all other pleasures there is satiety; and after they +be used, their verdure departeth, which showeth well that they be but +deceits of pleasure, and not pleasures; and that it was the novelty +which pleased, not the quality; and therefore we see that voluptuous men +turn friars, and ambitious princes turn melancholy. But of knowledge +there is no satiety, but satisfaction and appetite are perpetually +interchangeable.--_Bacon._ + +What novelty is worth the sweet monotony where everything is known, and +loved because it is known?--_George Eliot._ + +The truth is, that most men want knowledge, not for itself, but for the +superiority which knowledge confers; and the means they employ to secure +this superiority are as wrong as the ultimate object, for no man can +ever end with being superior who will not begin with being +inferior.--_Sydney Smith._ + +He who knows much has much to care for.--_Lessing._ + +Properly, there is no other knowledge but that which is got by working: +the rest is yet all a hypothesis of knowledge; a thing to be argued of +in schools; a thing floating in the clouds, in endless logic-vortices, +till we try and fix it.--_Carlyle._ + +He that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.--_Bible._ + +To know by rote is no knowledge; it is only a retention of what is +intrusted to the memory. That which a man truly knows may be disposed of +without regard to the author, or reference to the book from whence he +had it.--_Montaigne._ + +He who cherishes his old knowledge, so as continually to acquire new, he +may be a teacher of others.--_Confucius._ + +A taste of every sort of knowledge is necessary to form the mind, and is +the only way to give the understanding its due improvement to the full +extent of its capacity.--_Locke._ + +Knowledge has, in our time, triumphed, and is triumphing, over +prejudice, and over bigotry. The civilized and Christian world is fast +learning the great lesson, that difference of nation does not imply +necessary hostility, and that all contact need not be war. The whole +world is becoming a common field for intellect to act in. Energy of +mind, genius, power, wheresoever it exists, may speak out in any tongue, +and the world will hear it.--_Daniel Webster._ + +Knowledge once gained casts a faint light beyond its own immediate +boundaries.--_Tyndall._ + +The shortest and the surest way of arriving at real knowledge is to +unlearn the lessons we have been taught, to remount to first principles, +and take nobody's word about them.--_Bolingbroke._ + +Sorrow is knowledge; they who know the most must mourn the deepest o'er +the fatal truth; the tree of knowledge is not that of life.--_Byron._ + +The seeds of knowledge maybe planted in solitude, but must be cultivated +in public.--_Johnson._ + +Knowledge dwells in heads replete with thoughts of other men; Wisdom, in +minds attentive to their own.--_Cowper._ + +It is the glorious prerogative of the empire of knowledge, that what it +gains it never loses. On the contrary, it increases by the multiple of +its own power; all its ends become means; all its attainments helps to +new conquests.--_Daniel Webster._ + +The love of knowledge in a young mind is almost a warrant against the +infirm excitement of passions and vices.--_Beecher._ + +There is nothing so minute, or inconsiderable, that I would not rather +know it than not.--_Johnson._ + +We always know everything when it serves no purpose, and when the seal +of the irreparable has been set upon events.--_Theophile Gautier._ + +All the knowledge that we mortals can acquire is not knowledge positive, +but knowledge comparative, and subject to the errors and passions of +humanity.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + + +L. + +~Labor.~--Labor is the divine law of our existence; repose is desertion +and suicide.--_Mazzini._ + +Labor is life: from the inmost heart of the worker rises his God-given +force, the sacred celestial life-essence breathed into him by Almighty +God!--_Carlyle._ + +The fact is nothing comes; at least nothing good. All has to be +fetched.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Genius begins great works, labor alone finishes them.--_Joubert._ + +As steady application to work is the healthiest training for every +individual, so is it the best discipline of a state. Honorable industry +always travels the same road with enjoyment and duty, and progress is +altogether impossible without it.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Nature is just towards men. It recompenses them for their sufferings; it +renders them laborious, because to the greatest toils it attaches the +greatest rewards.--_Montesquieu._ + +Virtue's guard is Labor, ease her sleep.--_Tasso._ + +Alexander the Great, reflecting on his friends degenerating into sloth +and luxury, told them that it was a most slavish thing to luxuriate, and +a most royal thing to labor.--_Barrow._ + +Many young painters would never have taken their pencils in hand if they +could have felt, known, and understood, early enough, what really +produced a master like Raphael.--_Goethe._ + +He that thinks that diversion may not lie in hard labor forgets the +early rising and hard riding of huntsmen.--_Locke._ + +The pain of life but sweetens death; the hardest labor brings the +soundest sleep.--_Albert Smith._ + +What men want is not talent, it is purpose; not the power to achieve, +but the will to labor.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The true epic of our times is not "arms and the man," but "tools and the +man," an infinitely wider kind of epic.--_Carlyle._ + +Labor is the curse of the world, and nobody can meddle with it without +becoming proportionably brutified!--_Hawthorne._ + +~Land.~--There is a distinct joy in owning land, unlike that which you +have in money, in houses, in books, pictures, or anything else which men +have devised. Personal property brings you into society with men. But +land is a part of God's estate in the globe; and when a parcel of +ground is deeded to you, and you walk over it, and call it your own, it +seems as if you had come into partnership with the original Proprietor +of the earth.--_Beecher._ + +~Language.~--The Creator has gifted the whole universe with language, but +few are the hearts that can interpret it. Happy those to whom it is no +foreign tongue, acquired imperfectly with care and pain, but rather a +native language, learned unconsciously from the lips of the great +mother.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The key to the sciences.--_Bruyere._ + +A countryman is as warm in fustian as a king in velvet, and a truth is +as comfortable in homely language as in fine speech. As to the way of +dishing up the meat, hungry men leave that to the cook, only let the +meat be sweet and substantial.--_Spurgeon._ + +The machine of the poet.--_Macaulay._ + +Poetry, indeed, cannot be translated; and, therefore, it is the poets +that preserve the languages; for we would not be at the trouble to learn +a language if we could have all that is written in it just as well in a +translation. But as the beauties of poetry cannot be preserved in any +language except that in which it was originally written, we learn the +language.--_Johnson._ + +Language most shows a man; speak that I may see thee: it springs out of +the most retired and inmost part of us.--_Ben Jonson._ + +If the way in which men express their thoughts is slipshod and mean, it +will be very difficult for their thoughts themselves to escape being the +same. If it is high flown and bombastic, a character for national +simplicity and thankfulness cannot long be maintained.--_Dean Alford._ + +~Laughter.~--Conversation never sits easier than when we now and then +discharge ourselves in a symphony of laughter; which may not improperly +be called the chorus of conversation.--_Steele._ + +The laughers are a majority.--_Pope._ + +Learn from the earliest days to inure your principles against the perils +of ridicule: you can no more exercise your reason, if you live in the +constant dread of laughter, than you can enjoy your life if you are in +the constant terror of death.--_Sydney Smith._ + +How much lies in laughter: the cipher key, wherewith we decipher the +whole man!--_Carlyle._ + +God made both tears and laughter, and both for kind purposes; for as +laughter enables mirth and surprise to breathe freely, so tears enable +sorrow to vent itself patiently. Tears hinder sorrow from becoming +despair and madness.--_Leigh Hunt._ + +How inevitably does an immoderate laughter end in a sigh!--_South._ + +Laughing, if loud, ends in a deep sigh; and all pleasures have a sting +in the tail, though they carry beauty on the face.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Laughter means sympathy.--_Carlyle._ + +One good, hearty laugh is a bombshell exploding in the right place, +while spleen and discontent are a gun that kicks over the man who shoots +it off.--_De Witt Talmage._ + +I am sure that since I had the use of my reason, no human being has ever +heard me laugh.--_Chesterfield._ + +I like the laughter that opens the lips and the heart, that shower at +the same time pearls and the soul.--_Victor Hugo._ + +Laughter is a most healthful exertion; it is one of the greatest helps +to digestion with which I am acquainted; and the custom prevalent among +our forefathers, of exciting it at table by jesters and buffoons, was +founded on true medical principles.--_Dr. Hufeland._ + +~Law.~--With us, law is nothing unless close behind it stands a warm, +living public opinion. Let that die or grow indifferent, and statutes +are waste paper, lacking all executive force.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +Of all the parts of a law, the most effectual is the _vindicatory_; for +it is but lost labor to say, "Do this, or avoid that," unless we also +declare, "This shall be the consequence of your non-compliance." The +main strength and force of a law consists in the penalty annexed to +it.--_Blackstone._ + +If there be any one principle more widely than another confessed by +every utterance, or more sternly than another imprinted on every atom of +the visible creation, that principle is not liberty, but law.--_Ruskin._ + +It would be very singular if this great shad-net of the law did not +enable men to catch at something, balking for the time the eternal +flood-tide of justice.--_Chapin._ + +True law is right reason conformably to nature, universal, unchangeable, +eternal, whose commands urge us to duty, and whose prohibitions restrain +us from evil.--_Cicero._ + +Aristotle himself has said, speaking of the laws of his own country, +that jurisprudence, or the knowledge of those laws, is the principal and +most perfect branch of ethics.--_Blackstone._ + +In effect, to follow, not to force, the public inclination, to give a +direction, a form, a technical dress, and a specific sanction, to the +general sense of the community, is the true end of +legislation.--_Burke._ + +In the habits of legal men every accusation appears insufficient if they +do not exaggerate it even to calumny. It is thus that justice itself +loses its sanctity and its respect amongst men.--_Lamartine._ + +Pity is the virtue of the law, and none but tyrants use it +cruelly.--_Shakespeare._ + +It is a very easy thing to devise good laws; the difficulty is to make +them effective. The great mistake is that of looking upon men as +virtuous, or thinking that they can be made so by laws; and consequently +the greatest art of a politician is to render vices serviceable to the +cause of virtue.--_Bolingbroke._ + +A mouse-trap; easy to enter but not easy to get out of.--_Mrs Balfour._ + +What can idle laws do with morals?--_Horace._ + +The law is a gun, which if it misses a pigeon always kills a crow; if it +does not strike the guilty it hits some one else. As every crime creates +a law, so in turn every law creates a crime.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Learning.~--It adds a precious seeing to the eye.--_Shakespeare._ + +You are to consider that learning is of great use to society; and though +it may not add to the stock, it is a necessary vehicle to transmit it to +others. Learned men are the cisterns of knowledge, not the +fountain-heads.--_James Northcote._ + +Learning makes a man fit company for himself.--_Young._ + +Learning maketh young men temperate, is the comfort of old age, standing +for wealth with poverty, and serving as an ornament to +riches.--_Cicero._ + +The chief art of learning, as Locke has observed, is to attempt but +little at a time. The widest excursions of the mind are made by short +flights frequently repeated; the most lofty fabrics of science are +formed by the continued accumulation of single propositions.--_Johnson._ + +No man can ever want this mortification of his vanity, that what he +knows is but a very little, in comparison of what he still continues +ignorant of. Consider this, and, instead of boasting thy knowledge of a +few things, confess and be out of countenance for the many more which +thou dost not understand.--_Thomas a Kempis._ + +Suppose we put a tax upon learning? Learning, it is true, is a useless +commodity, but I think we had better lay it on ignorance; for learning +being the property but of a very few, and those poor ones too, I am +afraid we can get little among them; whereas ignorance will take in most +of the great fortunes in the kingdom.--_Fielding._ + +For ignorance of all things is an evil neither terrible nor excessive, +nor yet the greatest of all; but great cleverness and much learning, if +they be accompanied by a bad training is a much greater +misfortune.--_Plato._ + +No power can exterminate the seeds of liberty when it has germinated in +the blood of brave men. Our religion of to-day is still that of +martyrdom; to-morrow it will be the religion of victory.--_Mazzini._ + +~Leisure.~--"Never less idle than when idle," was the motto which the +admirable Vittoria Colonna wrought upon her husband's dressing-gown. And +may we not justly regard our appreciation of leisure as a test of +improved character and growing resources?--_Tuckerman._ + +Leisure is gone; gone where the spinning-wheels are gone, and the +pack-horses, and the slow wagons, and the peddlers who brought bargains +to the door on sunny afternoons.--_George Eliot._ + +~Libels.~--Undoubtedly the good fame of every man ought to be under the +protection of the laws, as well as his life and liberty and property. +Good fame is an outwork that defends them all and renders them all +valuable. The law forbids you to revenge; when it ties up the hands of +some, it ought to restrain the tongues of others.--_Burke._ + +If it was a new thing, it may be I should not be displeased with the +suppression of the first libel that should abuse me; but, since there +are enough of them to make a small library, I am secretly pleased to see +the number increased, and take delight in raising a heap of stones that +envy has cast at me without doing me any harm.--_Balzac._ + +~Liberty.~--Liberty is the right to do what the laws allow; and if a +citizen could do what they forbid, it would be no longer liberty, +because others would have the same powers.--_Montesquieu._ + +If the true spark of religious and civil liberty be kindled, it will +burn. Human agency cannot extinguish it. Like the earth's central fire, +it may be smothered for a time; the ocean may overwhelm it; mountains +may press it down; but its inherent and unconquerable force will heave +both the ocean and the land, and at some time or another, in some place +or another, the volcano will break out and flame to heaven.--_Daniel +Webster._ + +Interwoven is the love of liberty with every ligament of the +heart.--_Washington._ + +~Library.~--A large library is apt to distract rather than to instruct the +learner; it is much better to be confined to a few authors than to +wander at random over many.--_Seneca._ + +He has his Rome, his Florence, his whole glowing Italy, within the four +walls of his library. He has in his books the ruins of an antique world, +and the glories of a modern one.--_Longfellow._ + +What a place to be in is an old library! It seems as though all the +souls of all the writers that have bequeathed their labors to these +Bodleians were reposing here, as in some dormitory, or middle state. I +do not want to handle, to profane the leaves, their winding-sheets. I +could as soon dislodge a shade. I seem to inhale learning, walking amid +their foliage; and the odor of their old moth-scented coverings is +fragrant as the first bloom of those sciential apples which grew amid +the happy orchard.--_Lamb._ + +~Life.~--Life is a quaint puzzle. Bits the most incongruous join into each +other, and the scheme thus gradually becomes symmetrical and clear; +when, lo! as the infant clasps his hands, and cries, "See, see! the +puzzle is made out," all the pieces are swept back into the box--black +box with the gilded nails!--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +We never live, but we ever hope to live.--_Pascal._ + +Life is like a beautiful and winding lane, on either side bright +flowers, and beautiful butterflies, and tempting fruits, which we +scarcely pause to admire and to taste, so eager are we to hasten to an +opening which we imagine will be more beautiful still. But by degrees as +we advance, the trees grow bleak; the flowers and butterflies fail, the +fruits disappear, and we find we have arrived--to reach a desert +waste.--_G. A. Sala._ + +How small a portion of our life it is that we really enjoy! In youth we +are looking forward to things that are to come; in old age we are +looking backwards to things that are gone past; in manhood, although we +appear indeed to be more occupied in things that are present, yet even +that is too often absorbed in vague determinations to be vastly happy on +some future day when we have time.--_Colton._ + +The days of our years are three-score years and ten; and if by reason of +strength they be four-score years, yet is their strength labor and +sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away.--_Bible._ + +When I reflect upon what I have seen, what I have heard, what I have +done, I can hardly persuade myself that all that frivolous hurry and +bustle and pleasure of the world had any reality; and I look on what has +passed as one of those wild dreams which opium occasions, and I by no +means wish to repeat the nauseous dose for the sake of the fugitive +illusion.--_Chesterfield._ + +Life is like a game of whist. I don't enjoy the game much, but I like to +play my cards well, and see what will be the end of it.--_George Eliot._ + +He most lives who thinks most, feels the noblest, acts the best; and he +whose heart beats the quickest lives the longest.--_James Martineau._ + +Life is so complicated a game that the devices of skill are liable to be +defeated at every turn by air-blown chances, incalculable as the descent +of thistledown.--_George Eliot._ + +When we embark in the dangerous ship called Life, we must not, like +Ulysses, be tied to the mast; we must know how to listen to the songs of +the sirens and to brave their blandishments.--_Arsene Houssaye._ + +Life is thick sown with thorns, and I know no other remedy than to pass +quickly through them. The longer we dwell on our misfortunes the greater +is their power to harm us.--_Voltaire._ + +The earnestness of life is the only passport to the satisfaction of +life.--_Theodore Parker._ + +I am convinced that there is no man that knows life well, and remembers +all the incidents of his past existence, who would accept it again; we +are certainly here to punish precedent sins.--_Campbell._ + +The childhood of immortality.--_Goethe._ + +So our lives glide on; the river ends we don't know where, and the sea +begins, and then there is no more jumping ashore.--_George Eliot._ + +We never think of the main business of life till a vain repentance minds +us of it at the wrong end.--_L'Estrange._ + +This tide of man's life after it once turneth and declineth ever runneth +with a perpetual ebb and falling stream, but never floweth again.--_Sir +W. Raleigh._ + +If the first death be the mistress of mortals, and the mistress of the +universe, reflect then on the brevity of life. "I have been, and that is +all," said Saladin the Great, who was conqueror of the East. The longest +liver had but a handful of days, and life itself is but a circle, always +beginning where it ends.--_Henry Mayhew._ + +Why all this toil for the triumphs of an hour?--_Young._ + +The cradle and the tomb, alas! so nigh.--_Prior._ + +Life's short summer--man is but a flower.--_Johnson._ + +Man lives only to shiver and perspire.--_Sydney Smith._ + +O frail estate of human things!--_Dryden._ + +Many think themselves to be truly God-fearing when they call this world +a valley of tears. But I believe they would be more so, if they called +it a happy valley. God is more pleased with those who think everything +right in the world, than with those who think nothing right. With so +many thousand joys, is it not black ingratitude to call the world a +place of sorrow and torment?--_Richter._ + +Life is a progress from want to want, not from enjoyment to +enjoyment.--_Johnson._ + +We never live: we are always in the expectation of living.--_Voltaire._ + +Life does not count by years. Some suffer a lifetime in a day, and so +grow old between the rising and the setting of the sun.--_Augusta +Evans._ + +~Light.~--Science and art may invent splendid modes of illuminating the +apartments of the opulent; but these are all poor and worthless compared +with the light which the sun sends into our windows, which he pours +freely, impartially, over hill and valley, which kindles daily the +eastern and western sky; and so the common lights of reason and +conscience and love are of more worth and dignity than the rare +endowments which give celebrity to a few.--_Dr. Channing._ + +More light!--_Goethe's last words._ + +Light! Nature's resplendent robe; without whose vesting beauty all were +wrapt in gloom.--_Thomson._ + +Hail! holy light, offspring of heaven, first born!--_Milton._ + +We should render thanks to God for having produced this temporal light, +which is the smile of heaven and joy of the world, spreading it like a +cloth of gold over the face of the air and earth, and lighting it as a +torch, by which we might behold his works.--_Caussin._ + +~Likeness.~--Like, but oh, how different!--_Wordsworth._ + +~Lips.~--Lips like rosebuds peeping out of snow.--_Bailey._ + +He kissed me hard, as though he'd pluck up kisses by the roots that grew +upon my lips.--_Shakespeare._ + +The lips of a fool swallow up himself.--_Bible._ + +~Literature.~--Literature happens to be the only occupation in which wages +are not given in proportion to the goodness of the work done.--_Froude._ + +The literature of a people must spring from the sense of its +nationality; and nationality is impossible without self-respect, and +self-respect is impossible without liberty.--_Mrs. Stowe._ + +Cleverness is a sort of genius for instrumentality. It is the brain of +the hand. In literature, cleverness is more frequently accompanied by +wit, genius, and sense, than by humor.--_Coleridge._ + +When literature is the sole business of life, it becomes a drudgery. +When we are able to resort to it only at certain hours, it is a charming +relaxation. In my earlier days I was a banker's clerk, obliged to be at +the desk everyday from ten till five o'clock; and I shall never forget +the delight with which, on returning home, I used to read and write +during the evening.--_Rogers._ + +Literary history is the great morgue where all seek the dead ones whom +they love, or to whom they are related.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Whatever the skill of any country be in sciences, it is from excellence +in polite learning alone that it must expect a character from +posterity.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Logic.~--Logic differeth from rhetoric as the fist from the palm; the one +close, the other at large.--_Bacon._ + +Syllogism is of necessary use, even to the lovers of truth, to show them +the fallacies that are often concealed in florid, witty, or involved +discourses.--_Locke._ + +Logic is the art of convincing us of some truth.--_Bruyere._ + +~Love.~--Fie, fie! how wayward is this foolish love, that, like a testy +babe, will scratch the nurse, and presently, all humbled, will kiss the +rod!--_Shakespeare._ + +Love is the cross and passion of the heart; its end, its errand.--_P. L. +Bailey._ + +Love is frightened at the intervals of insensibility and callousness +that encroach by little and little on the dominion of grief, and it +makes efforts to recall the keenness of the first anguish.--_George +Eliot._ + +Love while 't is day; night cometh soon, wherein no man or maiden +may.--_Joaquin Miller._ + +Love has a way of cheating itself consciously, like a child who plays at +solitary hide-and-seek; it is pleased with assurances that it all the +while disbelieves.--_George Eliot._ + +As soon go kindle fire with snow, as seek to quench the fire of love +with words.--_Shakespeare._ + +Loves change sure as man or moon, and wane like warm full days of +June.--_Joaquin Miller._ + +Take of love as a sober man takes wine; do not get drunk.--_Alfred de +Musset._ + +Love is the admiration and cherishing of the amiable qualities of the +beloved person, upon the condition of yourself being the object of their +action. The qualities of the sexes correspond. The man's courage is +loved by the woman, whose fortitude again is coveted by the man. His +vigorous intellect is answered by her infallible tact. Can it be true, +what is so constantly affirmed, that there is no sex in souls? I doubt +it--I doubt it exceedingly.--_Coleridge._ + +As love increases prudence diminishes.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +Never self-possessed, or prudent, love is all abandonment.--_Emerson._ + +The desire to be beloved is ever restless and unsatisfied; but the love +that flows out upon others is a perpetual well-spring from on high.--_L. +M. Child._ + +Love is love's reward.--_Dryden._ + +The violence of love is as much to be dreaded as that of hate. When it +is durable, it is serene and equable. Even its famous pains begin only +with the ebb of love, for few are indeed lovers, though all would fain +be.--_Thoreau._ + +Love makes all things possible.--_Shakespeare._ + +Economy in love is peace to nature, much like economy in worldly +matters; we should be prudent, never love too fast; profusion will not, +cannot, always last.--_Peter Pindar._ (_John W. Wolcott._) + +There is no fear in love, for perfect love casteth out fear.--_Bible._ + +O love! thy essence is thy purity! Breathe one unhallowed breath upon +thy flame and it is gone for ever, and but leaves a sullied vase,--its +pure light lost in shame.--_Landor._ + +The pale complexion of true love.--_Shakespeare._ + +Love has no middle term; it either saves or destroys.--_Victor Hugo._ + +Young love is a flame; very pretty, often very hot and fierce, but still +only light and flickering. The love of the older and disciplined heart +is as coals, deep-burning, unquenchable.--_Beecher._ + +In love's war, he who flies is conqueror.--_Mrs. Osgood._ + +Where there is room in the heart there is always room in the +house.--_Moore._ + +Love's like the measles, all the worse when it comes late in +life.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +Only they conquer love who run away.--_Carew._ + +The heart's hushed secret in the soft dark eye.--_L. E. Landon._ + +Love, well thou know'st, no partnership allows; cupid averse rejects +divided vows.--_Prior._ + +Celestial rosy red, love's proper hue.--_Milton._ + +Those who yield their souls captive to the brief intoxication of love, +if no higher and holier feeling mingle with and consecrate their dream +of bliss, will shrink trembling from the pangs that attend their +waking.--_Schlegel._ + +The first sigh of love is the last of wisdom.--_Antoine Bret._ + +I have enjoyed the happiness of this world, I have lived and have +loved.--_Richter._ + +Life is a flower of which love is the honey.--_Victor Hugo._ + +Love is a severe critic. Hate can pardon more than love.--_Thoreau._ + +Young love-making, that gossamer web! Even the points it clings to--the +things whence its subtle interlacings are swung--are scarcely +perceptible: momentary touches of finger-tips, meetings of rays from +blue and dark orbs, unfinished phrases, lightest changes of cheek and +lip, faintest tremors. The web itself is made of spontaneous beliefs and +indefinable joys, yearnings of one life towards another, visions of +completeness, indefinite trust.--_George Eliot._ + +Love is the loadstone of love.--_Mrs. Osgood._ + +Love is never lasting which flames before it burns.--_Feltham._ + +The best part of woman's love is worship; but it is hard to her to be +sent away with her precious spikenard rejected, and her long tresses, +too, that were let fall ready to soothe the wearied feet.--_George +Eliot._ + +Love is an Oriental despot.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +We must love as looking one day to hate.--_George Herbert._ + +Love with old men is as the sun upon the snow, it dazzles more than it +warms them.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +Love is lowliness; on the wedding ring sparkles no jewel.--_Richter._ + +Love alone is wisdom, love alone is power; and where love seems to fail, +it is where self has stepped between and dulled the potency of its +rays.--_George MacDonald._ + +To speak of love is to make love.--_Balzac._ + +A man may be a miser of his wealth; he may tie up his talent in a +napkin; he may hug himself in his reputation; but he is always generous +in his love. Love cannot stay at home; a man cannot keep it to himself. +Like light, it is constantly traveling. A man must spend it, must give +it away.--_Macleod._ + +Repining love is the stillest; the shady flowers in this spring as in +the other, shun sunlight.--_Richter._ + +Love is like the moon; when it does not increase it decreases.--_Segur._ + +Love is the most terrible, and also the most generous of the passions: +it is the only one that includes in its dreams the happiness of some one +else.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +A woman whom we truly love is a religion.--_Emile de Girardin._ + +Childhood is only a wearisome prologue: the first act of the human +comedy opens only at the moment when love makes a breach in our +hearts.--_Arsene Houssaye._ + +The religion of humanity is love.--_Mazzini._ + +He who is intoxicated with wine will be sober again in the course of the +night, but he who is intoxicated by the cup-bearer will not recover his +senses until the day of judgment.--_Saadi._ + +Love reasons without reason.--_Shakespeare._ + +It seems to me that the coming of love is like the coming of spring--the +date is not to be reckoned by the calendar. It may be slow and gradual; +it may be quick and sudden. But in the morning, when we wake and +recognize a change in the world without, verdure on the trees, blossoms +on the sward, warmth in the sunshine, music in the air, we say spring +has come.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Love and a cough cannot be hid.--_George Herbert._ + +Love is the most dunder-headed of all the passions; it never will listen +to reason. The very rudiments of logic are unknown to it. "Love has no +wherefore," says one of the Latin poets.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Love in marriage should be the accomplishment of a beautiful dream, and +not, as it too often is, the end.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +One dies twice: to cease to live is nothing, but to cease to love and to +be loved is an insupportable death.--_Voltaire._ + +The heart of a woman is never so full of affection that there does not +remain a little corner for flattery and love.--_Mauvaux._ + +Love is always blind and tears his hands whenever he tries to gather +roses.--_Arsene Houssaye._ + +Love is a canvas furnished by Nature and embroidered by +imagination.--_Voltaire._ + +Oh! I was mad to intoxicate myself with the wine of love, and to extend +my hand to the crown of poets. Pleasure! Poetry! you are perfidious +friends. Pain follows you closely.--_Arsene Houssaye._ + +If love gives wit to fools, it undoubtedly takes it from +wits.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +In love, as in everything else, experience is a physician who never +comes until after the disorder is cured.--_Mme. de la Tour._ + +One expresses well only the love he does not feel.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +In love, as in war, a fortress that parleys is half taken.--_Marguerite +de Valois._ + +A supreme love, a motive that gives a sublime rhythm to a woman's life, +and exalts habit into partnership with the soul's highest needs, is not +to be had where and how she wills: to know that high initiation, she +must often tread where it is hard to tread, and feel the chill air, and +watch through darkness.--_George Eliot._ + +To love one who loves you, to admire one who admires you, in a word, to +be the idol of one's idol, is exceeding the limit of human joy; it is +stealing fire from heaven and deserves death.--_Madame de Girardin._ + +But to enlarge or illustrate this power and effects of love is to set a +candle in the sun.--_Burton._ + +There are as many kinds of love as there are races. A great tall German, +learned, virtuous, phlegmatic, said one day: "Souls are sisters, fallen +from heaven, who all at once recognize and run to meet each other." A +little dry Frenchman, hot-blooded, witty, lively, replied to him: "You +are right; you can always find shoes to fit."--_Taine._ + +Love supreme defies all sophistry.--_George Eliot._ + +It is strange that men will talk of miracles, revelations, inspiration, +and the like, as things past, while love remains.--_Thoreau._ + +The love of man to woman is a thing common, and of course, and at first +partakes more of instinct and passion than of choice; but true +friendship between man and man is infinite and immortal.--_Plato._ + +We look at the one little woman's face we love, as we look at the face +of our mother earth, and see all sorts of answers to our own +yearnings.--_George Eliot._ + +Take away love, and not physical nature only, but the heart of the moral +world would be palsied.--_Southey._ + +Among all the many kinds of first love, that which begins in childish +companionship is the strongest and most enduring; when passion comes to +unite its force to long affection, love is at its spring-tide.--_George +Eliot._ + +Nothing quickens the perceptions like genuine love. From the humblest +professional attachment to the most chivalric devotion, what keenness of +observation is born under the influence of that feeling which drives +away the obscuring clouds of selfishness, as the sun consumes the vapor +of the morning.--_Tuckerman._ + +~Luck.~--Hope nothing from luck, and the probability is that you will be +so prepared, forewarned, and forearmed, that all shallow observers will +call you lucky.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Luxury.~--Whenever vanity and gayety, a love of pomp and dress, +furniture, equipage, buildings, great company, expensive diversions, and +elegant entertainments get the better of the principles and judgments of +men and women, there is no knowing where they will stop, nor into what +evils, natural, moral, or political, they will lead us.--_John Adams._ + +He repents on thorns that sleeps in beds of roses.--_Quarles._ + +O brethren, it is sickening work to think of your cushioned seats, your +chants, your anthems, your choirs, your organs, your gowns, and your +bands, and I know not what besides, all made to be instruments of +religious luxury, if not of pious dissipation, while ye need far more to +be stirred up and incited to holy ardor for the propagation of the truth +as it is in Jesus.--_Spurgeon._ + +O Luxury! Thou curst of heaven's decree.--_Goldsmith._ + +Superfluity comes sooner by white hairs, but competency lives +longer.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Lying.~--Lying's a certain mark of cowardice.--_Southern._ + +There are people who lie simply for the sake of lying.--_Pascal._ + +Every brave man shuns more than death the shame of lying.--_Corneille._ + +It is a hard matter for a man to lie all over, nature having provided +king's evidence in almost every member. The hand will sometimes act as a +vane, to show which way the wind blows, even when every feature is set +the other way; the knees smite together and sound the alarm of fear +under a fierce countenance; the legs shake with anger, when all above is +calm.--_Washington Allston._ + +Lies exist only to be extinguished.--_Carlyle._ + +A lie that is half a truth is ever the blackest of lies.--_Tennyson._ + + +M. + +~Madness.~--Many a man is mad in certain instances, and goes through life +without having it perceived. For example, a madness has seized a person +of supposing himself obliged literally to pray continually; had the +madness turned the opposite way, and the person thought it a crime ever +to pray, it might not improbably have continued unobserved.--_Johnson._ + +~Man.~--It is of dangerous consequence to represent to man how near he is +to the level of beasts, without showing him at the same time his +greatness. It is likewise dangerous to let him see his greatness without +his meanness. It is more dangerous yet to leave him ignorant of either; +but very beneficial that he should be made sensible of both.--_Pascal._ + +Man, I tell you, is a vicious animal.--_Moliere._ + +He is of the earth, but his thoughts are with the stars. Mean and petty +his wants and his desires; yet they serve a soul exalted with grand, +glorious aims,--with immortal longings,--with thoughts which sweep the +heavens, and wander through eternity. A pigmy standing on the outward +crest of this small planet, his far-reaching spirit stretches outward to +the infinite, and there alone finds rest.--_Carlyle._ + +Alas! what does man here below? A little noise in much +obscurity.--_Victor Hugo._ + +What a piece of work is a man! how noble in reason! how infinite in +faculty! in form and movement, how express and admirable! in action, how +like an angel! in apprehension, how like a god! the beauty of the world! +the paragon of animals!--_Shakespeare._ + +Every man is a divinity in disguise, a god playing the fool. It seems as +if heaven had sent its insane angels into our world as to an asylum. And +here they will break out into their native music, and utter at intervals +the words they have heard in heaven; then the mad fit returns, and they +mope and wallow like dogs!--_Emerson._ + +In my youth I thought of writing a satire on mankind; but now in my age +I think I should write an apology for them.--_Walpole._ + +Man is a reasoning rather than a reasonable animal.--_Alexander +Hamilton._ + +I considered how little man is, yet, in his own mind, how great! He is +lord and master of all things, yet scarce can command anything. He is +given a freedom of his will; but wherefore? Was it but to torment and +perplex him the more? How little avails this freedom, if the objects he +is to act upon be not as much disposed to obey as he is to +command!--_Burke._ + +Men's natures are neither white nor black, but brown.--_Charles Buxton._ + +He is compounded of two very different ingredients, spirit and matter; +but how such unallied and disproportioned substances should act upon +each other, no man's learning yet could tell him.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +Man is the highest product of his own history. The discoverer finds +nothing so grand or tall as himself, nothing so valuable to him. The +greatest star is at the small end of the telescope, the star that is +looking, not looked after nor looked at.--_Theodore Parker._ + +Men are but children of a larger growth; our appetites are apt to change +as theirs, and full as craving, too, and full as vain.--_Dryden._ + +Little things are great to little men.--_Goldsmith._ + +Man himself is the crowning wonder of creation; the study of his nature +the noblest study the world affords.--_Gladstone._ + +Limited in his nature, infinite in his desires.--_Lamartine._ + +~Manners.~--A man ought to carry himself in the world as an orange tree +would if it could walk up and down in the garden, swinging perfume from +every little censer it holds up to the air.--_Beecher._ + +All manners take a tincture from our own.--_Pope._ + +I have seen manners that make a similar impression with personal beauty, +that give the like exhilaration and refine us like that; and in +memorable experiences they are suddenly better than beauty, and make +that superfluous and ugly. But they must be marked by fine perception, +the acquaintance with real beauty. They must always show control; you +shall not be facile, apologetic, or leaky, but king over your word; and +every gesture and action shall indicate power at rest. They must be +inspired by the good heart. There is no beautifier of complexion, or +form, or behavior, like the wish to scatter joy, and not pain, around +us.--_Emerson._ + +We perhaps never detect how much of our social demeanor is made up of +artificial airs, until we see a person who is at once beautiful and +simple: without the beauty, we are apt to call simplicity +awkwardness.--_George Eliot._ + +We cannot always oblige, but we can always speak +obligingly.--_Voltaire._ + +Nature is the best posture-master.--_Emerson._ + +Good breeding consists in having no particular mark of any profession, +but a general elegance of manners.--_Johnson._ + +Men are like wine; not good before the lees of clownishness be +settled.--_Feltham._ + +The person who screams, or uses the superlative degree, or converses +with heat, puts whole drawing-rooms to flight. If you wish to be loved, +love measure. You must have genius or a prodigious usefulness if you +will hide the want of measure.--_Emerson._ + +We are to carry it from the hand to the heart, to improve a ceremonial +nicety into a substantial duty, and the modes of civility into the +realities of religion.--_South._ + +Better were it to be unborn than to be ill-bred.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +Simplicity of manner is the last attainment. Men are very long afraid of +being natural, from the dread of being taken for ordinary.--_Jeffrey._ + +Kings themselves cannot force the exquisite politeness of distance to +capitulate, hid behind its shield of bronze.--_Balzac._ + +Comport thyself in life as at a banquet. If a plate is offered thee, +extend thy hand and take it moderately; if it be withdrawn, do not +detain it. If it come not to thy side, make not thy desire loudly known, +but wait patiently till it be offered thee.--_Epictetus._ + +Good manners and good morals are sworn friends and firm +allies.--_Bartol._ + +The "over-formal" often impede, and sometimes frustrate, business by a +dilatory, tedious, circuitous, and (what in colloquial language is +called) fussy way of conducting the simplest transactions. They have +been compared to a dog which cannot lie down till he has made three +circuits round the spot.--_Whately._ + +~Martyrs.~--Even in this world they will have their judgment-day, and +their names, which went down in the dust like a gallant banner trodden +in the mire, shall rise again all glorious in the sight of +nations.--_Mrs. Stowe._ + +It is not the death that makes the martyr, but the cause.--_Canon Dale._ + +It is admirable to die the victim of one's faith; it is sad to die the +dupe of one's ambition.--_Lamartine._ + +God discovers the martyr and confessor without the trial of flames and +tortures, and will hereafter entitle many to the reward of actions which +they had never the opportunity of performing.--_Addison._ + +~Matrimony.~--When a man and woman are married their romance ceases and +their history commences.--_Rochebrune._ + +It resembles a pair of shears, so joined that they cannot be separated; +often moving in opposite directions, yet always punishing any one who +comes between them.--_S. Smith._ + +Married in haste, we repent at leisure.--_Congreve._ + +I believe marriages would in general be as happy, and often more so, if +they were all made by the Lord Chancellor, upon a due consideration of +the characters and circumstances, without the parties having any choice +in the matter.--_Johnson._ + +Hanging and wiving go by destiny.--_Shakespeare._ + +The married man is like the bee that fixes his hive, augments the world, +benefits the republic, and by a daily diligence, without wronging any, +profits all; but he who contemns wedlock, like a wasp, wanders an +offence to the world, lives upon spoil and rapine, disturbs peace, +steals sweets that are none of his own, and, by robbing the hives of +others, meets misery as his due reward.--_Feltham._ + +One can, with dignity, be wife and widow but once.--_Joubert._ + +Few natures can preserve through years the poetry of the first +passionate illusion. That can alone render wedlock the seal that +confirms affection, and not the mocking ceremonial that consecrates its +grave.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +It's hard to wive and thrive both in a year.--_Tennyson._ + +Maids want nothing but husbands, and when they have them, they want +everything.--_Shakespeare._ + +Wedlock's like wine, not properly judged of till the second +glass.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +A good wife is like the ivy which beautifies the building to which it +clings, twining its tendrils more lovingly as time converts the ancient +edifice into a ruin.--_Johnson._ + +He that marries is like the Doge who was wedded to the Adriatic. He +knows not what there is in that which he marries: mayhap treasures and +pearls, mayhap monsters and tempests, await him.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +A husband is a plaster that cures all the ills of girlhood.--_Moliere._ + +There is more of good nature than of good sense at the bottom of most +marriages.--_Thoreau._ + +The love of some men for their wives is like that of Alfieri for his +horse. "My attachment for him," said he, "went so far as to destroy my +peace every time that he had the least ailment; but my love for him did +not prevent me from fretting and chafing him whenever he did not wish to +go my way."--_Bovee._ + +No navigator has yet traced lines of latitude and longitude on the +conjugal sea.--_Balzac._ + +Has any one ever pinched into its pilulous smallness the cobweb of +pre-matrimonial acquaintanceship?--_George Eliot._ + +~Mediocrity.~--Mediocrity is excellent to the eyes of mediocre +people.--_Joubert._ + +Mediocrity is now, as formerly, dangerous, commonly fatal, to the poet; +but among even the successful writers of prose, those who rise sensibly +above it are the very rarest exceptions.--_Gladstone._ + +~Meditation.~--Chewing the cud of sweet and bitter fancy.--_Shakespeare._ + +'Tis greatly wise to talk with our past hours, and ask them what report +they bore to heaven, and how they might have borne more welcome +news.--_Young._ + +Meditation is that exercise of the mind by which it recalls a known +truth, as some kind of creatures do their food, to be ruminated upon +till all vicious parts be extracted.--_Bishop Horne._ + +~Meekness.~--The flower of meekness grows on a stem of grace.--_J. +Montgomery._ + +A boy was once asked what meekness was. He thought for a moment and +said, "Meekness gives smooth answers to rough questions."--_Mrs. +Balfour._ + +~Melancholy.~--Melancholy is a fearful gift; what is it but the telescope +of truth?--_Byron._ + +A lazy frost, a numbness of the mind.--_Dryden._ + +Demoniac frenzy, moping melancholy.--_Milton._ + +The noontide sun is dark, and music discord, when the heart is +low.--_Young._ + +~Memory.~--Memory is what makes us young or old.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +No canvas absorbs color like memory.--_Willmott._ + +Of all the faculties of the mind, memory is the first that flourishes, +and the first that dies.--_Colton._ + +Joy's recollection is no longer joy; but sorrow's memory is sorrow +still.--_Byron._ + +A sealed book, at whose contents we tremble.--_L. E. Landon._ + +And fondly mourn the dear delusions gone.--_Prior._ + +How can such deep-imprinted images sleep in us at times, till a word, a +sound, awake them?--_Lessing._ + +In literature and art memory is a synonym for invention; it is the +life-blood of imagination, which faints and dies when the veins are +empty.--_Willmott._ + +Memory is the scribe of the soul.--_Aristotle._ + +The memory has as many moods as the temper, and shifts its scenery like +a diorama.--_George Eliot._ + +We must always have old memories and young hopes.--_Arsene Houssaye._ + +They teach us to remember; why do not they teach us to forget? There is +not a man living who has not, some time in his life, admitted that +memory was as much of a curse as a blessing.--_F. A. Durivage._ + +~Mercy.~--Mercy more becomes a magistrate than the vindictive wrath which +men call justice!--_Longfellow._ + +Nothing emboldens sin so much as mercy.--_Shakespeare._ + +'Tis mightiest in the mightiest; it becomes the throned monarch better +than his crown.--_Shakespeare._ + +Give money, but never lend it. Giving it only makes a man ungrateful; +lending it makes him an enemy.--_Dumas._ + +Mercy among the virtues is like the moon among the stars,--not so +sparkling and vivid as many, but dispensing a calm radiance that hallows +the whole. It is the bow that rests upon the bosom of the cloud when the +storm is past. It is the light that hovers above the +judgment-seat.--_Chapin._ + +We hand folks over to God's mercy, and show none ourselves.--_George +Eliot._ + +Among the attributes of God, although they are all equal, mercy shines +with even more brilliancy than justice.--_Cervantes._ + +~Milton.~--His poetry reminds us of the miracles of Alpine scenery. Nooks +and dells, beautiful as fairy land, are embosomed in its most rugged and +gigantic elevations. The roses and myrtles bloom unchilled on the verge +of the avalanche.--_Macaulay._ + +~Mind.~--It is with diseases of the mind as with diseases of the body, we +are half dead before we understand our disorder, and half cured when we +do.--_Colton._ + +The end which at present calls forth our efforts will be found when it +is once gained to be only one of the means to some remoter end. The +natural flights of the human mind are not from pleasure to pleasure, but +from hope to hope.--_Johnson._ + +Minds filled with vivid, imaginative thoughts, are the most indolent in +reproducing. Clear, cold, hard minds are productive. They have to +retrace a very simple design.--_X. Doudan._ + +The mind is the atmosphere of the soul.--_Joubert._ + +What is this little, agile, precious fire, this fluttering motion which +we call the mind?--_Prior._ + +Just as a particular soil wants some one element to fertilize it, just +as the body in some conditions has a kind of famine for one special +food, so the mind has its wants, which do not always call for what is +best, but which know themselves and are as peremptory as the salt sick +sailor's call for a lemon or raw potato.--_Holmes._ + +The best way to prove the clearness of our mind is by showing its +faults; as when a stream discovers the dirt at the bottom, it convinces +us of the transparency of the water.--_Pope._ + +A mind once cultivated will not lie fallow for half an +hour.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Mischief.~--The opportunity to do mischief is found a hundred times a +day, and that of doing good once a year.--_Voltaire._ + +~Miser.~--The miser swimming in gold seems to me like a thirsty fish.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +In all meanness there is a deficit of intellect as well as of heart, and +even the cleverness of avarice is but the cunning of +imbecility.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Misery.~--There are a good many real miseries in life that we cannot help +smiling at, but they are the smiles that make wrinkles and not +dimples.--_Holmes._ + +Misery is so little appertaining to our nature, and happiness so much +so, that we in the same degree of illusion only lament over that which +has pained us, but leave unnoticed that which has rejoiced +us.--_Richter._ + +~Misfortune.~--If all the misfortunes of mankind were cast into a public +stock, in order to be equally distributed among the whole species, those +who now think themselves the most unhappy would prefer the share they +are already possessed of before that which would fall to them by such a +division.--_Socrates._ + +Depend upon it, that if a man _talks_ of his misfortunes there is +something in them that is not disagreeable to him; for where there is +nothing but pure misery, there never is any recourse to the mention of +it.--_Johnson._ + +Flowers never emit so sweet and strong a fragrance as before a storm. +Beauteous soul! when a storm approaches thee be as fragrant as a +sweet-smelling flower.--_Richter._ + +Our bravest lessons are not learned through success, but +misadventure.--_Alcott._ + +There is a chill air surrounding those who are down in the world, and +people are glad to get away from them, as from a cold room.--_George +Eliot._ + +Men shut their doors against the setting sun.--_Shakespeare._ + +He that is down needs fear no fall.--_Bunyan._ + +~Moderation.~--Till men have been some time free, they know not how to use +their freedom. The natives of wine countries are generally sober. In +climates where wine is a rarity intemperance abounds. A newly liberated +people may be compared to a Northern army encamped on the Rhine or the +Xeres. It is said that, when soldiers in such a situation first find +themselves able to indulge without restraint in such a rare and +expensive luxury, nothing is to be seen but intoxication. Soon, however, +plenty teaches discretion; and after wine has been for a few months +their daily fare, they become more temperate than they had ever been in +their own country. In the same manner, the final and permanent fruits of +liberty are wisdom, moderation, and mercy.--_Macaulay._ + +The superior man wishes to be slow in his words, and earnest in his +conduct.--_Confucius._ + +Let a man take time enough for the most trivial deed, though it be but +the paring of his nails. The buds swell imperceptibly, without hurry or +confusion; as if the short spring days were an eternity.--_Thoreau._ + +It is a little stream which flows softly, but freshens everything along +its course.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Modesty.~--False modesty is the last refinement of vanity. It is a +lie.--_Bruyere._ + +The first of all virtues is innocence; the next is modesty. If we banish +Modesty out of the world, she carries away with her half the virtue that +is in it.--_Addison._ + +He of his port was meek as is a maid.--_Chaucer._ + +Modesty is the lowest of the virtues, and is a confession of the +deficiency it indicates. He who undervalues himself is justly +undervalued by others.--_Hazlitt._ + +Modesty, who, when she goes, is gone forever.--_Landor._ + +Modesty is the conscience of the body.--_Balzac._ + +There are as many kinds of modesty as there are races. To the English +woman it is a duty; to the French woman a propriety.--_Taine._ + +Virtue which shuns the day.--_Addison._ + +Modesty and the dew love the shade. Each shine in the open day only to +be exhaled to heaven.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +Modesty is still a provocation.--_Poincelot._ + +Modesty is the chastity of merit, the virginity of noble souls.--_E. de +Girardin._ + +~Money.~--Wisdom, knowledge, power--all combined.--_Byron._ + +Oh, what a world of vile ill-favored faults looks handsome in three +hundred pounds a year!--_Shakespeare._ + +It is my opinion that a man's soul may be buried and perish under a +dung-heap, or in a furrow of the field, just as well as under a pile of +money.--_Hawthorne._ + +If you would know the value of money, go and try to borrow some; for he +that goes a-borrowing goes a-sorrowing.--_Franklin._ + +Make all you can, save all you can, give all you can.--_Wesley._ + +The avaricious love of gain, which is so feelingly deplored, appears to +us a principle which, in able hands, might be guided to the most +salutary purposes. The object is to encourage the love of labor, which +is best encouraged by the love of money.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Ready money is Aladdin's lamp.--_Byron._ + +Money does all things; for it gives and it takes away, it makes honest +men and knaves, fools and philosophers; and so forward, _mutatis +mutandis_, to the end of the chapter.--_L'Estrange._ + +Mammon is the largest slave-holder in the world.--_Fred. Saunders._ + +But for money and the need of it, there would not be half the friendship +in the world. It is powerful for good if divinely used. Give it plenty +of air and it is sweet as the hawthorn; shut it up and it cankers and +breeds worms.--_George MacDonald._ + +Money, the life-blood of the nation.--_Swift._ + +~Moon.~--The silver empress of the night.--_Tickell._ + +How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank.--_Shakespeare._ + +Mysterious veil of brightness made.--_Butler._ + +Cynthia, fair regent of the night.--_Gay._ + +The maiden moon in her mantle of blue.--_Joaquin Miller._ + +~Morals.~--Every age and every nation has certain characteristic vices, +which prevail almost universally, which scarcely any person scruples to +avow, and which even rigid moralists but faintly censure. Succeeding +generations change the fashion of their morals with the fashion of their +hats and their coaches; take some other kind of wickedness under their +patronage, and wonder at the depravity of their ancestors.--_Macaulay._ + +We like the expression of Raphael's faces without an edict to enforce +it. I do not see why there should not be a taste in morals formed on the +same principle.--_Hazlitt._ + +Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of much life so. Aim +above morality. Be not simply good; be good for something.--_Thoreau._ + +~Morning.~--Vanished night, shot through with orient beams.--_Milton._ + +The dewy morn, with breath all incense, and with cheek all +bloom.--_Byron._ + +Jocund day stands tiptoe on the misty mountain top.--_Shakespeare._ + +When the glad sun, exulting in his might, comes from the dusky-curtained +tents of night.--_Emma C. Embury._ + +The cock, that is the trumpet of the morn, doth with his lofty and +shrill-sounding throat awake the god of day.--_Shakespeare._ + +Its brightness, mighty divinity! has a fleeting empire over the day, +giving gladness to the fields, color to the flowers, the season of the +loves, harmonious hour of wakening birds.--_Calderon._ + +Temperate as the morn.--_Shakespeare._ + +I was always an early riser. Happy the man who is! Every morning day +comes to him with a virgin's love, full of bloom and freshness. The +youth of nature is contagious, like the gladness of a happy +child.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Mother.~--Children, look in those eyes, listen to that dear voice, notice +the feeling of even a single touch that is bestowed upon you by that +gentle hand! Make much of it while yet you have that most precious of +all good gifts, a loving mother. Read the unfathomable love of those +eyes; the kind anxiety of that tone and look, however slight your pain. +In after life you may have friends, fond, dear friends, but never will +you have again the inexpressible love and gentleness lavished upon you +which none but a mother bestows.--_Macaulay._ + +Nature's loving proxy, the watchful mother.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +I believe I should have been swept away by the flood of French +infidelity, if it had not been for one thing, the remembrance of the +time when my sainted mother used to make me kneel by her side, taking my +little hands folded in hers, and caused me to repeat the Lord's +Prayer.--_Thomas Randolph._ + +The mother's yearning, that completest type of the life in another life +which is the essence of real human love, feels the presence of the +cherished child even in the base, degraded man.--_George Eliot._ + +When Eve was brought unto Adam, he became filled with the Holy Spirit, +and gave her the most sanctified, the most glorious of appellations. He +called her Eva, that is to say, the Mother of All. He did not style her +wife, but simply mother,--mother of all living creatures. In this +consists the glory and the most precious ornament of woman.--_Luther._ + +There is in all this cold and hollow world no fount of deep, strong, +deathless love, save that within a mother's heart.--_Hemans._ + +~Motive.~--The morality of an action depends upon the motive from which we +act. If I fling half-a-crown to a beggar with intention to break his +head, and he picks it up and buys victuals with it, the physical effect +is good; but with respect to me, the action is very wrong.--_Johnson._ + +Whatever touches the nerves of motive, whatever shifts man's moral +position, is mightier than steam, or caloric, or lightning.--_Chapin._ + +Let the motive be in the deed and not in the event. Be not one whose +motive for action is the hope of reward.--_Kreeshna._ + +We must not inquire too curiously into motives. They are apt to become +feeble in the utterance: the aroma is mixed with the grosser air. We +must keep the germinating grain away from the light.--_George Eliot._ + +Every activity proposes to itself a passivity, every labor +enjoyment.--_Jacobi._ + +~Mourning.~--Oh, for the touch of a vanished hand, and the sound of a +voice that is still!--_Tennyson._ + +The meek-ey'd morn appears, mother of dews.--_Thomson._ + +~Music.~--Sentimentally I am disposed to harmony, but organically I am +incapable of a tune.--_Lamb._ + +All musical people seem to be happy; it is the engrossing pursuit; +almost the only innocent and unpunished passion.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Where painting is weakest, namely, in the expression of the highest +moral and spiritual ideas, there music is sublimely strong.--_Mrs. +Stowe._ + +There is something marvelous in music. I might almost say that music is, +in itself, a marvel. Its position is somewhere between the region of +thought and that of phenomena; a glimmering medium between mind and +matter, related to both and yet differing from either. Spiritual, and +yet requiring rhythm; material, and yet independent of space.--_Heinrich +Heine._ + +The hidden soul of harmony.--_Milton._ + +Give me some music! music, moody food of us that trade in +love.--_Shakespeare._ + +Explain it as we may, a martial strain will urge a man into the front +rank of battle sooner than an argument, and a fine anthem excite his +devotion more certainly than a logical discourse.--_Tuckerman._ + +Such sweet compulsion doth in music lie.--_Milton._ + +Music, in the best sense, does not require novelty; nay, the older it +is, and the more we are accustomed to it, the greater its +effect.--_Goethe._ + +Music, which gentler on the spirit lies than tired eyelids upon tired +eyes.--_Tennyson._ + +Melodies die out like the pipe of Pan, with the ears that love them and +listen for them.--_George Eliot._ + +Music can noble hints impart, engender fury, kindle love, with +unsuspected eloquence can move and manage all the man with secret +art.--_Addison._ + +Music is the harmonious voice of creation; an echo of the invisible +world; one note of the divine concord which the entire universe is +destined one day to sound.--_Mazzini._ + + +N. + +~Naivete.~--Naivete is the language of pure genius and of discerning +simplicity. It is the most simple picture of a refined and ingenious +idea; a masterpiece of art in him in whom it is not +natural.--_Mendelssohn._ + +~Name.~--A virtuous name is the precious only good for which queens and +peasants' wives must contest together.--_Schiller._ + +A man's name is not like a mantle which merely hangs about him, and +which one perchance may safely twitch and pull, but a perfectly fitting +garment, which, like the skin, has grown over and over him, at which one +cannot rake and scrape without injuring the man himself.--_Goethe._ + +~Napoleon.~--Whose game was empires, and whose stakes were +thrones.--_Byron._ + +Napoleon I. might have been the Washington of France; he preferred to be +another Attila,--a question of taste.--_F. A. Durivage._ + +~Nature.~--Nature has no mind; every man who addresses her is compelled to +force upon her for a moment the loan of his own mind. And if she answers +a question which his own mind puts to her, it is only by such a reply as +his own mind teaches to her parrot-like lips. And as every man has a +different mind, so every man gets a different answer.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Nature will be buried a great time, and yet revive upon the occasion or +temptation: like as it was with AEsop's damsel, turned from a cat to a +woman, who sat very demurely at the board's end till a mouse ran before +her.--_Bacon._ + +Virtue, as understood by the world, is a constant struggle against the +laws of nature.--_De Finod._ + +Nature,--a thing which science and art never appear to see with the same +eyes. If to an artist Nature has a soul, why, so has a steam-engine. Art +gifts with soul all matter that it contemplates; science turns all that +is already gifted with soul into matter.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Nature is too thin a screen; the glory of the One breaks in +_everywhere_.--_Emerson._ + +Nature is poetic, but not mankind. When one aims at truth it is easier +to find the poetic side of nature than of man.--_X. Doudan._ + +All nature is a vast symbolism; every material fact has sheathed within +it a spiritual truth.--_Chapin._ + +Nature is no sentimentalist,--does not cosset or pamper us. We must see +that the world is rough and surly, and will not mind drowning a man or a +woman, but swallows your ships like a grain of dust. The cold, +inconsiderate of persons, tingles your blood, benumbs your feet, freezes +a man like an apple. The diseases, the elements, fortune, gravity, +lightning, respect no persons.--_Emerson._ + +Nature imitates herself. A grain thrown into good ground brings forth +fruit: a principle thrown into a good mind brings forth fruit. +Everything is created and conducted by the same Master,--the root, the +branch, the fruits,--the principles, the consequences.--_Pascal._ + +A noble nature can alone attract the noble, and alone knows how to +retain them.--_Goethe._ + +Nature, the vicar of the almighty Lord.--_Chaucer._ + +A poet ought not to pick Nature's pocket. Let him borrow, and so borrow +as to repay by the very act of borrowing. Examine nature accurately, but +write from recollection, and trust more to the imagination than the +memory.--_Coleridge._ + +We, by art, unteach what Nature taught.--_Dryden._ + +Nature is the armory of genius. Cities serve it poorly, books and +colleges at second hand; the eye craves the spectacle of the horizon, of +mountain, ocean, river and plain, the clouds and stars; actual contact +with the elements, sympathy with the seasons as they rise and +roll.--_Alcott._ + +Nothing is rich but the inexhaustible wealth of Nature. She shows us +only surfaces, but she is million fathoms deep.--_Emerson._ + +Nature is an absolute and jealous divinity. Lovely, eloquent, and +instructive in all her inequalities and contrasts, she hides her face, +and remains mute to those who, by attempting to re-fashion her, profane +her.--_Mazzini._ + +~Necessity.~--Necessity is a bad recommendation to favors of any kind, +which as seldom fall to those who really want them, as to those who +really deserve them.--_Fielding._ + +It is observed in the golden verses of Pythagoras, that power is never +far from necessity. The vigor of the human mind quickly appears when +there is no longer any place for doubt and hesitation, when diffidence +is absorbed in the sense of danger, or overwhelmed by some resistless +passion.--_Johnson._ + +When God would educate a man He compels him to learn bitter lessons. He +sends him to school to the necessities rather than to the graces, that, +by knowing all suffering, he may know also the eternal +consolation.--_Celia Burleigh._ + +Necessity may render a doubtful act innocent, but it cannot make it +praiseworthy.--_Joubert._ + +What was once to me mere matter of the fancy now has grown the vast +necessity of heart and life.--_Tennyson._ + +~Neglect.~--He that thinks he can afford to be negligent is not far from +being poor.--_Johnson._ + +~News.~--Give to a gracious message an host of tongues; but let ill +tidings tell themselves when they be felt.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Newspapers.~--In these times we fight for ideas, and newspapers are our +fortresses.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Before this century shall run out journalism will be the whole press. +Mankind will write their book day by day, hour by hour, page by page. +Thought will spread abroad with the rapidity of light; instantly +conceived, instantly written, instantly understood at the extremities of +the earth; it will spread from Pole to Pole, suddenly burning with the +fervor of soul which made it burst forth; it will be the reign of the +human mind in all its plenitude; it will not have time to ripen, to +accumulate in the form of a book; the book will arrive too late; the +only book possible from day to day is a newspaper.--_Lamartine._ + +Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand +bayonets.--_Napoleon._ + +They preach to the people daily, weekly; admonishing kings themselves; +advising peace or war with an authority which only the first Reformers +and a long-past class of Popes were possessed of; inflicting moral +censure; imparting moral encouragement, consolation, edification; in all +ways diligently "administering the discipline of the Church." It may be +said, too, that in private disposition the new preachers somewhat +resemble the mendicant Friars of old times; outwardly, full of holy +zeal; inwardly, not without stratagem, and hunger for terrestrial +things.--_Carlyle._ + +These papers of the day have uses more adequate to the purposes of +common life than more pompous and durable volumes.--_Johnson._ + +~Night.~--Wisdom mounts her zenith with the stars.--_Mrs. Barbauld._ + +The day is done, and the darkness falls from the wings of +night.--_Longfellow._ + +Sable-vested night, eldest of things.--_Milton._ + +O mysterious night! Thou art not silent: many tongues hast +thou.--_Joanna Baillie._ + +Night, when deep sleep falleth on men.--_Bible._ + +~No.~--No is a surly, honest fellow, speaks his mind rough and round at +once.--_Walter Scott._ + +Learn to say No! and it will be of more use to you than to be able to +read Latin.--_Spurgeon._ + +The woman who really wishes to refuse contents herself with saying No. +She who explains wants to be convinced.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +~Nobility.~--Virtue is the first title of nobility.--_Moliere._ + +~Nonsense.~--Nonsense is to sense as shade to light--it heightens +effect.--_Fred. Saunders._ + +~Nothing.~--There is nothing useless to men of sense; clever people turn +everything to account.--_Fontaine._ + +Variety of mere nothings gives more pleasure than uniformity of +something.--_Richter._ + +~Novels.~--Novels are sweet. All people with healthy literary appetites +love them--almost all women; a vast number of clever, hard-headed +men,--Judges, bishops, chancellors, mathematicians,--are notorious novel +readers, as well as young boys and sweet girls, and their kind, tender +mothers.--_Thackeray._ + +We must have books for recreation and entertainment, as well as books +for instruction and for business; the former are agreeable, the latter +useful, and the human mind requires both. The canon law and the codes of +Justinian shall have due honor and reign at the universities, but Homer +and Virgil need not therefore be banished. We will cultivate the olive +and the vine, but without eradicating the myrtle and the +rose.--_Balzac._ + +A little grain of the romance is no ill ingredient to preserve and exalt +the dignity of human nature, without which it is apt to degenerate into +everything that is sordid, vicious, and low.--_Swift._ + +~Novelty.~--The enormous influence of novelty--the way in which it +quickens observation, sharpens sensation, and exalts sentiment--is not +half enough taken note of by us, and is to me a very sorrowful matter. +And yet, if we try to obtain perpetual change, change itself will become +monotonous; and then we are reduced to that old despair, "If water +chokes, what will you drink after it?" The two points of practical +wisdom in the matter are, first, to be content with as little novelty as +possible at a time; and secondly, to preserve, as as much possible, the +sources of novelty.--_Ruskin._ + +Novelty is the great-parent of pleasure.--_South._ + + +O. + +~Obedience.~--To obey is better than sacrifice.--_Bible._ + +How will you find good? It is not a thing of choice, it is a river that +flows from the foot of the Invisible Throne, and flows by the path of +obedience.--_George Eliot._ + +~Oblivion.~--Oblivion is the flower that grows best on graves.--_George +Sand._ + +The grave of human misery.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +~Observation.~--It is the close observation of little things which is the +secret of success in business, in art, in science, and in every pursuit +in life. Human knowledge is but an accumulation of small facts, made by +successive generations of men,--the little bits of knowledge and +experience carefully treasured up by them growing at length into a +mighty pyramid.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Observation made in the cloister, or in the desert, will generally be as +obscure as the one, and as barren as the other; but he that would paint +with his pencil must study originals, and not be over fearful of a +little dust.--_Colton._ + +Each one sees what he carries in his heart.--_Goethe._ + +~Occupation.~--The want of occupation is no less the plague of society +than of solitude.--_Rousseau._ + +The busy have no time for tears.--_Byron._ + +One of the principal occupations of man is to divine +woman.--_Lacretelle._ + +~Ocean.~--Wave rolling after wave in torrent rapture.--_Milton._ + +It plays with the clouds, it mocks the skies, or like a cradled creature +lies.--_Barry Cornwall._ + +The visitation of the winds, who take the ruffian billows by the top, +curling their monstrous heads.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Office.~--The gratitude of place-expectants is a lively sense of future +favors.--_Walpole._ + +~Opinion.~--The men of the past had convictions, while we moderns have +only opinions.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Wind puffs up empty bladders; opinion, fools.--_Socrates._ + +Our pet opinions are usually those which place us in a minority of a +minority amongst our own party: very happily, else those poor opinions, +born with no silver spoon in their mouths, how would they get nourished +and fed?--_George Eliot._ + +Those who never retract their opinions love themselves more than they +love truth.--_Joubert._ + +It has been shrewdly said that when men abuse us, we should suspect +ourselves, and when they praise us, them. It is a rare instance of +virtue to despise censure which we do not deserve, and still more rare +to despise praise, which we do. But that integrity that lives only on +opinion would starve without it.--_Colton._ + +There never was in the world two opinions alike, no more than two hairs +or two grains. The most universal quality is diversity.--_Montaigne._ + +The history of human opinion is scarcely anything more than the history +of human errors.--_Voltaire._ + +If a man should register all his opinions upon love, politics, religion, +learning, etc., beginning from his youth, and so go on to old age, what +a bundle of inconsistencies and contradictions would appear at +last.--_Swift._ + +One of the mistakes in the conduct of human life is, to suppose that +other men's opinions are to make us happy.--_Burton._ + +It is with true opinions which one has the courage to utter as with +pawns first advanced on the chess-board; they may be beaten, but they +have inaugurated a game which must be won.--_Goethe._ + +The feeble tremble before opinion, the foolish defy it, the wise judge +it, the skillful direct it.--_Mme. Roland._ + +~Opportunity.~--The cleverest of all devils is opportunity.--_Vieland._ + +Chance opportunities make us known to others, and still more to +ourselves.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +What is opportunity to the man who can't use it? An unfecundated egg, +which the waves of time wash away into nonentity.--_George Eliot._ + +There is no man whom Fortune does not visit once in his life; but when +she does not find him ready to receive her, she walks in at the door and +flies out at the window.--_Cardinal Imperiali._ + +The golden moments in the stream of life rush past us, and we see +nothing but sand; the angels come to visit us, and we only know them +when they are gone.--_George Eliot._ + +Every one has a fair turn to be as great as he pleases.--_Jeremy +Collier._ + +A philosopher being asked what was the first thing necessary to win the +love of a woman, answered: "Opportunity."--_Moore._ + +Opportunity, sooner or later, comes to all who work and wish.--_Lord +Stanley._ + +You will never "find" time for anything. If you want time you must make +it.--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Opposition.~--The effects of opposition are wonderful. There are men who +rise refreshed on hearing of a threat,--men to whom a crisis which +intimidates and paralyzes the majority--demanding, not the faculties of +prudence and thrift, but comprehension, immovableness, the readiness of +sacrifice--comes graceful and beloved as a bride!--_Emerson._ + +Nobody loves heartily unless people take pains to prevent +it.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Oratory.~--Orators are most vehement when they have the weakest cause, as +men get on horseback when they cannot walk.--_Cicero._ + +Metaphor is the figure most suitable for the orator, as men find a +positive pleasure in catching resemblances for +themselves.--_Aristotle._ + +Those orators who give us much noise and many words, but little argument +and less wit, and who are most loud when they are least lucid, should +take a lesson from the great volume of Nature; she often gives us the +lightning even without the thunder, but never the thunder without the +lightning.--_Colton._ + +An orator without judgment is a horse without a bridle.--_Theophrastus._ + +When the Roman people had listened to the diffuse and polished +discourses of Cicero, they departed, saying one to another, "What a +splendid speech our orator has made!" But when the Athenians heard +Demosthenes, he so filled them with the subject-matter of his oration, +that they quite forgot the orator, and left him at the finish of his +harangue, breathing revenge, and exclaiming, "Let us go and fight +against Philip!"--_Colton._ + +Let not a day pass without exercising your powers of speech. There is no +power like that of oratory. Caesar controlled men by exciting their +fears; Cicero, by captivating their affections and swaying their +passions. The influence of the one perished with its author; that of the +other continues to this day.--_Henry Clay._ + +It was reckoned the fault of the orators at the decline of the Roman +empire, when they had been long instructed by rhetoricians, that their +periods were so harmonious as that they could be sung as well as spoken. +What a ridiculous figure must one of these gentlemen cut, thus measuring +syllables and weighing words when he should plead the cause of his +client!--_Goldsmith._ + +~Originality.~--Originality is nothing but judicious +imitation.--_Voltaire._ + +One couldn't carry on life comfortably without a little blindness to the +fact that everything has been said better than we can put it +ourselves.--_George Eliot._ + +The most original writers borrowed one from another. Boiardo has +imitated Pulci, and Ariosto Boiardo. The instruction we find in books is +like fire. We fetch it from our neighbor's, kindle it at home, +communicate it to others, and it becomes the property of +all.--_Voltaire._ + +All originality is estrangement.--_G. H. Lawes._ + + +P. + +~Pain.~--Psychical pain is more easily borne than physical, and if I had +my choice between a bad conscience and a bad tooth, I should choose the +former.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +The same refinement which brings us new pleasures exposes us to new +pains.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Pardon.~--Pardon is the virtue of victory.--_Mazzini._ + +The heart has always the pardoning power.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +The offender never pardons.--_George Herbert._ + +Love is on the verge of hate each time it stoops for +pardon.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +These evils I deserve, yet despair not of his final pardon whose ear is +ever open, and his eye gracious to readmit the supplicant.--_Milton._ + +Having mourned your sin, for outward Eden lost, find paradise +within.--_Dryden._ + +~Parent.~--The sacred books of the ancient Persians say: If you would be +holy instruct your children, because all the good acts they perform will +be imputed to you.--_Montesquieu._ + +~Partiality.~--Partiality in a parent is commonly unlucky; for fondlings +are in danger to be made fools, and the children that are least cockered +make the best and wisest men.--_L'Estrange._ + +As there is a partiality to opinions, which is apt to mislead the +understanding, so there is also a partiality to studies, which is +prejudicial to knowledge.--_Locke._ + +Partiality is properly the understanding's judging according to the +inclination of the will and affections, and not according to the exact +truth of things, or the merits of the cause.--_South._ + +~Parting.~--In every parting there is an image of death.--_George Eliot._ + +~Party.~--He knows very little of mankind who expects, by any facts or +reasoning, to convince a determined party-man.--_Lavater._ + +He that aspires to be the head of a party will find it more difficult to +please his friends than to perplex his foes.--_Colton._ + +~Passions.~--Passions makes us feel but never see clearly.--_Montesquieu._ + +Passions are likened best to floods and streams: the shallow murmur, but +the deep are dumb.--_Sir Walter Raleigh._ + +The passions are the voice of the body.--_Rousseau._ + +The advice given by a great moralist to his friend was, that he should +compose his passions; and let that be the work of reason which would +certainly be the work of time.--_Addison._ + +A vigorous mind is as necessarily accompanied with violent passions as a +great fire with great heat.--_Burke._ + +There are moments when our passions speak and decide for us, and we seem +to stand by and wonder. They carry in them an inspiration of crime, that +in one instant does the work of long premeditation.--_George Eliot._ + +The blossoms of passion, gay and luxuriant flowers, are brighter and +fuller of fragrance, but they beguile us and lead us astray, and their +odor is deadly.--_Longfellow._ + +"All the passions," says an old writer, "are such near neighbors, that +if one of them is on fire the others should send for the buckets." Thus +love and hate being both passions, the one is never safe from the spark +that sets the other ablaze. But contempt is passionless; it does not +catch, it quenches fire.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +All the passions seek after whatever nourishes them. Fear loves the idea +of danger.--_Joubert._ + +It is the excess and not the nature of our passions which is perishable. +Like the trees which grow by the tomb of Protesilaus, the passions +flourish till they reach a certain height, but no sooner is that height +attained than they wither away.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Past.~--Let the dead past bury its dead.--_Longfellow._ + +Oh vanished times! splendors eclipsed for aye! Oh suns behind the +horizon that have set.--_Victor Hugo._ + +It is to live twice, when we can enjoy the recollections of our former +life.--_Martial._ + +I desire no future that will break the ties of the past.--_George +Eliot._ + +~Patience.~--There is one form of hope which is never unwise, and which +certainly does not diminish with the increase of knowledge. In that form +it changes its name and we call it patience.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +It's easy finding reasons why other folks should be patient.--_George +Eliot._ + +Patience, sovereign o'er transmuted ills.--_Johnson._ + +There's no music in a "rest," that I know of, but there's the making of +music in it. And people are always missing that part of the life melody, +always talking of perseverance, and courage, and fortitude; but patience +is the finest and worthiest part of fortitude, and the rarest, +too.--_Ruskin._ + +The two powers which in my opinion constitute a wise man are those of +bearing and forbearing.--_Epictetus._ + +Enter into the sublime patience of the Lord. Be charitable in view of +it. God can afford to wait; why cannot we, since we have Him to fall +back upon? Let patience have her perfect work, and bring forth her +celestial fruits.--_G. MacDonald._ + +'Tis all men's office to speak patience to those that wring under the +load of sorrow; but no man's virtue nor sufficiency to be so moral when +he shall endure the like himself.--_Shakespeare._ + +He that hath patience hath fat thrushes for a farthing.--_George +Herbert._ + +Imitate time. It destroys slowly. It undermines, wears, loosens, +separates. It does not uproot.--_Joubert._ + +God is with the patient.--_Koran._ + +Patience, the second bravery of man, is, perhaps, greater than the +first.--_Antonio de Solis._ + +Patience--the truest fortitude.--_Milton._ + +~Patriotism.~--In peace patriotism really consists only in this--that +every one sweeps before his own door, minds his own business, also +learns his own lesson, that it may be well with him in his own +house.--_Goethe._ + +Our country! In her intercourse with foreign nations may she always be +in the right; but our country, right or wrong.--_Decatur._ + +How dear is fatherland to all noble hearts.--_Voltaire._ + +Let our object be our country, our whole country, and nothing but our +country. And, by the blessing of God, may that country itself become a +vast and splendid monument, not of oppression and terror, but of wisdom, +of peace, and of liberty, upon which the world may gaze with admiration +forever!--_Daniel Webster._ + +There can be no affinity nearer than our country.--_Plato._ + +Of the whole sum of human life no small part is that which consists of a +man's relations to his country, and his feelings concerning +it.--_Gladstone._ + +~Peace.~--They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears +into pruning-hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, +neither shall they learn war any more.--_Bible._ + +Still in thy right hand carry gentle peace.--_Shakespeare._ + +Lovely concord and most sacred peace doth nourish virtue, and fast +friendship breed.--_Spenser._ + +Peace gives food to the husbandman, even in the midst of rocks; war +brings misery to him, even in the most fertile plains.--_Menander._ + +Peace, dear nurse of arts, plenties, and joyful birth.--_Shakespeare._ + +A land rejoicing and a people blest.--_Pope._ + +~Pedant.~--As pedantry is an ostentatious obtrusion of knowledge, in which +those who hear us cannot sympathize, it is a fault of which soldiers, +sailors, sportsmen, gamesters, cultivators, and all men engaged in a +particular occupation, are quite as guilty as scholars; but they have +the good fortune to have the vice only of pedantry, while scholars have +both the vice and the name for it too.--_S. Smith._ + +With loads of learned lumber in his head.--_Pope._ + +It is not a circumscribed situation so much as a narrow vision that +creates pedants; not having a pet study or science, but a narrow, vulgar +soul, which prevents a man from seeing all sides and hearing all things; +in short, the intolerant man is the real pedant.--_Richter._ + +~Perfection.~--It is reasonable to have perfection in our eye that we may +always advance towards it, though we know it can never be +reached.--_Johnson._ + +Perfection does not exist; to understand it is the triumph of human +intelligence; to desire to possess it is the most dangerous kind of +madness.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +That historian who would describe a favorite character as faultless +raises another at the expense of himself. Zeuxis made five virgins +contribute their charms to his single picture of Helen; and it is as +vain for the moralist to look for perfection in the mind, as for the +painter to expect to find it in the body.--_Colton._ + +Trifles make perfection, but perfection is no trifle.--_Michael Angelo._ + +He who boasts of being perfect is perfect in folly. I never saw a +perfect man. Every rose has its thorns, and every day its night. Even +the sun shows spots, and the skies are darkened with clouds. And faults +of some kind nestle in every bosom.--_Spurgeon._ + +Faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null, dead perfection; no +more.--_Tennyson._ + +~Persecution.~--Of all persecutions, that of calumny is the most +intolerable. Any other kind of persecution can affect our outward +circumstances only, our properties, our lives; but this may affect our +characters forever.--_Hazlitt._ + +~Perseverance.~--Great effects come of industry and perseverance; for +audacity doth almost bind and mate the weaker sort of minds.--_Bacon._ + +Let us only suffer any person to tell us his story, morning and evening, +but for one twelve-month, and he will become our master.--_Burke._ + +Perpetual pushing and assurance put a difficulty out of countenance, and +make a seeming impossibility give way.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +Much rain wears the marble.--_Shakespeare._ + +I'm proof against that word failure. I've seen behind it. The only +failure a man ought to fear is failure in cleaving to the purpose he +sees to be best.--_George Eliot._ + +Every man who observes vigilantly, and resolves steadfastly, grows +unconsciously into genius.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Perseverance is not always an indication of great abilities. An +indifferent poet is invulnerable to a repulse, the want of sensibility +in him being what a noble self-confidence was in Milton. These excluded +suitors continue, nevertheless, to hang their garlands at the gate, to +anoint the door-post, and even kiss the very threshold of her home, +though the Muse beckons them not in.--_Wordsworth._ + +~Perverseness.~--The strength of the donkey mind lies in adopting a course +inversely as the arguments urged, which, well considered, requires as +great a mental force as the direct sequence.--_George Eliot._ + +~Philosophy.~--Philosophy is the art of living.--_Plutarch._ + +Philosophy consists not in airy schemes, or idle speculations; the rule +and conduct of all social life is her great province.--_Thomson._ + +The philosopher knows the universe and knows not himself.--_Fontaine._ + +Philosophy is the rational expression of genius.--_Lamartine._ + +It is a maxim received among philosophers themselves from the days of +Aristotle down to those of Sir William Hamilton, that philosophy ceases +where truth is acknowledged.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Physiognomy.~--It is a point of cunning to wait upon him with whom you +speak with your eye, as the Jesuits give it in precept; for there be +many wise men that have secret hearts and transparent +countenances.--_Bacon._ + +As the language of the face is universal, so 'tis very comprehensive; no +laconism can reach it; 'tis the short-hand of the mind, and crowds a +great deal in a little room.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +The distinguishing characters of the face, and the lineaments of the +body, grow more plain and visible with time and age; but the peculiar +physiognomy of the mind is most discernible in children.--_Locke._ + +What knowledge is there, of which man is capable, that is not founded on +the exterior; the relation that exists between visible and invisible, +the perceptible and the imperceptible?--_Lavater._ + +~Piety.~--Among the many strange servilities mistaken for pieties one of +the least lovely is that which hopes to flatter God by despising the +world and vilifying human nature.--_G. H. Lewes._ + +Piety softens all that courage bears.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Piety is a kind of modesty. It makes us turn aside our thoughts, as +modesty makes us cast down our eyes in the presence of whatever is +forbidden.--_Joubert._ + +Piety is not an end, but a means of attaining the highest degree of +culture by perfect peace of mind. Hence it is to be observed that those +who make piety an end and aim in itself for the most part become +hypocrites.--_Goethe._ + +~Pity.~--Pity is not natural to man. Children are always cruel. Savages +are always cruel. Pity is acquired and improved by the cultivation of +reason. We may have uneasy sensations from seeing a creature in +distress, without pity; for we have not pity unless we wish to relieve +them. When I am on my way to dine with a friend, and, finding it late, +bid the coachman make haste, if I happen to attend when he whips his +horses, I may feel unpleasantly that the animals are put to pain, but I +do not wish him to desist; no, sir, I wish him to drive on.--_Johnson._ + +Pity is sworn servant unto love, and this be sure, wherever it begin to +make the way, it lets the master in.--_Daniel._ + +Those many that need pity, and those infinities of people that refuse to +pity, are miserable upon a several charge, but yet they almost make up +all mankind.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Of all the sisters of Love one of the most charming is Pity.--_Alfred de +Musset._ + +~Place.~--In place there is a license to do good and evil, whereof the +latter is a curse; for in evil the best condition is not to will; the +second, not to can.--_Lord Bacon._ + +Where you are is of no moment, but only what you are doing there. It is +not the place that ennobles you, but you the place; and this only by +doing that which is great and noble.--_Petrarch._ + +I take sanctuary in an honest mediocrity.--_Bruyere._ + +A true man never frets about his place in the world, but just slides +into it by the gravitation of his nature, and swings there as easily as +a star.--_Chapin._ + +~Plagiarism.~--Nothing is sillier than this charge of plagiarism. There is +no sixth commandment in art. The poet dare help himself wherever he +lists--wherever he finds material suited to his work. He may even +appropriate entire columns with their carved capitals, if the temple he +thus supports be a beautiful one. Goethe understood this very well, and +so did Shakespeare before him.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +~Pleasure.~--Consider pleasures as they depart, not as they +come.--_Aristotle._ + +We have not an hour of life in which our pleasures relish not some pain, +our sours some sweetness.--_Massinger._ + +How many there are that take pleasure in toil: that can outrise the sun, +outwatch the moon, and outrun the field's wild beasts! merely out of +fancy and delectation, they can find out mirth in vociferation, music in +the barking of dogs, and be content to be led about the earth, over +hedges and through sloughs, by the windings and the shifts of poor +affrighted vermin; yet, after all, come off, as Messalina, tired, and +not satisfied with all that the brutes can do. But were a man enjoined +to this that did not like it, how tedious and how punishable to him +would it prove! since, in itself, it differs not from riding +post.--_Feltham._ + +Boys immature in knowledge pawn their experience to their present +pleasure.--_Shakespeare._ + +'Tis a wrong way to proportion other men's pleasures to ourselves. 'Tis +like a child's using a little bird--"Oh, poor bird, thou shalt sleep +with me"--so lays it in his bosom and stifles it with his hot breath. +The bird had rather be in the cold air. And yet, too, 'tis the most +pleasing flattery to like what other men like.--_Selden._ + +There is no pleasure but that some pain is nearly allied to +it.--_Menander._ + +All fits of pleasure are balanced by an equal degree of pain or languor; +'tis like spending this year part of the next year's revenue.--_Swift._ + +Fly the pleasure that bites to-morrow.--_George Herbert._ + +Look upon pleasures not upon that side that is next the sun, or where +they look beauteously, that is, as they come towards you to be enjoyed, +for then they paint and smile, and dress themselves up in tinsel, and +glass gems, and counterfeit imagery.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +Pleasure has its time; so, too, has wisdom. Make love in thy youth, and +in old age attend to thy salvation.--_Voltaire._ + +A man of pleasure is a man of pains.--_Young._ + +Pleasure is very seldom found where it is sought. Our brightest blazes +of gladness are commonly kindled by unexpected sparks.--_Johnson._ + +What would we not give to still have in store the first blissful moment +we ever enjoyed!--_Rochepedre._ + +Most pleasures embrace us but to strangle.--_Montaigne._ + +~Poetry.~--Poetry is the apotheosis of sentiment.--_Madame de Stael._ + +Poetry is the sister of sorrow. Every man that suffers and weeps is a +poet; every tear is a verse, and every heart a poem.--_Marc Andre._ + +Much is the force of heaven-bred poesy.--_Shakespeare._ + +Poetry, good sir, in my opinion, is like a tender virgin, very young, +and extremely beautiful, whom divers other virgins--namely, all the +other sciences--make it their business to enrich, polish, and adorn; and +to her it belongs to make use of them all, and on her part to give a +lustre to them all.--_Cervantes._ + +Poetry is the overflowing of the soul.--_Tuckerman._ + +Poetry is enthusiasm with wings of fire, it is the angel of high +thoughts, that inspires us with the power of sacrifice.--_Mazzini._ + +Poetry is the music of thought, conveyed to us in the music of +language.--_Chatfield._ + +The great secret of morals is love, or a going out of our own nature, +and an identification of ourselves with the beautiful which exists in +thought, action, or person, not our own. A man, to be greatly good, must +imagine intensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place +of another, and of many others; the pains and pleasures of his species +must become his own. The great instrument of moral good is imagination, +and poetry administers to the effect by acting upon the +cause.--_Shelley._ + +Truth shines the brighter clad in verse.--_Pope._ + +It is a shallow criticism that would define poetry as confined to +literary productions in rhyme and metre. The written poem is only poetry +_talking_, and the statue, the picture, and the musical composition are +poetry _acting_. Milton and Goethe, at their desks, were not more truly +poets than Phidias with his chisel, Raphael at his easel, or deaf +Beethoven bending over his piano, inventing and producing strains which +he himself could never hope to hear.--_Ruskin._ + +Thought in blossom.--_Bishop Ken._ + +It is a ruinous misjudgment, too contemptible to be asserted, but not +too contemptible to be acted upon, that the end of poetry is +publication.--_George MacDonald._ + +Wisdom married to immortal verse.--_Wordsworth._ + +By poetry we mean the art of employing words in such a manner as to +produce an illusion on the imagination; the art of doing by means of +words what the painter does by means of colors.--_Macaulay._ + +Thoughts, that voluntary move harmonious numbers.--_Milton._ + +The world is so grand and so inexhaustible that subjects for poems +should never be wanted. But all poetry should be the poetry of +circumstance; that is, it should be inspired by the Real. A particular +subject will take a poetic and general character precisely because it is +created by a poet. All my poetry is the poetry of circumstance. It +wholly owes its birth to the realities of life.--_Goethe._ + +Nothing which does not transport is poetry. The lyre is a winged +instrument.--_Joubert._ + +Perhaps there are no warmer lovers of the muse than those who are only +permitted occasionally to gain her favors. The shrine is more reverently +approached by the pilgrim from afar than the familiar worshiper. Poetry +is often more beloved by one whose daily vocation is amid the bustle of +the world. We read of a fountain in Arabia upon whose basin is +inscribed, "Drink and away;" but how delicious is that hasty draught, +and how long and brightly the thought of its transient refreshment +dwells in the memory!--_Tuckerman._ + +Old-fashioned poetry, but choicely good.--_Izaak Walton._ + +Poetry is not made out of the understanding. The question of common +sense is always: "What is it good for?" a question which would abolish +the rose and be triumphantly answered by the cabbage.--_Lowell._ + +The poetry of earth is never dead.--_Keats._ + +~Poets.~--Poets, like race-horses, must be fed, not fattened.--_Charles +IX._ + +True poets, like great artists, have scarcely any childhood, and no old +age.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Modern poets mix much water with their ink.--_Goethe._ + +There is nothing of which Nature has been more bountiful than poets. +They swarm like the spawn of cod-fish, with a vicious fecundity, that +invites and requires destruction. To publish verses is become a sort of +evidence that a man wants sense; which is repelled not by writing good +verses, but by writing excellent verses.--_Sydney Smith._ + +There is a pleasure in poetic pains which only poets +know.--_Wordsworth._ + +An artist that works in marble or colors has them all to himself and his +tribe, but the man who moulds his thoughts in verse has to employ the +materials vulgarized by everybody's use, and glorify them by his +handling.--_Holmes._ + +A little shallowness might be useful to many a poet! What is depth, +after all? Is the pit deeper than the shallow mirror which reflects its +lowest recesses?--_Heinrich Heine._ + +We praise the dramatic poet who possesses the art of drawing tears--a +talent which he has in common with the meanest onion!--_Heinrich Heine._ + +I have observed a gardener cut the outward rind of a tree (which is the +surtout of it), to make it bear well: and this is a natural account of +the usual poverty of poets, and is an argument why wits, of all men +living, ought to be ill clad. I have always a sacred veneration for any +one I observe to be a little out of repair in his person, as supposing +him either a poet or a philosopher; because the richest minerals are +ever found under the most ragged and withered surfaces of the +earth.--_Swift._ + +Words become luminous when the poet's finger has passed over them its +phosphorescence.--_Joubert._ + +Poets are the hierophants of an unapprehended inspiration; the mirrors +of the gigantic shadows which futurity casts upon the +present.--_Shelley._ + +Poets are far rarer births than kings.--_Ben Jonson._ + +One might discover schools of the poets as distinctly as schools of the +painters, by much converse in them, and a thorough taste of their manner +of writing.--_Pope._ + +They learn in suffering what they teach in song.--_Shelley._ + +~Policy.~--He has mastered all points who has combined the useful with the +agreeable.--_Horace._ + +At court one becomes a sort of human ant-eater, and learns to catch +one's prey by one's tongue.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Measures, not men, have always been my mark.--_Goldsmith._ + +In a troubled state, we must do as in foul weather upon a river, not +think to cut directly through, for the boat may be filled with water; +but rise and fall as the waves do, and give way as much as we +conveniently can.--_Seldon._ + +To manage men one ought to have a sharp mind in a velvet +sheath.--_George Eliot._ + +~Politeness.~--Politeness is fictitious benevolence. It supplies the place +of it among those who see each other only in public, or but little. +Depend upon it, the want of it never fails to produce something +disagreeable to one or other. I have always applied to good breeding +what Addison, in his "Cato," says of honor: "Honor's a sacred tie: the +law of kings; the noble mind's distinguishing perfection; that aids and +strengthens Virtue where it meets her, and imitates her actions where +she is not."--_Johnson._ + +Self-command is the main elegance.--_Emerson._ + +Politeness smooths wrinkles.--_Joubert._ + +Politeness is as natural to delicate natures as perfume is to +flowers.--_De Finod._ + +~Politics.~--It is the misfortune of all miscellaneous political +combinations, that with the purest motives of their more generous +members are ever mixed the most sordid interests and the fiercest +passions of mean confederates.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Nothing is politically right which is morally wrong.--_Daniel +O'Connell._ + +Those who think must govern those who toil.--_Goldsmith._ + +The man who can make two ears of corn, or two blades of grass, grow on +the spot where only one grew before, would deserve better of mankind, +and render more essential service to the country, than the whole race of +politicians put together.--_Swift._ + +Jarring interests of themselves create the according music of a +well-mixed state.--_Pope._ + +Wise men and gods are on the strongest side.--_Sir C. Sedley._ + +The thorough-paced politician must laugh at the squeamishness of his +conscience, and read it another lecture.--_South._ + +A thousand years scarce serve to form a state; an hour may lay it in the +dust.--_Byron._ + +Extended empire, like extended gold, exchanges solid strength for feeble +splendor.--_Johnson._ + +~Possessions.~--It so falls out that what we have we prize not to the +worth whiles we enjoy it; but being lacked and lost, why then we rack +the value; then we find the virtue that possession would not show us +whiles it was ours.--_Shakespeare._ + +All comes from and will go to others.--_George Herbert._ + +In life, as in chess, one's own pawns block one's way. A man's very +wealth, ease, leisure, children, books, which should help him to win, +more often checkmate him.--_Charles Buxton._ + +In all worldly things that a man pursues with the greatest eagerness and +intention of mind imaginable, he finds not half the pleasure in the +actual possession of them as he proposed to himself in the +expectation.--_South._ + +As soon as women become ours we are no longer theirs.--_Montaigne._ + +Attainment is followed by neglect, and possession by disgust. The +malicious remark of the Greek epigrammatist on marriage may apply to +every other course of life,--that its two days of happiness are the +first and the last.--_Johnson._ + +~Posterity.~--Posterity preserves only what will pack into small compass. +Jewels are handed down from age to age, less portable valuables +disappear.--_Lord Stanley._ + +The drafts which true genius draws upon posterity, although they may not +always be honored so soon as they are due, are sure to be paid with +compound interest in the end.--_Colton._ + +~Poverty.~--Many good qualities are not sufficient to balance a single +want--the want of money.--_Zimmerman._ + +Few save the poor feel for the poor.--_L. E. Landon._ + +Thou shalt know by experience how salt the savor is of others' bread, +and how sad a path it is to climb and descend another's +stairs.--_Dante._ + +Riches endless is as poor as winter, to him that ever fears he shall be +poor.--_Shakespeare._ + +A poor man resembles a fiddler, whose music, though liked, is not much +praised, because he lives by it; while a gentleman performer, though the +most wretched scraper alive, throws the audience into +raptures.--_Goldsmith._ + +He is not poor that little hath, but he that much desires.--_Daniel._ + +The wicked man's tempter, the good man's perdition, the proud man's +curse, the melancholy man's halter.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Power.~--The weakest living creature, by concentrating his powers on a +single object, can accomplish something. The strongest, by dispensing +his over many, may fail to accomplish anything. The drop, by continually +falling, bores its passage through the hardest rock. The hasty torrent +rushes over it with hideous uproar, and leaves no trace +behind.--_Carlyle._ + +Oh for a forty parson power.--_Byron._ + +Power is so characteristically calm, that calmness in itself has the +aspect of power, and forbearance implies strength. The orator who is +known to have at his command all the weapons of invective is most +formidable when most courteous.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Praise.~--Expect not praise without envy until you are dead. Honors +bestowed on the illustrious dead have in them no admixture of envy; for +the living pity the dead; and pity and envy, like oil and vinegar, +assimilate not.--_Colton._ + +Praise is the best diet for us after all.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Desert being the essential condition of praise, there can be no reality +in the one without the other.--_Washington Allston._ + +Damn with faint praise.--_Pope._ + +Counsel is not so sacred a thing as praise, since the former is only +useful among men, but the latter is for the most part reserved for the +gods.--_Pythagoras._ + +Praise undeserved is satire in disguise.--_Broadhurst._ + +One good deed, dying tongueless, slaughters a thousand waiting upon +that. Our praises are our wages.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Prayer.~--The Lord's Prayer contains the sum total of religion and +morals.--_Wellington._ + +Nymph, in thy orisons be all my sins remembered.--_Shakespeare._ + +'Tis heaven alone that is given away; 'tis only God may be had for the +asking.--_Lowell._ + +Let our prayers, like the ancient sacrifices, ascend morning and +evening. Let our days begin and end with God.--_Channing._ + +The few that pray at all pray oft amiss.--_Cowper._ + +Such words as Heaven alone is fit to hear.--_Dryden._ + +What are men better than sheep or goats, that nourish a blind life +within the brain, if, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer both +for themselves and those who call them friends!--_Tennyson._ + +Prayer ardent opens heaven.--_Young._ + +Solicitude is the audience-chamber of God.--_Landor._ + +The best answer to all objections urged against prayer is the fact that +man cannot help praying; for we may be sure that that which is so +spontaneous and ineradicable in human nature has its fitting objects and +methods in the arrangements of a boundless Providence.--_Chapin._ + +He prayeth best who loveth best.--_Coleridge._ + +~Preaching.~--Preachers say, do as I say, not as I do. But if a physician +had the same disease upon him that I have, and he should bid me do one +thing and he do quite another, could I believe him?--~Selden.~ + +~Preface.~--Your opening promises some great design.--_Horace._ + +A preface, being the entrance of a book, should invite by its beauty. An +elegant porch announces the splendor of the interior.--_Disraeli._ + +A good preface is as essential to put the reader into good humor, as a +good prologue is to a play, or a fine symphony is to an opera, +containing something analogous to the work itself; so that we may feel +its want as a desire not elsewhere to be gratified. The Italians call +the preface--La salsa del libro--the sauce of the book; and, if +well-seasoned, it creates an appetite in the reader to devour the book +itself.--_Disraeli._ + +~Prejudice.~--He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of +that.--_J. Stuart Mill._ + +Prejudice, which sees what it pleases, cannot see what is +plain.--_Aubrey de Vere._ + +All looks yellow to the jaundiced eye.--_Pope._ + +Prejudice is the reason of fools.--_Voltaire._ + +Ignorance is less remote from the truth than prejudice.--_Diderot._ + +~Present, The.~--Since Time is not a person we can overtake when he is +gone, let us honor him with mirth and cheerfulness of heart while he is +passing.--_Goethe._ + +Man, living, feeling man, is the easy sport of the over-mastering +present.--_Schiller._ + +'Tis but a short journey across the isthmus of Now.--_Bovee._ + +The present hour is always wealthiest when it is poorer than the future +ones, as that is the pleasantest site which affords the pleasantest +prospect.--_Thoreau._ + +Let us enjoy the fugitive hour. Man has no harbor, time has no shore, it +rushes on and carries us with it.--_Lamartine._ + +~Presentiment.~--We walk in the midst of secrets--we are encompassed with +mysteries. We know not what takes place in the atmosphere that +surrounds us--we know not what relations it has with our minds. But one +thing is sure, that, under certain conditions, our soul, through the +exercise of mysterious functions, has a greater power than reason, and +that the power is given it to antedate the future,--ay, to see into the +future.--_Goethe._ + +We should not neglect a presentiment. Every man has within him a spark +of divine radiance which is often the torch which illumines the darkness +of our future.--_Madame de Girardin._ + +~Press.~--The press is not only free, it is powerful. That power is ours. +It is the proudest that man can enjoy. It was not granted by monarchs, +it was not gained for us by aristocracies; but it sprang from the +people, and, with an immortal instinct, it has always worked for the +people.--_B. Disraeli._ + +~Presumption.~--Presumption is our natural and original +disease.--_Montaigne._ + +Presumption never stops in its first attempt. If Caesar comes once to +pass the Rubicon, he will be sure to march further on, even till he +enters the very bowels of Rome, and breaks open the Capitol itself. He +that wades so far as to wet and foul himself, cares not how much he +trashes further.--_South._ + +He that presumes steps into the throne of God.--_South._ + +~Pretence.~--As a general rule, people who flagrantly pretend to anything +are the reverse of that which they pretend to. A man who sets up for a +saint is sure to be a sinner, and a man who boasts that he is a sinner +is sure to have some feeble, maudlin, sniveling bit of saintship about +him which is enough to make him a humbug.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Pretension.~--Pretences go a great way with men that take fair words and +magisterial looks for current payment.--_L'Estrange._ + +~Pride.~--I have been more and more convinced, the more I think of it, +that in general, pride is at the bottom of all great mistakes. All the +other passions do occasional good; but whenever pride puts in _its_ +word, everything goes wrong; and what it might really be desirable to +do, quietly and innocently, it is mortally dangerous to do +proudly.--_Ruskin._ + +Pride's chickens have bonny feathers, but they are an expensive brood to +rear--they eat up everything, and are always lean when brought to +market.--_Alexander Smith._ + +When pride thaws look for floods.--_Bailey._ + +Pride, like laudanum and other poisonous medicines, is beneficial in +small, though injurious in large, quantities. No man who is not pleased +with himself, even in a personal sense, can please others.--_Frederick +Saunders._ + +Pride is seldom delicate; it will please itself with very mean +advantages.--_Johnson._ + +~Principles.~--Principle is a passion for truth.--_Hazlitt._ + +Principles, like troops of the line, are undisturbed, and stand +fast.--_Richter._ + +Whatever lies beyond the limits of experience, and claims another origin +than that of induction and deduction from established data, is +illegitimate.--_G. H. Lewes._ + +The value of a principle is the number of things it will explain; and +there is no good theory of disease which does not at once suggest a +cure.--_Emerson._ + +What is the essence and the life of character? Principle, integrity, +independence, or, as one of our great old writers has it, "that inbred +loyalty unto virtue which can serve her without a +livery."--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +The change we personally experience from time to time we obstinately +deny to our principles.--_Zimmerman._ + +~Printing.~--Things printed can never be stopped; they are like babies +baptized, they have a soul from that moment, and go on forever.--_George +Meredith._ + +~Prison.~--Young Crime's finishing school.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +The worst prison is not of stone. It is of a throbbing heart, outraged +by an infamous life.--_Beecher._ + +~Procrastination.~--Indulge in procrastination, and in time you will come +to this, that because a thing ought to be done, therefore you can't do +it.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The man who procrastinates struggles with ruin.--_Hesiod._ + +There is, by God's grace, an immeasurable distance between late and too +late.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Prodigality.~--This is a vice too brave and costly to be kept and +maintained at any easy rate; it must have large pensions, and be fed +with both hands, though the man who feeds it starve for his pains.--_Dr. +South._ + +When I see a young profligate squandering his fortune in bagnios, or at +the gaming-table, I cannot help looking on him as hastening his own +death, and in a manner digging his own grave.--_Goldsmith._ + +The gains of prodigals are like fig-trees growing on a precipice: for +these, none are better but kites and crows; for those, only harlots and +flatterers.--_Socrates._ + +~Progress.~--All that is human must retrograde if it do not +advance.--_Gibbon._ + +What matters it? say some, a little more knowledge for man, a little +more liberty, a little more general development. Life is so short! He is +a being so limited! But it is precisely because his days are few, and he +cannot attain to all, that a little more culture is of importance to +him. The ignorance in which God leaves man is divine; the ignorance in +which man leaves himself is a crime and a shame.--_X. Doudan._ + +Revolutions never go backwards.--_Emerson._ + +What pains and tears the slightest steps of man's progress have cost! +Every hair-breadth forward has been in the agony of some soul, and +humanity has reached blessing after blessing of all its vast achievement +of good with bleeding feet.--_Bartol._ + +Progress is lame.--_St. Bueve._ + +We know what a masquerade all development is, and what effective shapes +may be disguised in helpless embryos. In fact, the world is full of +hopeful analogies and handsome dubious eggs called +possibilities.--_George Eliot._ + +The pathway of progress will still, as of old, bear the traces of +martyrdom, but the advance is inevitable.--_G. H. Lewes._ + +Nations are educated through suffering, mankind is purified through +sorrow. The power of creating obstacles to progress is human and +partial. Omnipotence is with the ages.--_Mazzini._ + +Every age has its problem, by solving which, humanity is helped +forward.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Men of great genius and large heart sow the seeds of a new degree of +progress in the world, but they bear fruit only after many +years.--_Mazzini._ + +It is curious to note the old sea-margins of human thought. Each +subsiding century reveals some new mystery; we build where monsters used +to hide themselves.--_Longfellow._ + +The activity of to-day and the assurance of to-morrow.--_Emerson._ + +The moral law of the universe is progress. Every generation that passes +idly over the earth without adding to that progress by one degree +remains uninscribed upon the register of humanity, and the succeeding +generation tramples its ashes as dust.--_Mazzini._ + +A fresh mind keeps the body fresh. Take in the ideas of the day, drain +off those of yesterday. As to the morrow, time enough to consider it +when it becomes to-day.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Promise.~--Promises hold men faster than benefits: hope is a cable and +gratitude a thread.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +~Proof.~--In the eyes of a wise judge proofs by reasoning are of more +value than witnesses.--_Cicero._ + +Give me the ocular proof; make me see't; or at the least, so prove it, +that the probation bear no hinge, no loop, to hang a doubt +upon.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Prosperity.~--Prosperity makes some friends and many +enemies.--_Vauvenargues._ + +That fortitude which has encountered no dangers, that prudence which has +surmounted no difficulties, that integrity which has been attacked by no +temptation, can at best be considered but as gold not yet brought to the +test, of which therefore the true value cannot be assigned.--_Johnson._ + +Alas for the fate of men! Even in the midst of the highest prosperity a +shadow may overturn them; but if they be in adverse fortune a moistened +sponge can blot out the picture.--_AEschylus._ + +Prosperity lets go the bridle.--_George Herbert._ + +~Proverbs.~--Proverbs are somewhat analogous to those medical formulas +which, being in frequent use, are kept ready made up in the chemists' +shops, and which often save the framing of a distinct +prescription.--_Bishop Whately._ + +The study of proverbs may be more instructive and comprehensive than the +most elaborate scheme of philosophy.--_Motherwell._ + +The proverbial wisdom of the populace in the street, on the roads, and +in the markets, instructs the ear of him who studies man more fully than +a thousand rules ostentatiously displayed.--_Lavater._ + +~Prudence.~--There is no amount of praise which is not heaped on prudence; +yet there is not the most insignificant event of which it can make us +sure.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +Too many, through want of prudence, are golden apprentices, silver +journeymen, and copper masters.--_Whitfield._ + +Men of sense often learn from their enemies. Prudence is the best +safeguard. This principle cannot be learned from a friend, but an enemy +extorts it immediately. It is from their foes, not their friends, that +cities learn the lesson of building high walls and ships of war. And +this lesson saves their children, their homes, and their +properties.--_Aristophanes._ + +~Punctuality.~--The most indispensable qualification of a cook is +punctuality. The same must be said of guests.--_Brillat Savarin._ + +Punctuality is the stern virtue of men of business, and the graceful +courtesy of princes.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Punishment.~--One man meets an infamous punishment for that crime which +confers a diadem upon another.--_Juvenal._ + +It is as expedient that a wicked man be punished as that a sick man be +cured by a physician; for all chastisement is a kind of +medicine.--_Plato._ + +Punishment is lame, but it comes.--_George Herbert._ + +If punishment makes not the will supple it hardens the +offender.--_Locke._ + +Don't let us rejoice in punishment, even when the hand of God alone +inflicts it. The best of us are but poor wretches just saved from +shipwreck: can we feel anything but awe and pity when we see a +fellow-passenger swallowed by the waves?--_George Eliot._ + +The work of eradicating crimes is not by making punishment familiar, but +formidable.--_Goldsmith._ + +The public have more interest in the punishment of an injury than he who +receives it.--_Cato._ + +The best of us being unfit to die, what an inexpressible absurdity to +put the worst to death!--_Hawthorne._ + +~Puns.~--I have very little to say about puns; they are in very bad +repute, and so they _ought_ to be. The wit of language is so miserably +inferior to the wit of ideas, that it is very deservedly driven out of +good company. Sometimes, indeed, a pun makes its appearance which seems +for a moment to redeem its species; but we must not be deceived by them: +it is a radically bad race of wit.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Conceits arising from the use of words that agree in sound but differ in +sense.--_Addison._ + +~Purposes.~--Man proposes, but God disposes.--_Thomas a Kempis._ + +A man's heart deviseth his way; but the Lord directeth his +steps.--_Bible._ + +It is better by a noble boldness to run the risk of being subject to +half of the evils which we anticipate, than to remain in cowardly +listlessness for fear of what may happen.--_Herodotus._ + +Purposes, like eggs, unless they be hatched into action, will run into +decay.--_Smiles._ + +~Pursuit.~--The rapture of pursuing is the prize the vanquished +gain.--_Longfellow._ + +The fruit that can fall without shaking, indeed is too mellow for +me.--_Lady Montagu._ + + +Q. + +~Quacks.~--Pettifoggers in law and empirics in medicine have held from +time immemorial the fee simple of a vast estate, subject to no +alienation, diminution, revolution, nor tax--the folly and ignorance of +mankind.--_Colton._ + +Nothing more strikingly betrays the credulity of mankind than medicine. +Quackery is a thing universal, and universally successful. In this case +it becomes literally true that no imposition is too great for the +credulity of men.--_Thoreau._ + +~Qualities.~--Wood burns because it has the proper stuff in it; and a man +becomes famous because he has the proper stuff in him.--_Goethe._ + +~Quarrels.~--Coarse kindness is, at least, better than coarse anger; and +in all private quarrels the duller nature is triumphant by reason of its +dullness.--_George Eliot._ + +The quarrels of lovers are like summer storms. Everything is more +beautiful when they have passed.--_Mme. Necker._ + +~Questions.~--There are innumerable questions to which the inquisitive +mind can, in this state, receive no answer: Why do you and I exist? Why +was this world created? And, since it was to be created, why was it not +created sooner?--_Johnson._ + +~Quotation.~--In quoting of books, quote such authors as are usually read; +others you may read for your own satisfaction, but not name +them.--_Selden._ + +If these little sparks of holy fire which I have thus heaped up together +do not give life to your prepared and already enkindled spirit, yet they +will sometimes help to entertain a thought, to actuate a passion, to +employ and hallow a fancy.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +If the grain were separated from the chaff which fills the works of our +National Poets, what is truly valuable would be to what is useless in +the proportion of a mole-hill to a mountain.--_Burke._ + +It is the beauty and independent worth of the citations, far more than +their appropriateness, which have made Johnson's Dictionary popular even +as a reading-book.--_Coleridge._ + +Ruin half an author's graces by plucking bon-mots from their +places.--_Hannah More._ + +I take memorandums of the schools.--_Swift._ + +The obscurest sayings of the truly great are often those which contain +the germ of the profoundest and most useful truths.--_Mazzini._ + +To select well among old things is almost equal to inventing new +ones.--_Trublet._ + +Why are not more gems from our great authors scattered over the country? +Great books are not in everybody's reach; and though it is better to +know them thoroughly than to know them only here and there, yet it is a +good work to give a little to those who have neither time nor means to +get more. Let every bookworm, when in any fragrant, scarce old tome he +discovers a sentence, a story, an illustration, that does his heart +good, hasten to give it.--_Coleridge._ + +A couplet of verse, a period of prose, may cling to the rock of ages as +a shell that survives a deluge.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Selected thoughts depend for their flavor upon the terseness of their +expression, for thoughts are grains of sugar, or salt, that must be +melted in a drop of water.--_J. Petit Senn._ + +As people read nothing in these days that is more than forty-eight hours +old, I am daily admonished that allusions, the most obvious, to anything +in the rear of our own times need explanation.--_De Quincey._ + + +R. + +~Rain.~--Clouds dissolved the thirsty ground supply.--_Roscommon._ + +The kind refresher of the summer heats.--_Thomson._ + +Vexed sailors curse the rain for which poor shepherds prayed in +vain.--_Waller._ + +The spongy clouds are filled with gathering rain.--_Dryden._ + +~Rainbow.~--That smiling daughter of the storm.--_Colton._ + +Born of the shower, and colored by the sun.--_J. C. Prince._ + +God's glowing covenant.--_Hosea Ballou._ + +~Rank.~--If it were ever allowable to forget what is due to superiority of +rank, it would be when the privileged themselves remember it.--_Madame +Swetchine._ + +I weigh the man, not his title; 'tis not the king's stamp can make the +metal better.--_Wycherley._ + +Of the king's creation you may be; but he who makes a count ne'er made a +man.--_Southerne._ + +~Rashness.~--Rashness and haste make all things insecure.--_Denham._ + +We may outrun by violent swiftness that which we run at, and lose by +overrunning.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Reading.~--Read, and refine your appetite; learn to live upon +instruction; feast your mind and mortify your flesh; read, and take your +nourishment in at your eyes, shut up your mouth, and chew the cud of +understanding.--_Congreve._ + +Deep versed in books, but shallow in himself.--_Milton._ + +The love of reading enables a man to exchange the wearisome hours of +life, which come to every one, for hours of delight.--_Montesquieu._ + +There was, it is said, a criminal in Italy, who was suffered to make his +choice between Guicciardini and the galleys. He chose the history. But +the war of Pisa was too much for him. He changed his mind, and went to +the oars.--_Macaulay._ + +Exceedingly well read and profited in strange +concealments.--_Shakespeare._ + +The reader, who would follow a close reasoner to the summit of the +absolute principle of any one important subject, has chosen a +chamois-hunter for his guide. He cannot carry us on his shoulders; we +must strain our sinews, as he has strained his; and make firm footing on +the smooth rock for ourselves, by the blood of toil from our own +feet.--_Coleridge._ + +~Reason.~--Reason lies between the spur and the bridle.--_George Herbert._ + +Many are destined to reason wrongly; others not to reason at all; and +others to persecute those who do reason.--_Voltaire._ + +If reasons were as plenty as blackberries I would give no man a reason +upon compulsion.--_Shakespeare._ + +We can only reason from what is; we can reason on actualities, but not +on possibilities.--_Bolingbroke._ + +I do not call reason that brutal reason which crushes with its weight +what is holy and sacred; that malignant reason which delights in the +errors it succeeds in discovering; that unfeeling and scornful reason +which insults credulity.--_Joubert._ + +I have no other but a woman's reason: I think him so, because I think +him so.--_Shakespeare._ + +Reason 's progressive; instinct is complete: swift instinct leaps; slow +reason feebly climbs.--_Young._ + +Faith evermore looks upward and descries objects remote; but reason can +discover things only near,--sees nothing that's above her.--_Quarles._ + +How can finite grasp infinity?--_Dryden._ + +Let us not dream that reason can ever be popular. Passions, emotions, +may be made popular, but reason remains ever the property of the +few.--_Goethe._ + +Reason is, so to speak, the police of the kingdom of art, seeking only +to preserve order. In life itself a cold arithmetician who adds up our +follies. Sometimes, alas! only the accountant in bankruptcy of a broken +heart.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Sure He that made us with such large discourse, looking before and +after, gave us not that capability and godlike reason to rust in us +unused.--_Shakespeare._ + +Reason may cure illusions but not suffering.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +~Reciprocity.~--There is one word which may serve as a rule of practice +for all one's life, that word is _reciprocity_. What you do not wish +done to yourself, do not do to others.--_Confucius._ + +~Reconciliation.~--It is much safer to reconcile an enemy than to conquer +him; victory may deprive him of his poison, but reconciliation of his +will.--_Owen Feltham._ + +~Rectitude.~--The great high-road of human welfare lies along the highway +of steadfast well-doing, and they who are the most persistent, and work +in the truest spirit, will invariably be the most successful.--_Samuel +Smiles._ + +If you would convince a man that he does wrong, do right. But do not +care to convince him. Men will believe what they see. Let them +see.--_Thoreau._ + +No man can do right unless he is good, wise, and strong. What wonder we +fail?--_Charles Buxton._ + +~Refinement.~--Refinement that carries us away from our fellow-men is not +God's refinement.--_Beecher._ + +Refinement is the lifting of one's self upwards from the merely sensual, +the effort of the soul to etherealize the common wants and uses of +life.--_Beecher._ + +~Reflection.~--We are told, "Let not the sun go down on your wrath." This, +of course, is best; but, as it generally does, I would add, never act or +write till it has done so. This rule has saved me from many an act of +folly. It is wonderful what a different view we take of the same event +four-and-twenty hours after it has happened.--_Sydney Smith._ + +~Reform.~--We are reformers in spring and summer; in autumn and winter we +stand by the old--reformers in the morning, conservatives at night. +Reform is affirmative, conservatism is negative; conservatism goes for +comfort, reform for truth.--_Emerson._ + +Long is the way and hard, that out of hell leads up to light.--_Milton._ + +Conscious remorse and anguish must be felt, to curb desire, to break the +stubborn will, and work a second nature in the soul.--_Rowe._ + +They say best men are moulded out of faults, and, for the most, become +much more the better for being a little bad!--_Shakespeare._ + +~Regret.~--Why is it that a blessing only when it is lost cuts as deep +into the heart as a sharp diamond? Why must we first weep before we can +love so deeply that our hearts ache?--_Richter._ + +~Religion.~--Natural religion supplies still all the facts which are +disguised under the dogma of popular creeds. The progress of religion is +steadily to its identity with morals.--_Emerson._ + +I endeavor in vain to give my parishioners more cheerful ideas of +religion; to teach them that God is not a jealous, childish, merciless +tyrant; that He is best served by a regular tenor of good actions, not +by bad singing, ill-composed prayers, and eternal apprehensions. But the +luxury of false religion is to be unhappy!--_Sydney Smith._ + +Nowhere would there be consolation if religion were not.--_Jacobi._ + +Monopolies are just as injurious to religion as to trade. With +competition religions preserve their strength, but they will never again +flourish in their original glory until religious freedom, or, in other +words, free trade among the gods, is introduced.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +A religion giving dark views of God, and infusing superstitious fear of +innocent enjoyment, instead of aiding sober habits, will, by making men +abject and sad, impair their moral force, and prepare them for +intemperance as a refuge from depression or despair.--_Channing._ + +Religion is the hospital of the souls that the world has wounded.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +Ah! what a divine religion might be found out if charity were really +made the principle of it instead of faith.--_Shelley._ + +The ship retains her anchorage yet drifts with a certain range, subject +to wind and tide. So we have for an anchorage the cardinal truths of the +gospel.--_Gladstone._ + +The best religion is the most tolerant.--_Emile de Girardin._ + +~Remembrance.~--The greatest comfort of my old age, and that which gives +me the highest satisfaction, is the pleasing remembrance of the many +benefits and friendly offices I have done to others.--_Cato._ + +Pleasure is the flower that fades; remembrance is the lasting +perfume.--_Boufflers._ + +~Remorse.~--Remorse is the punishment of crime; repentance its expiation. +The former appertains to a tormented conscience; the latter to a soul +changed for the better.--_Joubert._ + +Remorse sleeps in the atmosphere of prosperity.--_Rousseau._ + +Unnatural deeds do breed unnatural troubles. Infected minds to their +deaf pillows will discharge their secrets.--_Shakespeare._ + +Truth severe, by fairy fiction drest.--_Gray._ + +~Repartee.~--The impromptu reply is precisely the touchstone of the man of +wit.--_Moliere._ + +~Repentance.~---Repentance clothes in grass and flowers the grave in which +the past is laid.--_Sterling._ + +He repents on thorns that sleeps in beds of roses.--_Quarles._ + +Beholding heaven, and feeling hell.--_Moore._ + +Is it not in accordance with divine order that every mortal is thrown +into that situation where his hidden evils can be brought forth to his +own view, that he may know them, acknowledge them, struggle against +them, and put them away?--_Anna Cora Ritchie._ + +Repentance is second innocence.--_De Bonald._ + +~Repose.~--Repose is agreeable to the human mind; and decision is repose. +A man has made up his opinions; he does not choose to be disturbed; and +he is much more thankful to the man who confirms him in his errors, and +leaves him alone, than he is to the man who refutes him, or who +instructs him at the expense of his tranquillity.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Rest is the sweet sauce of labor.--_Plutarch._ + +~Reproach.~--Few love to hear the sins they love to act.--_Shakespeare._ + +The silent upbraiding of the eye is the very poetry of reproach; it +speaks at once to the imagination.--_Mrs. Balfour._ + +~Republic.~--Though I admire republican principles in theory, yet I am +afraid the practice may be too perfect for human nature. We tried a +republic last century and it failed. Let our enemies try next. I hate +political experiments.--_Walpole._ + +The same fact that Boccaccio offers in support of religion, might be +adduced in behalf of a republic: "It exists in spite of its +ministers."--_Heinrich Heine._ + +At twenty, every one is republican.--_Lamartine._ + +~Reputation.~--Reputation is one of the prizes for which men contend: it +is, as Mr. Burke calls it, "the cheap defence and ornament of nations, +and the nurse of manly exertions;" it produces more labor and more +talent then twice the wealth of a country could ever rear up. It is the +coin of genius; and it is the imperious duty of every man to bestow it +with the most scrupulous justice and the wisest economy.--_Sydney +Smith._ + +An eminent reputation is as dangerous as a bad one.--_Tacitus._ + +Reputation is but the synonym of popularity; dependent on suffrage, to +be increased or diminished at the will of the voters.--_Washington +Allston._ + +My name and memory I leave to men's charitable speeches, to foreign +nations, and to the next age.--_Bacon._ + +The blaze of reputation cannot be blown out, but it often dies in the +socket.--_Johnson._ + +One may be better than his reputation or his conduct, but never better +than his principles.--_Latena._ + +~Request.~--No music is so charming to my ear as the requests of my +friends, and the supplications of those in want of my +assistance.--_Caesar._ + +He who goes round about in his requests wants commonly more than he +chooses to appear to want.--_Lavater._ + +~Resignation.~--O Lord, I do most cheerfully commit all unto +Thee.--_Fenelon._ + +Let God do with me what He will, anything He will; and, whatever it be, +it will be either heaven itself, or some beginning of it.--_Mountford._ + +A man that fortune's buffets and rewards has ta'en with equal +thanks.--_Shakespeare._ + +Trust in God, as Moses did, let the way be ever so dark; and it shall +come to pass that your life at last shall surpass even your longing. +Not, it may be, in the line of that longing, that shall be as it +pleaseth God; but the glory is as sure as the grace, and the most +ancient heavens are not more sure than that.--_Robert Collyer._ + +Vulgar minds refuse to crouch beneath their load; the brave bear theirs +without repining.--_Thomson._ + +"My will, not thine, be done," turned Paradise into a desert. "Thy will, +not mine, be done," turned the desert into a paradise, and made +Gethsemane the gate of heaven.--_Pressense._ + +Resignation is the courage of Christian sorrow.--_Dr. Vinet._ + +~Responsibility.~--Responsibility educates.--_Wendell Phillips._ + +~Restlessness.~--The mind is found most acute and most uneasy in the +morning. Uneasiness is, indeed, a species of sagacity--a passive +sagacity. Fools are never uneasy.--_Goethe._ + +Always driven towards new shores, or carried hence without hope of +return, shall we never, on the ocean of age cast anchor for even a +day?--_Lamartine._ + +~Retribution.~--Nemesis is lame, but she is of colossal stature, like the +gods; and sometimes, while her sword is not yet unsheathed, she +stretches out her huge left arm and grasps her victim. The mighty hand +is invisible, but the victim totters under the dire clutch.--_George +Eliot._ + +"One soweth and another reapeth" is a verity that applies to evil as +well as good.--_George Eliot._ + +~Revenge.~--Revenge at first, though sweet, bitter ere long back on itself +recoils.--_Milton._ + +Revenge is a debt, in the paying of which the greatest knave is honest +and sincere, and, so far as he is able, punctual.--_Colton._ + +There are some professed Christians who would gladly burn their enemies, +but yet who forgive them merely because it is heaping coals of fire on +their heads.--_F. A. Durivage._ + +~Revery.~--In that sweet mood when pleasant thoughts bring sad thoughts to +the mind.--_Wordsworth._ + +~Revolution.~--The working of revolutions, therefore, misleads me no more; +it is as necessary to our race as its waves to the stream, that it may +not be a stagnant marsh. Ever renewed in its forms, the genius of +humanity blossoms.--_Herder._ + +Great revolutions are the work rather of principles than of bayonets, +and are achieved first in the moral, and afterwards in the material +sphere.--_Mazzini._ + +All experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, +while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the +forms to which they are accustomed.--_Jefferson._ + +Nothing has ever remained of any revolution hut what was ripe in the +conscience of the masses.--_Ledru Rollin._ + +Revolution is the larva of civilization.--_Victor Hugo._ + +We deplore the outrages which accompany revolutions. But the more +violent the outrages, the more assured we feel that a revolution was +necessary! The violence of these outrages will always lie proportioned +to the ferocity and ignorance of the people: and the ferocity and +ignorance of the people will be proportioned to the oppression and +degradation under which they have been accustomed to live.--_Macaulay._ + +Let them call it mischief; when it's past and prospered, 't will be +virtue.--_Ben Jonson._ + +~Rhetoric.~--In composition, it is the art of putting ideas together in +graceful and accurate prose; in speaking, it is the art of delivering +ideas with propriety, elegance, and force; or, in other words, it is the +science of oratory.--_Locke._ + +Rhetoric without logic is like a tree with leaves and blossoms, but no +root; yet more are taken with rhetoric than logic, because they are +caught with a free expression, when they understand not +reason.--_Selden._ + +The florid, elevated, and figurative way is for the passions; for love +and hatred, fear and anger, are begotten in the soul by showing their +objects out of their true proportion, either greater than the life, or +less; but instruction is to be given by showing them what they naturally +are. A man is to cheated into passion, but reasoned into +truth.--_Dryden._ + +All the art of rhetoric, besides order and clearness, are for nothing +else but to insinuate wrong ideas, move the passions, and thereby +mislead the judgment.--_Locke._ + +Rhetoric is very good, or stark naught; there's no medium in +rhetoric.--_Selden._ + +~Riches.~--The shortest road to riches lies through contempt of +riches.--_Seneca._ + +One cause, which is not always observed, of the insufficiency of riches, +is that they very seldom make their owner rich.--_Johnson._ + +Of all the riches that we hug, of all the pleasures we enjoy, we can +carry no more out of this world than out of a dream.--_Bonnell._ + +If the search for riches were sure to be successful, though I should +become a groom with a whip in my hand to get them, I will do so. As the +search may not be successful, I will follow after that which I +love.--_Confucius._ + +I have a rich neighbor that is always so busy that he has no leisure to +laugh; the whole business of his life is to get money, more money, that +he may still get more. He is still drudging, saying what Solomon says, +"The diligent hand maketh rich." And it is true, indeed; but he +considers not that it is not in the power of riches to make a man happy; +for it was wisely said by a man of great observation that "there be as +many miseries beyond riches as on this side of them."--_Izaak Walton._ + +Riches, though they may reward virtues, yet they cannot cause them; he +is much more noble who deserves a benefit, than he who bestows +one.--_Owen Feltham._ + +In these times gain is not only a matter of greed, but of +ambition.--_Joubert._ + +~Ridicule.~--Some men are, in regard to ridicule, like tin-roofed +buildings in regard to hail: all that hits them bounds rattling off, not +a stone goes through.--_Beecher._ + +~Rogues.~--Rogues are always found out in some way. Whoever is a wolf will +act as a wolf; that is the most certain of all things.--_La Fontaine._ + +Many a man would have turned rogue if he knew how.--_Hazlitt._ + +~Ruin.~--To be ruined your own way is some comfort. When so many people +would ruin us, it is a triumph over the villany of the world to be +ruined after one's own pattern.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + + +S. + +~Sacrifice.~--You cannot win without sacrifice.--_Charles Buxton._ + +What you most repent of is a lasting sacrifice made under an impulse of +good-nature. The good-nature goes, the sacrifice sticks.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +~Sadness.~--Take my word for it, the saddest thing under the sky is a soul +incapable of sadness.--_Countess de Gasparin._ + +Our sadness is not sad, but our cheap joys.--_Thoreau._ + +~Salary.~--Other rules vary; this is the only one you will find without +exception: That in this world the salary or reward is always in the +inverse ratio of the duties performed.--_Sydney Smith._ + +~Sarcasm.~--A true sarcasm is like a sword-stick--it appears, at first +sight, to be much more innocent than it really is, till, all of a +sudden, there leaps something out of it--sharp and deadly and +incisive--which makes you tremble and recoil.--_Sydney Smith._ + +~Satire.~--To lash the vices of a guilty age.--_Churchill._ + +Thou shining supplement of public laws!--_Young._ + +By satire kept in awe, shrink from ridicule, though not from +law.--_Byron._ + +When dunces are satiric I take it for a panegyric.--_Swift._ + +~Scandal.~--Believe that story false that ought not to be +true.--_Sheridan._ + +Scandal has something so piquant, it is a sort of cayenne to the +mind.--_Byron._ + +~School.~--More is learned in a public than in a private school from +emulation: there is the collision of mind with mind, or the radiation of +many minds pointing to one centre--_Johnson._ + +Let the soldier be abroad if he will; he can do nothing in this age. +There is another personage abroad,--a person less imposing,--in the eyes +of some, perhaps, insignificant. The schoolmaster is abroad; and I trust +to him, armed with his primer, against the soldier in full military +array.--_Brougham._ + +The whining school-boy, with his satchel, and shining morning face, +creeping like a snail, unwillingly to school.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Science.~--They may say what they like; everything is organized matter. +The tree is the first link of the chain, man is the last. Men are young, +the earth is old. Vegetable and animal chemistry are still in their +infancy. Electricity, galvanism,--what discoveries in a few +years!--_Napoleon._ + +Human science is uncertain guess.--_Prior._ + +Twin-sister of natural and revealed religion, and of heavenly birth, +science will never belie her celestial origin, nor cease to sympathize +with all that emanates from the same pure home. Human ignorance and +prejudice may for a time seem to have divorced what God has joined +together; but human ignorance and prejudice shall at length pass away, +and then science and religion shall be seen blending their parti-colored +rays into one beautiful bow of light, linking heaven to earth and earth +to heaven.--_Prof. Hitchcock._ + +Science is a first rate piece of furniture for a man's upper chamber, if +he has common sense on the ground-floor. But if a man hasn't got plenty +of good common sense, the more science he has the worse for his +patient.--_Holmes._ + +~Scriptures.~--The majesty of Scripture strikes me with admiration, as the +purity of the Gospel has its influence on my heart. Peruse the works of +our philosophers; with all their pomp of diction, how mean, how +contemptible, are they, compared with the Scriptures! Is it possible +that a book at once so simple and sublime should be merely the work of +man? The Jewish authors were incapable of the diction, and strangers to +the morality contained in the Gospel, the marks of whose truths are so +striking and inimitable that the inventor would be a more astonishing +character than the hero.--_Rousseau._ + +~Secrecy.~--Thou hast betrayed thy secret as a bird betrays her nest, by +striving to conceal it.--_Longfellow._ + +Never confide your secrets to paper: it is like throwing a stone in the +air, and if you know who throws the stone, you do not know where it may +fall.--_Calderon._ + +People addicted to secrecy are so without knowing why; they are not so +for cause, but for secrecy's sake.--_Hazlitt._ + +~Sect.~--The effective strength of sects is not to be ascertained merely +by counting heads.--_Macaulay._ + +All sects are different, because they come from men; morality is +everywhere the same, because it comes from God.--_Voltaire._ + +Fierce sectarianism breeds fierce latitudinarianism.--_De Quincey._ + +~Self-Abnegation.~--'Tis much the doctrine of the times that men should +not please themselves, but deny themselves everything they take delight +in; not look upon beauty, wear no good clothes, eat no good meat, etc., +which seems the greatest accusation that can be upon the Maker of all +good things. If they are not to be used why did God make +them?--_Selden._ + +Self-abnegation, that rare virtue that good men preach and good women +practice.--_Holmes._ + +~Self-Examination.~--We neither know nor judge ourselves,--others may +judge, but cannot know us,--God alone judges, and knows too.--_Wilkie +Collins._ + +It belongs to every large nature, when it is not under the immediate +power of some strong unquestioning emotion, to suspect itself, and doubt +the truth of its own impressions, conscious of possibilities beyond its +own horizon.--_George Eliot._ + +There are two persons in the world we never see as they are,--one's self +and one's other self.--_Arsene Houssaye._ + +~Selfishness.~--Our infinite obligations to God do not fill our hearts +half as much as a petty uneasiness of our own; nor his infinite +perfections as much as our smallest wants.--_Hannah More._ + +It is astonishing how well men wear when they think of no one but +themselves.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Our selfishness is so robust and many-clutching that, well encouraged, +it easily devours all sustenance away from our poor little +scruples.--_George Eliot._ + +There is an ill-breeding to which, whatever our rank and nature, we are +almost equally sensitive,--the ill-breeding that comes from want of +consideration for others.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Self-Love.~--That household god, a man's own self.--_Flavel._ + +The greatest of all flatterers is self-love.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +Self-love exaggerates both our faults and our virtues.--_Goethe._ + +Whatever discoveries we may have made in the regions of self-love, there +still remain many unknown lands.--_Rochefoucauld._ + +Selfishness, if but reasonably tempered with wisdom, is not such an evil +trait.--_Ruffini._ + +A prudent consideration for Number One.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Oh, the incomparable contrivance of Nature who has ordered all things in +so even a method that wherever she has been less bountiful in her gifts, +there she makes it up with a larger dose of self-love, which supplies +the former deficits and makes all even.--_Erasmus._ + +The most inhibited sin in the canon.--_Shakespeare._ + +Ofttimes nothing profits more than self-esteem, grounded on just and +right.--_Milton._ + +Whose thoughts are centered on thyself alone.--_Dryden._ + +~Self-reliance.~--The spirit of self-help is the root of all genuine +growth in the individual; and, exhibited in the lives of many, it +constitutes the true source of national vigor and strength. Help from +without is often enfeebling in its effects, but help from within +invariably invigorates. Whatever is done _for_ men or classes, to a +certain extent takes away the stimulus and necessity of doing for +themselves; and where men are subjected to over-guidance and +over-government, the inevitable tendency is to render them comparatively +helpless.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Doubt whom you will, but never yourself.--_Bovee._ + +A person under the firm persuasion that he can command resources +virtually has them.--_Livy._ + +The supreme fall of falls is this, the first doubt of one's +self.--_Countess de Gasparin._ + +It's right to trust in God; but if you don't stand to your halliards, +your craft'll miss stays, and your faith'll be blown out of the +bolt-ropes in the turn of a marlinspike.--_George MacDonald._ + +The best lightning-rod for your protection is your own +spine.--_Emerson._ + +~Sensibility.~--The wild-flower wreath of feeling, the sunbeam of the +heart.--_Halleck._ + +Sensibility is the power of woman.--_Lavater._ + +Feeling loves a subdued light.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Sensitiveness.~--Solomon's Proverbs, I think, have omitted to say, that +as a sore palate findeth grit, so an uneasy consciousness heareth +innuendoes.--_George Eliot._ + +That chastity of honor which felt a stain like a wound.--_Burke._ + +~Sentiment.~--Cure the drunkard, heal the insane, mollify the homicide, +civilize the Pawnee, but what lessons can be devised for the debaucher +of sentiment?--_Emerson._ + +~Separation.~--Indifferent souls never part. Impassioned souls part, and +return to one another, because they can do no better.--_Madame +Swetchine._ + +~Shakespeare.~--There is only one writer in whom I find something that +reminds me of the directness of style which is found in the Bible. It is +Shakespeare.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Far from fearing, as an inferior artist would have done, the +juxtaposition of the familiar and the divine, the wildest and most +fantastic comedy with the loftiest and gravest tragedy, Shakespeare not +only made such apparently discordant elements mutually heighten and +complete the general effect which he contemplated, but in so doing +teaches us that, in human life, the sublime and ridiculous are always +side by side, and that the source of laughter is placed close by the +fountain of tears.--_T. B. Shaw._ + +Shakespeare is a great psychologist, and whatever can be known of the +heart of man may be found in his plays.--_Goethe._ + +In Shakespeare one sentence begets the next naturally; the meaning is +all inwoven. He goes on kindling like a meteor through the dark +atmosphere.--_Coleridge._ + +No man is too busy to read Shakespeare.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Shakespeare's personages live and move as if they had just come from the +hand of God, with a life that, though manifold, is one, and, though +complex, is harmonious.--_Mazzini._ + +Sweetest Shakespeare, fancy's child.--_Milton._ + +And rival all but Shakespeare's name below.--_Campbell._ + +Shakespeare is one of the best means of culture the world possesses. +Whoever is at home in his pages is at home everywhere.--_H. N. Hudson._ + +His imperial muse tosses the creation like a bauble from hand to hand to +embody any capricious thought that is uppermost in her mind. The +remotest spaces of nature are visited, and the farthest sundered things +are brought together by a subtle spiritual connection.--_Emerson._ + +I think most readers of Shakespeare sometimes find themselves thrown +into exalted mental conditions like those produced by music.--_O. W. +Holmes._ + +Whatever other learning he wanted he was master of two books unknown to +many profound readers, though books which the last conflagration can +alone destroy. I mean the book of Nature and of Man.--_Young._ + +If ever Shakespeare rants, it is not when his imagination is hurrying +him along, but when he is hurrying his imagination along.--_Macaulay._ + +It was said of Euripides, that every verse was a precept; and it may be +said of Shakespeare, that from his works may be collected a system of +civil and economical prudence.--_Johnson._ + +The genius of Shakespeare was an innate university.--_Keats._ + +Shame.--Nature's hasty conscience.--_Maria Edgeworth._ + +Mortifications are often more painful than real +calamities.--_Goldsmith._ + +~Ship.~--A prison with the chance of being drowned.--_Johnson._ + +Cradle of the rude imperious surge.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Silence.~--The main reason why silence is so efficacious an element of +repute is, first, because of that magnification which proverbially +belongs to the unknown; and, secondly, because silence provokes no man's +envy, and wounds no man's self-love.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Give thy thoughts no tongue.--_Shakespeare._ + +True gladness doth not always speak; joy bred and born but in the tongue +is weak.--_Ben Jonson._ + +I hear other men's imperfections, and conceal my own.--_Zeno._ + +Silence in times of suffering is the best.--_Dryden._ + +Silence! coeval with eternity.--_Pope._ + +Silence is the sanctuary of prudence.--_Balthasar Gracian._ + +The unspoken word never does harm.--_Kossuth._ + +Silence is the understanding of fools and one of the virtues of the +wise.--_Bonnard._ + +Speech is often barren; but silence also does not necessarily brood over +a full nest. Your still fowl, blinking at you without remark, may all +the while be sitting on one addled nest-egg; and when it takes to +cackling, will have nothing to announce but that addled +delusion.--_George Eliot._ + +Silence gives consent.--_Goldsmith._ + +Silence is the safest response for all the contradiction that arises +from impertinence, vulgarity, or envy.--_Zimmerman._ + +~Simplicity.~--Simplicity is doubtless a fine thing, but it often appeals +only to the simple. Art is the only passion of true artists. +Palestrina's music resembles the music of Rossini, as the song of the +sparrow is like the cavatina of the nightingale. Choose.--_Madame de +Girardin._ + +Simplicity is Nature's first step, and the last of Art.--_P. J. Bailey._ + +The world could not exist if it were not simple. This ground has been +tilled a thousand years, yet its powers remain ever the same; a little +rain, a little sun, and each spring it grows green again.--_Goethe._ + +The fairest lives, in my opinion, are those which regularly accommodate +themselves to the common and human model, without miracle, without +extravagance.--_Montaigne._ + +There is a majesty in simplicity which is far above the quaintness of +wit.--_Pope._ + +~Sin.~--Original sin is in us like the beard: we are shaved to-day, and +look clean, and have a smooth chin; to-morrow our beard has grown again, +nor does it cease growing while we remain on earth. In like manner +original sin cannot be extirpated from us; it springs up in us as long +as we exist; Nevertheless, we are bound to resist it to our utmost +strength, and to cut it down unceasingly.--_Luther._ + +Sin, in fancy, mothers many an ugly fact.--_Theodore Parker._ + +There is no immunity from the consequences of sin; punishment is swift +and sure to one and all.--_Hosea Ballou._ + +Every man has his devilish minutes.--_Lavater._ + +Death from sin no power can separate.--_Milton._ + +Our sins, like to our shadows, when our day is in its glory, scarce +appeared. Towards our evening how great and monstrous they are!--_Sir J. +Suckling._ + +'Tis the will that makes the action good or ill.--_Herrick._ + +Guilt, though it may attain temporal splendor, can never confer real +happiness. The evident consequences of our crimes long survive their +commission, and, like the ghosts of the murdered, forever haunt the +steps of the malefactor.--_Sir Walter Scott._ + +Some rise by sin, and some by virtue fall.--_Shakespeare._ + +Sin is disease, deformity, and weakness.--_Plato._ + +Sin and her shadow death.--_Milton._ + +If ye do well, to your own behoof will ye do it; and if ye do evil, +against yourselves will ye do it.--_Koran._ + +It is the sin which we have not committed which seems the most +monstrous.--_Boileau._ + +There are sins of omission as well as those of commission.--_Madame +Deluzy._ + +~Sincerity.~--Sincerity is to speak as we think, to do as we pretend and +profess, to perform and make good what we promise, and really to be what +we would seem and appear to be.--_Tillotson._ + +The whole faculties of man must be exerted in order to call forth noble +energies; and he who is not earnestly sincere lives in but half his +being, self-mutilated, self-paralyzed.--_Coleridge._ + +~Skepticism.~--Skepticism is slow suicide.--_Emerson._ + +~Skill.~--Nobody, however able, can gain the very highest success, except +in one line. He may rise above others, but he will fall below +himself.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Whatever may be said about luck, it is skill that leads to +fortune.--_Walter Scott._ + +The winds and waves are always on the side of the ablest +navigators.--_Gibbon._ + +~Slander.~--Done to death by slanderous tongues.--_Shakespeare._ + +Slugs crawl and crawl over our cabbages, like the world's slander over a +good name. You may kill them, it is true, but there is the +slime.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +Slander lives upon succession, forever housed where it gets +possession.--_Shakespeare._ + +When the absent are spoken of, some will speak gold of them, some +silver, some iron, some lead, and some always speak dirt, for they have +a natural attraction towards what is evil, and think it shows +penetration in them. As a cat watching for mice does not look up though +an elephant goes by, so are they so busy mousing for defects, that they +let great excellences pass them unnoticed. I will not say it is not +Christian to make beads of others' faults, and tell them over every day; +I say it is infernal. If you want to know how the devil feels, you do +know if you are such an one.--_Beecher._ + +If parliament were to consider the sporting with reputation of as much +importance as sporting on manors, and pass an act for the preservation +of fame as well as game, there are many would thank them for the +bill.--_Sheridan._ + +~Sleep.~--When one asked Alexander how he could sleep so soundly and +securely in the midst of danger, he told them that _Parmenio_ watched. +Oh, how securely may they sleep over whom He watches that never slumbers +nor sleeps! "I will," said David, "lay me down and sleep, for thou, +Lord, makest me to dwell in safety."--_Venning._ + +After life's fitful fever he sleeps well.--_Shakespeare._ + +Sleep is no servant of the will; it has caprices of its own; when +courted most, it lingers still; when most pursued, 'tis swiftly +gone.--_Bowring._ + +Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to +sleep.--_Bible._ + +Heaven trims our lamps while we sleep.--_Alcott._ + +Night's sepulchre.--_Byron._ + +Sleep is pain's easiest salve, and doth fulfill all offices of death, +except to kill.--_Donne._ + +Sleep, to the homeless thou art home; the friendless find in thee a +friend.--_Ebenezer Elliott._ + +The soul shares not the body's rest.--_Maturin._ + +Our foster nurse of nature is repose.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Sloth.~--Sloth, if it has prevented many crimes, has also smothered many +virtues.--_Colton._ + +~Smile.~--A woman has two smiles that an angel might envy--the smile that +accepts a lover afore words are uttered, and the smile that lights on +the first-born baby.--_Haliburton._ + +Smiles are smiles only when the heart pulls the wire.--_Winthrop._ + +Those happiest smiles that played on her ripe lips seemed not to know +what guests were in her eyes, which parted thence as pearls from +diamonds dropped.--_Shakespeare._ + +The smile that was childlike and bland.--_Bret Harte._ + +A soul only needs to see a smile in a white crape bonnet in order to +enter the palace of dreams.--_Victor Hugo._ + +~Sneer.~--The most insignificant people are the most apt to sneer at +others. They are safe from reprisals, and have no hope of rising in +their own esteem but by lowering their neighbors. The severest critics +are always those who have either never attempted, or who have failed in +original composition.--_Hazlitt._ + +~Society.~--If you wish to appear agreeable in society, you must consent +to be taught many things which you know already.--_Lavater._ + +Formed of two mighty tribes, the bores and bored.--_Byron._ + +Society undergoes continual changes; it is barbarous, it is civilized, +it is Christianized, it is rich, it is scientific; but this change is +not amelioration. For everything that is given something is taken. +Society acquires new arts, and loses old instincts. The civilized man +has built a coach, but has lost the use of his feet; he has a fine +Geneva watch, but cannot tell the hour by the sun.--_Emerson._ + +We take our colors, chameleon-like, from each other.--_Chamfort._ + +Society is the union of men, and not men themselves; the citizen may +perish, and yet man may remain.--_Montesquieu._ + +There are four varieties in society; the lovers, the ambitious, +observers, and fools. The fools are the happiest.--_Taine._ + +Society is the offspring of leisure; and to acquire this forms the only +rational motive for accumulating wealth, notwithstanding the cant that +prevails on the subject of labor.--_Tuckerman._ + +Intercourse is the soul of progress.--_Charles Buxton._ + +One ought to love society if he wishes to enjoy solitude. It is a social +nature that solitude works upon with the most various power. If one is +misanthropic, and betakes himself to loneliness that he may get away +from hateful things, solitude is a silent emptiness to +him.--_Zimmermann._ + +The most lucrative commerce has ever been that of hope, pleasure, and +happiness, the merchandise of authors, priests, and kings.--_Madame +Roland._ + +The more I see of men the better I think of animals.--_Tauler._ + +~Soldier.~--A soldier seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's +mouth.--_Shakespeare._ + +Policy goes beyond strength, and contrivance before action; hence it is +that direction is left to the commander, execution to the soldier, who +is not to ask Why? but to do what he is commanded.--_Xenophon._ + +Without a home must the soldier go, a changeful wanderer, and can warm +himself at no home-lit hearth.--_Schiller._ + +Soldiers looked at as they ought to be: they are to the world as poppies +to corn fields.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +~Solitude.~--Solitude is dangerous to reason without being favorable to +virtue. Pleasures of some sort are necessary to the intellectual as to +the corporal health, and those who resist gayety will be likely for the +most part to fall a sacrifice to appetite, for the solicitations of +sense are always at hand, and a dram to a vacant and solitary person is +a speedy and seducing relief. Remember that the solitary person is +certainly luxurious, probably superstitious, and possibly mad. The mind +stagnates for want of employment, and is extinguished, like a candle in +foul air.--_Johnson._ + +To be exempt from the passions with which others are tormented, is the +only pleasing solitude.--_Addison._ + +Conversation enriches the understanding, but solitude is the school of +genius.--_Gibbon._ + +Solitude has but one disadvantage; it is apt to give one too high an +opinion of one's self. In the world we are sure to be often reminded of +every known or supposed defect we may have.--_Byron._ + +Through the wide world he only is alone who lives not for +another.--_Rogers._ + +Solitude is the worst of all companions when we seek comfort and +oblivion.--_Mery._ + +~Sophistry.~--The juggle of sophistry consists, for the most part, in +using a word in one sense in all the premises, and in another sense in +the conclusion.--_Coleridge._ + +There is no error which hath not some appearance of probability +resembling truth, which, when men who study to be singular find out, +straining reason, they then publish to the world matter of contention +and jangling.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +~Sorrow.~--Our sweetest songs are those which tell of saddest +thought.--_Shelley._ + +If hearty sorrow be a sufficient ransom for offence, I tender it here; I +do as truly suffer as e'er I did commit.--_Shakespeare._ + +And weep the more, because I weep in vain.--_Gray._ + +The man who has learned to triumph over sorrow wears his miseries as +though they were sacred fillets upon his brow, and nothing is so +entirely admirable as a man bravely wretched.--_Seneca._ + +Sorrow more beautiful than beauty's self.--_Keats._ + +The violence of sorrow is not at the first to be striven withal; being, +like a mighty beast, sooner tamed with following than overthrown by +withstanding.--_Sir P. Sidney._ + +Never morning wore to evening, but some heart did break.--_Tennyson._ + +Sorrow being the natural and direct offspring of sin, that which first +brought sin into the world must, by necessary consequence, bring in +sorrow too.--_South._ + +In extent sorrow is boundless. It pours from ten million sources, and +floods the world. But its depth is small. It drowns few.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +It is the veiled angel of sorrow who plucks away one thing and another +that bound us here in ease and security, and, in the vanishing of these +dear objects, indicates the true home of our affections and our +peace.--_Chapin._ + +The mind profits by the wreck of every passion, and we may measure our +road to wisdom by the sorrows we have undergone.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Earth hath no sorrow that heaven cannot heal.--_Moore._ + +Sorrow breaks seasons, and reposing hours; makes the night morning, and +the noontide night.--_Shakespeare._ + +Sorrow is not evil, since it stimulates and purifies.--_Mazzini._ + +Sorrows must die with the joys they outnumber.--_Schiller._ + +He that hath so many causes of joy, and so great, is very much in love +with sorrow and peevishness, who loses all these pleasures, and chooses +to sit down on his little handful of thorns. Such a person is fit to +bear Nero company in his funeral sorrow for the loss of one of Poppea's +hairs, or help to mourn for Lesbia's sparrow; and because he loves it, +he deserves to starve in the midst of plenty, and to want comfort while +he is encircled with blessings.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +~Soul.~--Had I no other proof of the immortality of the soul than the +oppression of the just and the triumph of the wicked in this world, this +alone would prevent my having the least doubt of it. So shocking a +discord amidst a general harmony of things would make me naturally look +for a cause; I should say to myself we do not cease to exist with this +life; everything reassumes its order after death.--_Rousseau._ + +What is mind? No matter. What is matter? Never mind. What is the soul? +It is immaterial.--_Hood._ + +The human soul is hospitable, and will entertain conflicting sentiments +and contradictory opinions with much impartiality.--_George Eliot._ + +Our immortal souls, while righteous, are by God himself beautified with +the title of his own image and similitude.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +~Specialty.~--No one can exist in society without some specialty. Eighty +years ago it was only necessary to be well dressed and amiable; to-day a +man of this kind would be too much like the garcons at the +cafes.--_Taine._ + +~Speech.~--Sheridan once said of some speech, in his acute, sarcastic way, +that "it contained a great deal both of what was new and what was true: +but that unfortunately what was new was not true, and what was true was +not new."--_Hazlitt._ + +God has given us speech in order that we may say pleasant things to our +friends, and tell bitter truths to our enemies.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +The common fluency of speech in many men, and most women, is owing to a +scarcity of matter and a scarcity of words; for whoever is a master of +language and has a mind full of ideas, will be apt in speaking to +hesitate upon the choice of both; whereas common speakers have only one +set of ideas, and one set of words to clothe them in; and these are +always ready at the mouth: so people come faster out of a church when it +is almost empty, than when a crowd is at the door.--_Dean Swift._ + +Speech is like cloth of Arras, opened and put abroad, whereby the +imagery doth appear in figure; whereas in thoughts they lie but as in +packs.--_Plutarch._ + +Never is the deep, strong voice of man, or the low, sweet voice of +woman, finer than in the earnest but mellow tones of familiar speech, +richer than the richest music, which are a delight while they are heard, +which linger still upon the ear in softened echoes, and which, when they +have ceased, come, long after, back to memory, like the murmurs of a +distant hymn.--_Henry Giles._ + +Half the sorrows of women would be averted if they could repress the +speech they know to be useless--nay, the speech they have resolved not +to utter.--_George Eliot._ + +~Sport.~--Dwell not too long upon sports; for as they refresh a man that +is weary, so they weary a man that is refreshed.--_Fuller._ + +~Spring.~--Stately Spring! whose robe-folds are valleys, whose +breast-bouquet is gardens, and whose blush is a vernal +evening.--_Richter._ + +Fair-handed Spring unbosoms every grace.--_Thomson._ + +The spring, the summer, the chiding autumn, angry winter, change their +wonted liveries.--_Shakespeare._ + +Sweet daughter of a rough and stormy sire, hoar Winter's blooming child, +delightful Spring.--_Mrs. Barbauld._ + +Ye may trace my step o'er the wakening earth, by the winds which tell of +the violet's birth.--_Mrs. Hemans._ + +~Stars.~--These preachers of beauty, which light the world with their +admonishing smile.--_Emerson._ + +I am as constant as the northern star; of whose true, fixed, and resting +quality there is no fellow in the firmament.--_Shakespeare._ + +The stars are so far,--far away!--_L. E. Landon._ + +Day hath put on his jacket, and around his burning bosom buttoned it +with stars.--_Holmes._ + +The evening star, love's harbinger, appeared.--_Milton._ + +~Statesman.~--The great difference between the real statesman and the +pretender is, that the one sees into the future, while the other regards +only the present; the one lives by the day, and acts on expediency; the +other acts on enduring principles and for immortality.--_Burke._ + +The worth of a state, in the long run, is the worth of the individuals +composing it.--_J. Stuart Mill._ + +~Storms.~--When splitting winds make flexible the knees of knotted +oaks.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Strength.~--Oh! it is excellent to have a giant's strength; but it is +tyrannous to use it like a giant.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Study.~--Histories make men wise; poets, witty; the mathematics, subtile; +natural philosophy, deep; moral, grave; logic and rhetoric, able to +contend.--_Bacon._ + +Whatever study tends neither directly nor indirectly to make us better +men and citizens is at best but a specious and ingenious sort of +idleness, and the knowledge we acquire by it only a creditable kind of +ignorance, nothing more.--_Bolingbroke._ + +There is no one study that is not capable of delighting us after a +little application to it.--_Pope._ + +They are not the best students who are most dependent on books. What can +be got out of them is at best only material: a man must build his house +for himself.--_George MacDonald._ + +The man who has acquired the habit of study, though for only one hour +every day in the year, and keeps to the one thing studied till it is +mastered, will be startled to see the way he has made at the end of a +twelvemonth.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Style.~--The style is the man.--_Buffon._ + +As it is a great point of art, when our matter requires it, to enlarge +and veer out all sail, so to take it in and contract it is of no less +praise when the argument doth ask it.--_Ben Jonson._ + +Not poetry, but prose run mad.--_Pope._ + +There is a certain majesty in plainness; as the proclamation of a prince +never frisks it in tropes or fine conceits, in numerous and well-turned +periods, but commands in sober natural expressions.--_South._ + +In the present day our literary masonry is well done, but our +architecture is poor.--_Joubert._ + +Perhaps that is nearly the perfection of good writing which is original, +but whose truth alone prevents the reader from suspecting that it is so; +and which effects that for knowledge which the lense effects for the +sunbeam, when it condenses its brightness in order to increase its +force.--_Colton._ + +A temperate style is alone classical.--_Joubert._ + +Obscurity and affectation are the two great faults of style. Obscurity +of expression generally springs from confusion of ideas; and the same +wish to dazzle, at any cost, which produces affectation in the manner of +a writer, is likely to produce sophistry in his reasoning.--_Macaulay._ + +Style is the gossamer on which the seeds of truth float through the +world.--_Bancroft._ + +The lively phraseology of Montesquieu was the result of long meditation. +His words, as light as wings, bear on them grave +reflections.--_Joubert._ + +~Subordination.~--The usual way that men adopt to appease the wrath of +those whom they have offended, when they are at their mercy, is humble +submission; whereas a bold front, a firm and resolute bearing,--means +the very opposite,--have been at times equally +successful.--_Montaigne._ + +Reverences stand in awe of yourself.--_Sydney Smith._ + +He who reigns within himself, and rules passions, desires, and fears, is +more than a king.--_Milton._ + +~Success.~--It is a mistake to suppose that men succeed through success; +they much oftener succeed through failure.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +From mere success nothing can be concluded in favor of any nation upon +whom it is bestowed.--_Atterbury._ + +He that would relish success to purpose should keep his passion cool, +and his expectation low.--_Jeremy Collier._ + +The road to success is not to be run upon by seven-leagued boots. Step +by step, little by little, bit by bit,--that is the way to wealth, that +is the way to wisdom, that is the way to glory. Pounds are the sons, not +of pounds, but of pence.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The talent of success is nothing more than doing what you can do well; +and doing well whatever you do, without a thought of +fame.--_Longfellow._ + +Nothing can seem foul to those that win.--_Shakespeare._ + +All the proud virtue of this vaunting world fawns on success and power, +however acquired.--_Thomson._ + +A successful career has been full of blunders.--_Charles Buxton._ + +The man who succeeds above his fellows is the one who, early in life, +clearly discerns his object, and towards that object habitually directs +his powers. Thus, indeed, even genius itself is but fine observation +strengthened by fixity of purpose. Every man who observes vigilantly and +resolves steadfastly grows unconsciously into genius.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Success soon palls. The joyous time is when the breeze first strikes +your sails, and the waters rustle under your bows.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Success at first doth many times undo men at last.--_Venning._ + +~Suicide.~--Suicide itself, that fearful abuse of the dominion of the soul +over the body, is a strong proof of the distinction of their destinies. +Can the power that kills be the same that is killed? Must it not +necessarily be something superior and surviving? The act of the soul, +which in that fatal instant is in one sense so great an act of power, +can it at the same time be the act of its own annihilation? The will +kills the body, but who kills the will?--_Auguste_ _Nicolas._ + +Those men who destroy a healthful constitution of body by intemperance +as manifestly kill themselves as those who hang, or poison, or drown +themselves.--_Sherlock._ + +He who, superior to the checks of nature, dares make his life the victim +of his reason, does in some sort that reason deify, and takes a flight +at heaven.--_Young._ + +~Summer.~--Child of the sun, refulgent Summer comes.--_Thomson._ + +Beneath the Winter's snow lie germs of summer flowers.--_Whittier._ + +~Sun.~--The glorious sun stays in his course, and plays the alchemist, +turning with the splendor of his precious eyes the meagre, cloddy earth +to glittering gold.--_Shakespeare._ + +The downward sun looks out effulgent from amid the flash of broken +clouds.--_Thomson._ + +~Sunday.~--If the Sunday had not been observed as a day of rest during the +last three centuries, I have not the slightest doubt that we should have +been at this moment a poorer people and less civilized.--_Macaulay._ + +Oh, what a blessing is Sunday, interposed between the waves of worldly +business like the divine path of the Israelites through Jordan! There is +nothing in which I would advise you to be more strictly conscientious +than in keeping the Sabbath-day holy. I can truly declare that to me the +Sabbath has been invaluable.--_W. Wilberforce._ + +~Superstition.~--A peasant can no more help believing in a traditional +superstition than a horse can help trembling when he sees a +camel.--_George Eliot._ + +Religion worships God, while superstition profanes that +worship.--_Seneca._ + +Every inordination of religion that is not in defect is properly called +superstition.--_Jeremy Taylor._ + +The child taught to believe any occurrence a good or evil omen, or any +day of the week lucky, hath a wide inroad made upon the soundness of his +understanding.--_Watts._ + +Superstition is the only religion of which base souls are +capable.--_Joubert._ + +It is of such stuff that superstitions are commonly made; an intense +feeling about ourselves which makes the evening star shine at us with a +threat, and the blessing of a beggar encourage us. And superstitions +carry consequences which often verify their hope or their +foreboding.--_George Eliot._ + +We are all tattooed in our cradles with the beliefs of our tribe; the +record may seem superficial, but it is indelible. You cannot educate a +man wholly out of the superstitious fears which were implanted in his +imagination, no matter how utterly his reason may reject +them.--_Holmes._ + +~Surety.~--He who is surety is never sure. Take advice, and never be +security for more than you are quite willing to lose. Remember the words +of the wise man. "He that is surety for a stranger shall smart for it; +and he that hateth suretyship is sure."--_Spurgeon._ + +~Surfeit.~--They are sick, that surfeit with too much, as they that starve +with nothing.--_Shakespeare._ + +Satiety comes of riches, and contumaciousness of satiety.--_Solon._ + +~Suspicion.~--To be suspicious is to invite treachery.--_Voltaire._ + +There is no rule more invariable than that we are paid for our +suspicions by finding what we suspect.--_Thoreau._ + +Suspicion has its dupes, as well as credulity.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Don't seem to be on the lookout for crows, else you'll set other people +watching.--_George Eliot._ + +~Sympathy.~--Surely, surely, the only true knowledge of our fellow-man is +that which enables us to feel with him--which gives us a fine ear for +the heart-pulses that are beating under the mere clothes of circumstance +and opinion.--_George Eliot._ + +Next to love, sympathy is the divinest passion of the human +heart.--_Burke._ + +Outward things don't give, they draw out. You find in them what you +bring to them. A cathedral makes only the devotional feel devotional. +Scenery refines only the fine-minded.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Of all the virtues necessary to the completion of the perfect man, there +is none to be more delicately implied and less ostentatiously vaunted +than that of exquisite feeling or universal +benevolence.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +I would go fifty miles on foot to kiss the hand of that man whose +generous heart will give up the reins of his imagination into his +author's hands; be pleased, he knows not why, and cares not +wherefore.--_Sterne._ + + +T. + +~Tact.~--A tact which surpassed the tact of her sex as much as the tact of +her sex surpasses the tact of ours.--_Macaulay._ + +~Talent.~--It is adverse to talent to be consorted and trained up with +inferior minds or inferior companions, however high they may rank. The +foal of the racer neither finds out his speed, nor calls out his powers, +if pastured out with the common herd that are destined for the collar +and the yoke.--_Colton._ + +Whatever you are from nature, keep to it; never desert your own line of +talent. Be what nature intended you for, and you will succeed; be +anything else, and you will be ten thousand times worse than +nothing!--_Sydney Smith._ + +Gross and vulgar minds will always pay a higher respect to wealth than +to talent; for wealth, although it be a far less efficient source of +power than talent, happens to be far more intelligible.--_Colton._ + +As to great and commanding talents, they are the gift of Providence in +some way unknown to us. They rise where they are least expected. They +fail when everything seems disposed to produce them, or at least to call +them forth.--_Burke._ + +Talent is the capacity of doing anything that depends on application and +industry, and it is a voluntary power, while genius is +involuntary.--_Hazlitt._ + +Talent, lying in the understanding, is often inherited; genius, being +the action of reason or imagination, rarely or never.--_Coleridge._ + +It always seemed to me a sort of clever stupidity only to have one sort +of talent,--almost like a carrier-pigeon.--_George Eliot._ + +~Talking.~--I know a lady that loves talking so incessantly, she won't +give an echo fair play; she has that everlasting rotation of tongue, +that an echo must wait till she dies, before it can catch her last +words!--_Congreve._ + +Talkers are no good doers.--_Shakespeare._ + +When I think of talking, it is of course with a woman. For talking at +its best being an inspiration, it wants a corresponding divine quality +of receptiveness, and where will you find this but in woman?--_Holmes._ + +Who think too little and who talk too much.--_Dryden._ + +They talk most who have the least to say.--_Prior._ + +~Taste.~--Taste is the power of relishing or rejecting whatever is offered +for the entertainment of the imagination.--_Goldsmith._ + +There are some readers who have never read an essay on taste; and if +they take my advice they never will; for they can no more improve their +taste by so doing than they could improve their appetite or digestion by +studying a cookery-book.--_Southey._ + +Those internal powers, active and strong, and feelingly alive to each +fine impulse.--_Akenside._ + +All our tastes are but reminiscences.--_Lamartine._ + +~Teaching.~--Count it one of the highest virtues upon earth to educate +faithfully the children of others, which so few, and scarcely any, do by +their own.--_Luther._ + +The best teacher is the one who suggests rather than dogmatizes, and +inspires his listener with the wish to teach himself.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Tears.~--The overflow of a softened heart.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the +morning.--_Bible._ + +In woman's eye the unanswerable tear.--_Byron._ + +Blest tears of soul-felt penitence.--_Moore._ + +God washes the eyes by tears until they can behold the invisible land +where tears shall come no more. O love! O affliction! ye are the guides +that show us the way through the great airy space where our loved ones +walked; and, as hounds easily follow the scent before the dew be risen, +so God teaches us, while yet our sorrow is wet, to follow on and find +our dear ones in heaven.--_Beecher._ + +The kind oblation of a falling tear.--_Dryden._ + +A penitent's tear is an undeniable ambassador, and never returns from +the throne of grace unsatisfied.--_Spencer._ + +Fate and the dooming gods are deaf to tears.--_Dryden._ + +We praise the dramatic poet who possesses the art of drawing tears, a +power which he has in common with the meanest onion.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Her tears her only eloquence.--_Rogers._ + +Eye-offending brine.--_Shakespeare._ + +The tears which flow, and the honors that are paid, when the founders of +the republic die, give hope that the republic itself may be +immortal.--_Daniel Webster._ + +All my mother came into mine eyes, and gave me up to +tears.--_Shakespeare._ + +The tear that is wiped with a little address may be followed, perhaps, +by a smile.--_Cowper._ + +Virtue is the daughter of Religion. Her sole treasure is her +tears.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Nothing dries sooner than a tear.--_George Herbert._ + +My plenteous joys, wanton in fullness, seek to hide themselves in drops +of sorrow.--_Shakespeare._ + +Bright as young diamonds in their infant dew.--_Dryden._ + +Tears are sometimes the happiest smiles of love.--_Stendhal._ + +~Tediousness.~--The sin of excessive length.--_Shirley._ + +Life is as tedious as a twice-told tale, vexing the dull ear of a drowsy +man.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Teeth.~--Teeth like falling snow for white.--~Cowley.~ + +Such a pearly row of teeth that sovereignty would have pawned her jewels +for them.--_Sterne._ + +~Temperance.~--Temperance puts wood on the fire, meal in the barrel, flour +in the tub, money in the purse, credit in the country, contentment in +the house, clothes on the back, and vigor in the body.--_Franklin._ + +I consider the temperance cause the foundation of all social and +political reform.--_Cobden._ + +If temperance prevails, then education can prevail; if temperance fails, +then education must fail.--_Horace Mann._ + +Temperance to be a virtue must be free and not forced. Virtue may be +defended, as vice may be withstood, by a statute, but no virtue is or +can be created by a law, any more than by a battering ram a temple or +obelisk can be reared.--_Bartol._ + +If you wish to keep the mind clear and the body healthy, abstain from +all fermented liquors.--_Sydney Smith._ + +Use, do not abuse; neither abstinence nor excess ever renders man +happy.--_Voltaire._ + +He who would keep himself to himself should imitate the dumb animals, +and drink water.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Temptation.~--No man is matriculated to the art of life till he has been +well tempted.--~George Eliot.~ + +Temptation is a fearful word. It indicates the beginning of a possible +series of infinite evils. It is the ringing of an alarm bell, whose +melancholy sounds may reverberate through eternity. Like the sudden, +sharp cry of "Fire!" under our windows by night, it should rouse us to +instantaneous action, and brace every muscle to its highest +tension.--_Horace Mann._ + +Most confidence has still most cause to doubt.--_Dryden._ + +It is a most fearful fact to think of, that in every heart there is some +secret spring that would be weak at the touch of temptation, and that is +liable to be assailed. Fearful, and yet salutary to think of, for the +thought may serve to keep our moral nature braced. It warns us that we +can never stand at ease, or lie down in the field of life, without +sentinels of watchfulness and camp-fires of prayer.--_Chapin._ + +Love cries victory when the tears of a woman become the sole defense of +her virtue.--_La Fontaine._ + +When devils will their blackest sins put on, they do suggest at first +with heavenly shows.--_Shakespeare._ + +The devil tempts us not: it is we tempt him, beckoning his skill with +opportunity.--_George Eliot._ + +Better shun the bait than struggle in the snare.--_Dryden._ + +There are times when it would seem as if God fished with a line, and the +devil with a net.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Tenderness.~--When death, the great reconciler, has come, it is never our +tenderness that we repent of, but our severity.--_George Eliot._ + +~Theatre.~--A man who enters the theatre is immediately struck with the +view of so great a multitude, participating of one common amusement; and +experiences, from their very aspect, a superior sensibility or +disposition of being affected with every sentiment which he shares with +his fellow-creatures.--_Hume._ + +The theatre has often been at variance with the pulpit; they ought not +to quarrel. How much it is to be wished that the celebration of nature +and of God were intrusted to none but men of noble minds!--_Goethe._ + +~Theories.~--Most men take least notice of what is plain, as if that were +of no use; but puzzle their thoughts, and lose themselves in those vast +depths and abysses which no human understanding can fathom.--_Sherlock._ + +Metaphysicians can unsettle things, but they can erect nothing. They can +pull down a church, but they cannot build a hovel.--_Cecil._ + +~Thought.~--I have asked several men what passes in their minds when they +are thinking, and I could never find any man who could think for two +minutes together. Everybody has seemed to admit that it was a perpetual +deviation from a particular path, and a perpetual return to it; which, +imperfect as the operation is, is the only method in which we can +operate with our minds to carry on any process of thought.--_Sydney +Smith._ + +A delicate thought is a flower of the mind.--_Rollin._ + +Earnest men never think in vain though their thoughts may be +errors.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +Though an inheritance of acres may be bequeathed, an inheritance of +knowledge and wisdom cannot. The wealthy man may pay others for doing +his work for him, but it is impossible to get his thinking done for him +by another, or to purchase any kind of self-culture.--_Samuel Smiles._ + +Thoughts shut up want air, and spoil like bales unopened to the +sun.--_Young._ + +Good thoughts are blessed guests, and should be heartily welcomed, well +fed, and much sought after. Like rose leaves, they give out a sweet +smell if laid up in the jar of memory.--_Spurgeon._ + +Thought is invisible nature--nature is invisible thought.--_Heinrich +Heine._ + +Ingenious philosophers tell you, perhaps, that the great work of the +steam-engine is to create leisure for mankind. Do not believe them, it +only creates a vacuum for eager thought to rush in.--_George Eliot._ + +Wherever a great mind utters its thoughts,--there is +Golgotha.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +"Give me," said Herder to his son, as he lay in the parched weariness of +his last illness, "give me a great thought, that I may quicken myself +with it."--_Richter._ + +You shall see them on a beautiful quarto page, where a neat rivulet of +text shall meander through a meadow of margin.--_Sheridan._ + +Fully to understand a grand and beautiful thought requires, perhaps, as +much time as to conceive it.--_Joubert._ + +Many men's thoughts are not acorns, but merely pebbles.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +A vivid thought brings the power to paint it; and in proportion to the +depth of its source is the force of its projection.--_Emerson._ + +~Threats.~--Those that are the loudest in their threats are the weakest in +the execution of them.--_Colton._ + +It makes a great difference in the force of a sentence whether a man be +behind it or no.--_Emerson._ + +~Time.~--Time's abyss, the common grave of all.--_Dryden._ + +Come what come may, time and the hour run through the roughest +day.--_Shakespeare._ + +Time makes more converts than reason.--_Thomas Paine._ + +Time stoops to no man's lure.--_Swinburne._ + +Time is the wisest councillor.--_Pericles._ + +Time is a wave which never murmurs, because there is no obstacle to its +flow.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Time hath often cured the wound which reason failed to heal.--_Seneca._ + +The slow sweet hours that bring us all things good.--_Tennyson._ + +Part with it as with money, sparing; pay no moment but in purchase of +its worth; and what its worth! ask death-beds, they can tell.--_Young._ + +The crutch of Time accomplishes more than the club of +Hercules.--_Balthaser Gracian._ + +Time is the shower of Danae; each drop is golden.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Title.~--How impious is the title of "sacred majesty" applied to a worm, +who, in the midst of his splendor, is crumbling into dust!--_Thomas +Paine._ + +The three highest titles that can be given a man are those of martyr, +hero, saint.--_Gladstone._ + +~Toleration.~--The responsibility of tolerance lies with those who have +the wider vision.--_George Eliot._ + +Error tolerates, truth condemns.--_Fernan Caballero._ + +Toleration is the best religion.--_Victor Hugo._ + +~Tongue~.--When we advance a little into life, we find that the tongue of +man creates nearly all the mischief of the world.--_Paxton Hood._ + +~Travel.~--Rather see the wonders of the world abroad, than, living dully +sluggardized at home wear out thy youth with shapeless +idleness.--_Shakespeare._ + +Of dead kingdoms I recall the soul, sitting amid their ruins.--_N. P. +Willis._ + +The use of traveling is to regulate imagination by reality, and, instead +of thinking how things may be, to see them as they are.--_Johnson._ + +To see the world is to judge the judges.--_Joubert._ + +The bee, though it finds every rose has a thorn, comes back loaded with +honey from his rambles, and why should not other tourists do the +same.--_Haliburton._ + +~Treason.~--Treason pleases, but not the traitor.--_Cervantes._ + +The man was noble; but with his last attempt he wiped it out; betrayed +his country; and his name remains to the ensuing age +abhorred.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Trifles.~--A snapper-up of unconsidered trifles.--_Shakespeare._ + +We are not only pleased but turned by a feather. The history of a man is +a calendar of straws. If the nose of Cleopatra had been shorter, said +Pascal, in his brilliant way, Antony might have kept the +world.--_Willmott._ + +A drop of water is as powerful as a thunderbolt.--_Huxley._ + +Riches may enable us to confer favors; but to confer them with propriety +and with grace requires a something that riches cannot give: even +trifles may be so bestowed as to cease to be trifles. The citizens of +Megara offered the freedom of their city to Alexander; such an offer +excited a smile in the countenance of him who had conquered the world; +but he received this tribute of their respect with complacency on being +informed that they had never offered it to any but to Hercules and +himself.--_Colton._ + +There is a kind of latent omniscience not only in every man but in every +particle.--_Emerson._ + +It is in those acts called trivialities that the seeds of joy are +forever wasted, until men and women look round with haggard faces at the +devastation their own waste has made, and say, the earth bears no +harvest of sweetness--calling their denial knowledge.--_George Eliot._ + +The chains which cramp us most are those which weigh on us +least.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +Little things console us, because little things afflict us.--_Pascal._ + +~Trouble.~--Annoyance is man's leaven; the element of movement, without +which we would grow mouldy.--_Feuchtersleben._ + +~Truth.~--Veracity is a plant of Paradise, and the seeds have never +flourished beyond the walls.--_George Eliot._ + +Nothing so beautiful as truth.--_Des Cartes._ + +All high truth is poetry. Take the results of science: they glow with +beauty, cold and hard as are the methods of reaching them.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +Truth never turns to rebuke falsehood; her own straightforwardness is +the severest correction.--_Thoreau._ + +Whenever you look at human nature in masses, you find every truth met by +a counter truth, and both equally true.--_Charles Buxton._ + +Truth need not always be embodied; enough if it hovers around like a +spiritual essence, which gives one peace, and fills the atmosphere with +a solemn sweetness like harmonious music of bells.--_Goethe._ + +Dare to be true; nothing can need a lie.--_George Herbert._ + +We must never throw away a bushel of truth because it happens to contain +a few grains of chaff; on the contrary, we may sometimes profitably +receive a bushel of chaff for the few grains of truth it may +contain.--_Dean Stanley._ + +The first great work is that yourself may to yourself be +true.--_Roscommon._ + +In troubled water you can scarce see your face, or see it very little, +till the water be quiet and stand still: so in troubled times you can +see little truth; when times are quiet and settled, then truth +appears.--_Selden._ + +Men are as cold as ice to the truth, hot as fire to falsehood.--_La +Fontaine._ + +The way of truth is like a great road. It is not difficult to know it. +The evil is only that men will not seek it. Do you go home and search +for it.--_Mencius._ + +Speaking truth is like writing fair, and comes only by practice; it is +less a matter of will than of habit; and I doubt if any occasion can be +trivial which permits the practice and formation of such a +habit.--_Ruskin._ + +Forgetting that the only eternal part for man to act is man, and that +the only immutable greatness is truth.--_Lamartine._ + +Truth takes the stamp of the souls it enters. It is rigorous and rough +in arid souls, but tempers and softens itself in loving +natures.--_Joubert._ + +Truth severe, by fairy fiction drest.--_Gray._ + +The only amaranthine flower on earth is virtue; the only lasting +treasure, truth.--_Cowper._ + +Blunt truths make more mischief than nice falsehoods do.--_Pope._ + +Truth has rough flavors if we bite through.--_George Eliot._ + +Truth is a torch, but one of enormous size; so that we slink past it in +rather a blinking fashion for fear it should burn us.--_Goethe._ + +All truths are not to be repeated, still it is well to hear them.--_Mme. +du Deffaud._ + +It is only when one is thoroughly true that there can be purity and +freedom. Falsehood always avenges itself.--_Auerbach._ + +Nothing from man's hands, nor law, nor constitution, can be final. Truth +alone is final.--_Charles Sumner._ + +Verity is nudity.--_Alfred de Musset._ + +~Twilight.~--Parting day dies like the dolphin, whom each pang imbues with +a new color as it gasps away, the last still loveliest, till 'tis gone, +and all is gray.--_Byron._ + +Softly the evening came. The sun from the western horizon, like a +magician, extended his golden wand o'er the landscape.--_Longfellow._ + +Twilight gray hath in her sober livery all things clad.--_Milton._ + +The day is done; and slowly from the scene the stooping sun upgathers +his spent shafts, and puts them back into his golden +quiver!--_Longfellow._ + +The weary sun hath made a golden set, and, by the bright track of his +fiery car, gives token of a goodly day to-morrow.--_Shakespeare._ + + +U. + +~Ugliness.~--I do not know that she was virtuous; but she was always ugly, +and with a woman, that is half the battle.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +Ugliness, after virtue, is the best guardian of a young woman.--_Mme. de +Genlis._ + +~Understanding.~--The eye of the understanding is like the eye of the +sense; for as you may see great objects through small crannies or holes, +so you may see great axioms of nature through small and contemptible +instances.--_Bacon._ + +In its wider acceptation, understanding is the entire power of +perceiving and conceiving, exclusive of the sensibility; the power of +dealing with the impressions of sense, and composing them into wholes, +according to a law of unity: and in its most comprehensive meaning it +includes even simple apprehension.--_Coleridge._ + +~Unselfishness.~--The essence of true nobility is neglect of self. Let the +thought of self pass in, and the beauty of great action is gone, like +the bloom from a soiled flower.--_Froude._ + +~Uprightness.~--To redeem a world sunk in dishonesty has not been given +thee. Solely over one man therein thou hast quite absolute control. Him +redeem, him make honest.--_Thomas Carlyle._ + +~Urbanity.~--Poor wine at the table of a rich host is an insult without an +apology. Urbanity ushers in water that needs no apology, and gives a +zest to the worst vintage.--_Zimmermann._ + +~Usefulness.~--Nothing in this world is so good as usefulness. It binds +your fellow-creatures to you, and you to them; it tends to the +improvement of your own character; and it gives you a real importance in +society, much beyond what any artificial station can bestow.--_Sir B. C. +Brodie._ + +On the day of his death, in his eightieth year, Elliott, "the Apostle of +the Indians," was found teaching an Indian child at his bed-side. "Why +not rest from your labors now?" asked a friend. "Because," replied the +venerable man, "I have prayed God to render me useful in my sphere, and +He has heard my prayers; for now that I can no longer preach, He leaves +me strength enough to teach this poor child the alphabet."--_Rev. J. +Chaplin._ + +There is but one virtue--the eternal sacrifice of self.--_George Sand._ + + +V. + +~Valentine.~--Hail to thy returning festival, old Bishop Valentine! Great +is thy name in the rubric. Like unto thee, assuredly, there is no other +mitred father in the calendar.--_Charles Lamb._ + +The fourteenth of February is a day sacred to St. Valentine! It was a +very odd notion, alluded to by Shakespeare, that on this day birds begin +to couple; hence, perhaps, arose the custom of sending on this day +letters containing professions of love and affection.--_Noah Webster._ + +~Valor.~--Valor gives awe, and promises protection to those who want heart +or strength to defend themselves. This makes the authority of men among +women, and that of a master buck in a numerous herd.--_Sir W. Temple._ + +How strangely high endeavors may be blessed, where piety and valor +jointly go.--_Dryden._ + +Those who believe that the praises which arise from valor are superior +to those which proceed from any other virtues have not +considered.--_Dryden._ + +~Vanity.~--Verily every man at his best state is altogether +vanity.--_Bible._ + +Our vanities differ as our noses do: all conceit is not the same +conceit, but varies in correspondence with the minutiae of mental make in +which one of us differs from another.--_George Eliot._ + +One of the few things I have always most wondered at is, that there +should be any such thing as human vanity. If I had any, I had enough to +mortify it a few days ago; for I lost my mind for a whole day.--_Pope._ + +Greater mischiefs happen often from folly, meanness, and vanity than +from the greater sins of avarice and ambition.--_Burke._ + +It is vanity which makes the rake at twenty, the worldly man at forty, +and the retired man at sixty. We are apt to think that best in general +for which we find ourselves best fitted in particular.--_Pope._ + +O frail estate of human things.--_Dryden._ + +The vainest woman is never thoroughly conscious of her beauty till she +is loved by the man who sets her own passion vibrating in +return.--_George Eliot._ + +Vanity is the quicksand of reason.--_George Sand._ + +To be vain is rather a mark of humility than pride. Vain men delight in +telling what honors have been done them, what great company they have +kept, and the like; by which they plainly confess that these honors were +more than their due and such as their friends would not believe if they +had not been told. Whereas a man truly proud thinks the greatest honors +below his merits, and consequently scorns to boast. I, therefore, +deliver it as a maxim, that whoever desires the character of a proud man +ought to conceal his vanity.--_Swift._ + +~Vexations.~--Petty vexations may at times be petty, but still they are +vexations. The smallest and most inconsiderable annoyances are the most +piercing. As small letters weary the eye most, so also the smallest +affairs disturb us most.--_Montaigne._ + +~Vice.~--As to the general design of providence, the two extremes of vice +may serve (like two opposite biases) to keep up the balance of things. +When we speak against one capital vice, we ought to speak against its +opposite; the middle betwixt both is the point for virtue.--_Pope._ + +This is the essential evil of vice; it debases a man.--_Chapin._ + +It is only in some corner of the brain which we leave empty that Vice +can obtain a lodging. When she knocks at your door be able to say: "No +room for your ladyship: pass on."--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +I ne'er heard yet that any of these bolder vices wanted less impudence +to gainsay what they did, than to perform it first.--_Shakespeare._ + +Wise men will apply their remedies to vices, not to names; to the causes +of evil which are permanent, not the occasional organs by which they +act, and the transitory modes in which they appear.--_Burke._ + +One vice worn out makes us wiser than fifty tutors.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Vicissitudes.~--We do not marvel at the sunrise of a joy, only at its +sunset! Then, on the other hand, we are amazed at the commencement of a +sorrow-storm; but that it should go off in gentle showers we think quite +natural.--_Richter._ + +Who ordered toil as the condition of life, ordered weariness, ordered +sickness, ordered poverty, failure, success,--to this man a foremost +place, to the other a nameless struggle with the crowd; to that a +shameful fall, or paralyzed limb, or sudden accident; to each some work +upon the ground he stands on, until he is laid beneath it.--_Thackeray._ + +~Victory.~--Victory or Westminster Abbey.--_Nelson._ + +Victory may be honorable to the arms, but shameful to the counsels, of a +nation.--_Bolingbroke._ + +Victory belongs to the most persevering.--_Napoleon._ + +It is more difficult to look upon victory than upon battle.--_Walter +Scott._ + +~Villainy.~--Villainy, when detected, never gives up, but boldly adds +impudence to imposture.--_Goldsmith._ + +Villainy that is vigilant will be an overmatch for virtue, if she +slumber at her post.--_Colton._ + +~Violence.~--Nothing good comes of violence.--_Luther._ + +Violence does even justice unjustly.--_Carlyle._ + +Vehemence without feeling is rant.--_H. Lewes._ + +~Virtue.~--I willingly confess that it likes me better when I find virtue +in a fair lodging than when I am bound to seek it in an ill-favored +creature.--_Sir P. Sidney._ + +This is the tax a man must pay to his virtues--they hold up a torch to +his vices, and render those frailties notorious in him which would have +passed without observation in another.--_Colton._ + +True greatness is sovereign wisdom. We are never deceived by our +virtues.--_Lamartine._ + +It would not be easy, even for an unbeliever, to find a better +translation of the rule of virtue from the abstract into the concrete, +than to endeavor so to live that Christ would approve our life.--_John +Stuart Mill._ + +Most men admire virtue, who follow not her lore.--_Milton._ + +To be able under all circumstances to practice five things constitutes +perfect virtue: these five are gravity, generosity of soul, sincerity, +earnestness, and kindness.--_Confucius._ + +Of the two, I prefer those who render vice lovable to those who degrade +virtue.--_Joubert._ + +No man can purchase his virtue too dear, for it is the only thing whose +value must ever increase with the price it has cost us. Our integrity is +never worth so much as when we have parted with our all to keep +it.--_Colton._ + +Virtue can see to do what virtue would by her own radiant light, though +sun and moon were in the flat sea sunk.--_Milton._ + +Virtue is voluntary, vice involuntary.--_Plato._ + +Virtue is a rough way but proves at night a bed of down.--_Wotton._ + +Is virtue a thing remote? I wish to be virtuous, and lo! virtue is at +hand.--_Confucius._ + +Virtues that shun the day and lie concealed in the smooth seasons and +the calm of life.--_Addison._ + +That virtue which requires to be ever guarded is scarce worth the +sentinel.--_Goldsmith._ + +Why expect that extraordinary virtues should be in one person united, +when one virtue makes a man extraordinary? Alexander is eminent for his +courage; Ptolemy for his wisdom; Scipio for his continence; Trajan for +his love of truth; Constantius for his temperance.--_Zimmermann._ + +Virtue dwells at the head of a river, to which we cannot get but by +rowing against the stream.--_Feltham._ + +Our virtues live upon our income, our vices consume our capital.--_J. +Petit Senn._ + +Wealth is a weak anchor, and glory cannot support a man; this is the law +of God, that virtue only is firm, and cannot be shaken by a +tempest.--_Pythagoras._ + +All bow to virtue and then walk away.--_De Finod._ + +Virtue is an angel; but she is a blind one, and must ask of Knowledge to +show her the pathway that leads to her goal. Mere knowledge, on the +other hand, like a Swiss mercenary, is ready to combat either in the +ranks of sin or under the banners of righteousness,--ready to forge +cannon-balls or to print New Testaments, to navigate a corsair's vessel +or a missionary ship.--_Horace Mann._ + +~Vulgarity.~--The vulgarity of inanimate things requires time to get +accustomed to; but living, breathing, bustling, plotting, planning, +human vulgarity is a species of moral ipecacuanha, enough to destroy any +comfort.--_Carlyle._ + +Dirty work wants little talent and no conscience.--_George Eliot._ + + +W. + +~Waiting.~--It is the slowest pulsation which is the most vital. The hero +will then know how to wait, as well as to make haste. All good abides +with him who waiteth wisely.--_Thoreau._ + +~Want.~--Nothing makes men sharper than want.--_Addison._ + +Hundreds would never have known _want_ if they had not first known +_waste_.--_Spurgeon._ + +It is not from nature, but from education and habits, that our wants are +chiefly derived.--_Fielding._ + +If any one say that he has seen a just man in want of bread, I answer +that it was in some place where there was no other just man.--_St. +Clement._ + +~War.~--Take my word for it, if you had seen but one day of war, you would +pray to Almighty God that you might never see such a thing +again.--_Wellington._ + +Wherever there is war, there must be injustice on one side or the other, +or on both. There have been wars which were little more than trials of +strength between friendly nations, and in which the injustice was not to +each other, but to the God who gave them life. But in a malignant war +there is injustice of ignobler kind at once to God and man, which must +be stemmed for both their sakes.--_Ruskin._ + +Civil wars leave nothing but tombs.--_Lamartine._ + +The fate of war is to be exalted in the morning, and low enough at +night! There is but one step from triumph to ruin.--_Napoleon._ + +Woe to the man that first did teach the cursed steel to bite in his own +flesh, and make way to the living spirit.--_Spenser._ + +Providence for war is the best prevention of it.--_Bacon._ + +The bodies of men, munition, and money, may justly be called the sinews +of war.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +War is the matter which fills all history, and consequently the only or +almost the only view in which we can see the external of political +society is in a hostile shape; and the only actions to which we have +always seen, and still see, all of them intent, are such as tend to the +destruction of one another.--_Burke._ + +As long as mankind shall continue to bestow more liberal applause on +their destroyers than on their benefactors, the thirst of military glory +will ever be the vice of the most exalted characters.--_Gibbon._ + +The fate of a battle is the result of a moment,--of a thought: the +hostile forces advance with various combinations, they attack each other +and fight for a certain time; the critical moment arrives, a mental +flash decides, and the least reserve accomplishes the +object.--_Napoleon._ + +The feast of vultures, and the waste of life.--_Byron._ + +I abhor bloodshed, and every species of terror erected into a system, as +remedies equally ferocious, unjust, and inefficacious against evils that +can only be cured by the diffusion of liberal ideas.--_Mazzini._ + +~Weakness.~--Weakness is thy excuse, and I believe it; weakness to resist +Philistian gold: what murderer, what traitor, parricide, incestuous, +sacrilegious, but may plead it? All wickedness is weakness.--_Milton._ + +The strength of man sinks in the hour of trial; but there doth live a +Power that to the battle girdeth the weak.--_Joanna Baillie._ + +How many weak shoulders have craved heavy burdens?--_Joubert._ + +Weakness is born vanquished.--_Madame Swetchine._ + +~Wealth.~--An accession of wealth is a dangerous predicament for a man. At +first he is stunned, if the accession be sudden; he is very humble and +very grateful. Then he begins to speak a little louder, people think him +more sensible, and soon he thinks himself so.--_Cecil._ + +If Wealth come, beware of him, the smooth, false friend! There is +treachery in his proffered hand; his tongue is eloquent to tempt; lust +of many harms is lurking in his eye; he hath a hollow heart; use him +cautiously.--_Tupper._ + +Men pursue riches under the idea that their possession will set them at +ease, and above the world. But the law of association often makes those +who begin by loving gold as a servant, finish by becoming themselves its +slaves; and independence without wealth is at least as common as wealth +without independence.--_Colton._ + +~Weeping.~--What women would do if they could not cry, nobody knows! What +poor, defenseless creatures they would be!--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +~Welcome.~--Heaven opened wide her ever-during gates, harmonious sound! on +golden hinges turning.--_Milton._ + +~Wickedness.~--The happiness of the wicked passes away like a +torrent.--_Racine._ + +The hatred of the wicked is only roused the more from the impossibility +of finding any just grounds on which it can rest; and the very +consciousness of their own injustice is only a grievance the more +against him who is the object of it.--_Rousseau._ + +Wickedness is a wonderfully diligent architect of misery, of shame, +accompanied with terror and commotion, and remorse, and endless +perturbation.--_Plutarch._ + +What rein can hold licentious wickedness, when down the hill he holds +his fierce career?--_Shakespeare._ + +~Wife.~--Thy wife is a constellation of virtues; she's the moon, and thou +art the man in the moon.--_Congreve._ + +A light wife doth make a heavy husband.--_Shakespeare._ + +O woman! thou knowest the hour when the goodman of the house will +return, when the heat and burden of the day are past; do not let him at +such time, when he is weary with toil and jaded with discouragement, +find upon his coming to his habitation that the foot which should hasten +to meet him is wandering at a distance, that the soft hand which should +wipe the sweat from his brow is knocking at the door of other +houses.--_Washington Irving._ + +Her pleasures are in the happiness of her family.--_Rousseau._ + +Hanging and wiving goes by destiny.--_Shakespeare._ + +The wife safest and seemliest by her husband stays.--_Milton._ + +~Will.~--In the schools of the wrestling master, when a boy falls he is +bidden to get up again, and to go on wrestling day by day till he has +acquired strength; and we must do the same, and not be like those poor +wretches who, after one failure, suffer themselves to be swept along as +by a torrent. You need but _will_, and it is done; but if you relax your +efforts, you will be ruined; for ruin and recovery are both from +within.--_Epictetus._ + +~Winter.~--After summer ever more succeeds the barren winter with his +nipping cold.--_Shakespeare._ + +Winter binds our strengthened bodies in a cold embrace +constringent.--_Thomson._ + +~Wisdom.~--Wisdom for a man's self is, in many branches thereof, a +depraved thing: it is the wisdom of rats, that will be sure to leave a +house some time before it fall; it is the wisdom of the fox, that +thrusts out the badger, who digged and made room for him; it is the +wisdom of the crocodiles, that shed tears when they would +devour.--_Bacon._ + +Common sense in an uncommon degree is what the world calls +wisdom.--_Coleridge._ + +Human wisdom makes as ill use of her talent when she exercises it in +rescinding from the number and sweetness of those pleasures that are +naturally our due, as she employs it favorably, and well, in +artificially disguising and tricking out the ills of life to alleviate +the sense of them.--_Montaigne._ + +It may be said, almost without qualification, that true wisdom consists +in the ready and accurate perception of analogies. Without the former +quality, knowledge of the past is uninstructive; without the latter, it +is deceptive.--_Whately._ + +You read of but one wise man, and all that he knew was--that he knew +nothing.--_Congreve._ + +To be wiser than other men is to be honester than they; and strength of +mind is only courage to see and speak the truth.--_Hazlitt._ + +Knowledge comes but wisdom lingers.--_Tennyson._ + +Seize wisdom ere 'tis torment to be wise; that is, seize wisdom ere she +seizes thee.--_Young._ + +Wisdom married to immortal verse.--_Wordsworth._ + +No man can be wise on an empty stomach.--_George Eliot._ + +Among mortals second thoughts are wisest.--_Euripides._ + +~Wishes.~--The apparently irreconcilable dissimilarity between our wishes +and our means, between our hearts and this world, remains a +riddle.--_Richter._ + +~Wit.~--I have no more pleasure in hearing a man attempting wit, and +failing, than in seeing a man trying to leap over a ditch, and tumbling +into it.--_Johnson._ + +Thy wit is a very bitter sweeting; it is a most sharp +sauce.--_Shakespeare._ + +Wit must grow like fingers. If it be taken from others 'tis like plums +stuck upon blackthorns; there they are for a while, but they come to +nothing.--_Selden._ + +If he who has little wit needs a master to inform his stupidity, he who +has much frequently needs ten to keep in check his worldly wisdom, which +might otherwise, like a high-mettled charger, toss him to the +ground.--_Scriver._ + +To place wit above sense is to place superfluity above utility.--_Madame +de Maintenon._ + +~Woe.~--No scene of mortal life but teems with mortal woe.--_Walter +Scott._ + +Thus woe succeeds a woe, as wave a wave.--_Herrick._ + +So many miseries have crazed my voice, that my woe-wearied tongue is +still.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Woman.~--Who does know the bent of woman's fantasy?--_Spenser._ + +Pretty women without religion are like flowers without +perfume.--_Heinrich Heine._ + +The happiest women, like the happiest nations, have no history.--_George +Eliot._ + +To a gentleman every woman is a lady in right of her +sex.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +They never reason, or, if they do, they either draw correct inferences +from wrong premises, or wrong inferences from correct premises; and they +always poke the fire from the top.--_Bishop Whately._ + +The woman must not belong to herself; she is bound to alien destinies. +But she performs her part best who can take freely, of her own choice, +the alien to her heart, can bear and foster it with sincerity and +love.--_Richter._ + +God has placed the genius of women in their hearts; because the works of +this genius are always works of love.--_Lamartine._ + +Women for the most part do not love us. They do not choose a man because +they love him, but because it pleases them to be loved by him. They love +love of all things in the world, but there are very few men whom they +love personally.--_Alphonse Karr._ + +Woman is the Sunday of man; not his repose only, but his joy; the salt +of his life.--_Michelet._ + +Women see through and through each other; and often we most admire her +whom they most scorn.--_Charles Buxton._ + +It goes far to reconciling me to being a woman when I reflect that I am +thus in no danger of ever marrying one.--_Lady Montague._ + +Men are women's playthings; woman is the devil's.--_Victor Hugo._ + +Sing of the nature of woman, and the song shall be surely full of +variety,--old crotchets and most sweet closes,--it shall be humorous, +grave, fantastic, amorous, melancholy, sprightly,--one in all, and all +in one!--_Beaumont._ + +Her step is music and her voice is song.--_Bailey._ + +Woman is a miracle of divine contradictions.--_Michelet._ + +Woman, sister! there are some things which you do not execute as well as +your brother, man; no, nor ever will. Pardon me, if I doubt whether you +will ever produce a great poet from your choirs, or a Mozart, or a +Phidias, or a Michael Angelo, or a great philosopher, or a great +scholar. By which last is meant, not one who depends simply on an +infinite memory, but also on an infinite and electrical power of +combination; bringing together from the four winds, like the angel of +the resurrection, what else were dust from dead men's bones, into the +unity of breathing life. If you can create yourselves into any of these +grand creators, why have you not?--_De Quincey._ + +There are three things a wise man will not trust: the wind, the sunshine +of an April day, and woman's plighted faith.--_Southey._ + +Woman is mistress of the art of completely embittering the life of the +person on whom she depends.--_Goethe._ + +Women generally consider consequences in love, seldom in +resentment.--_Colton._ + +Just corporeal enough to attest humanity, yet sufficiently transparent +to let the celestial origin shine through.--_Ruffini._ + +There are female women, and there are male women.--_Charles Buxton._ + +To think of the part one little woman can play in the life of a man, so +that to renounce her may be a very good imitation of heroism, and to win +her may be a discipline!--_George Eliot._ + +Men at most differ as heaven and earth; but women, worst and best, as +heaven and hell.--_Tennyson._ + +Women of forty always fancy they have found the Fountain of Youth, and +that they remain young in the midst of the ruins of their day.--_Arsene +Houssaye._ + +A woman's hopes are woven of sunbeams; a shadow annihilates +them.--_George Eliot._ + +There remains in the faces of women who are naturally serene and +peaceful, and of those rendered so by religion, an after-spring, and +later, an after-summer, the reflex of their most beautiful +bloom.--_Richter._ + +Women see without looking; their husbands often look without +seeing.--_Louis Desnoyeas._ + +She was in the lovely bloom and spring-time of womanhood; at that age +when, if ever, angels be for God's good purposes enthroned in mortal +forms, they may be, without impiety, supposed to abide in such as hers. +Cast in so slight and exquisite a mould, so mild and gentle, so pure and +beautiful, that earth seemed not her element, nor its rough creatures +her fit companions.--_Dickens._ + +There is a woman at the beginning of all great things.--_Lamartine._ + +There is something still more to be dreaded than a Jesuit, and that is a +Jesuitess.--_Eugene Sue._ + +The honor of woman is badly guarded when it is guarded by keys and +spies. No woman is honest who does not wish to be.--_Adrian Dupuy._ + +~Words.~--There are words which sever hearts more than sharp swords; there +are words, the point of which sting the heart through the course of a +whole life.--_Fredrika Bremer._ + +Words are often everywhere as the minute-hands of the soul, more +important than even the hour-hands of action.--_Richter._ + +"The last word" is the most dangerous of infernal machines; and husband +and wife should no more fight to get it than they would struggle for the +possession of a lighted bomb-shell.--_Douglas Jerrold._ + +Words, like glass, darken whatever they do not help us to +see.--_Joubert._ + +If we use common words on a great occasion they are the more striking, +because they are felt at once to have a particular meaning, like old +banners, or every-day clothes, hung up in a sacred place.--_George +Eliot._ + +Words are but the signs and counters of knowledge, and their currency +should be strictly regulated by the capital which they +represent.--_Colton._ + +~World.~--The world is a comedy to those who think, a tragedy to those who +feel.--_Horace Walpole._ + +Creation's heir, the world, the world is mine.--_Goldsmith._ + +Contact with the world either breaks or hardens the heart.--_Chamfort._ + +Why, then the world's mine oyster, which I with sword will +open.--_Shakespeare._ + +~Worship.~--Worship as though the Deity were present. If my mind is not +engaged in my worship, it is as though I worshiped not.--_Confucius._ + +~Writing.~--Writing, after all, is a cold and coarse interpreter of +thought. How much of the imagination, how much of the intellect, +evaporates and is lost while we seek to embody it in words! Man made +language and God the genius.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +We must write as Homer wrote, not what he wrote.--_Theophile Vian._ + +~Wrong.~--There is no sort of wrong deed of which a man can bear the +punishment alone; you can't isolate yourself and say that the evil that +is in you shall not spread. Men's lives are as thoroughly blended with +each other as the air they breathe: evil spreads as necessarily as +disease.--_George Eliot._ + +My soul is sick with every day's report of wrong and outrage with which +earth is filled.--_Cowper._ + + +Y. + +~Youth.~--The canker galls the infants of the spring, too oft before their +buttons be disclosed; and in the morn and liquid dew of youth contagious +blastments are most imminent.--_Shakespeare._ + +Reckless youth makes rueful age.--_Moore._ + +In general, a man in his younger years does not easily cast off a +certain complacent self-conceit, which principally shows itself in +despising what he has himself been a little time before.--_Goethe._ + +Too young for woe, though not for tears.--_Washington Irving._ + +O youth! thou often tearest thy wings against the thorns of +voluptuousness.--_Victor Hugo._ + +O youth! ephemeral song, eternal canticle! The world may end, the +heavens fall, yet loving voices would still find an echo in the ruins of +the universe.--_Jules Janin._ + +The youthful freshness of a blameless heart.--_Washington Irving._ + +The heart of youth is reached through the senses; the senses of age are +reached through the heart.--_Retif de la Bretonne._ + +Agreeable surprises are the perquisites of youth.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + + +Z. + +~Zeal.~--I like men who are temperate and moderate in everything. An +excessive zeal for that which is good, though it may not be offensive to +me, at all events raises my wonder, and leaves me in a difficulty how I +should call it.--_Montaigne._ + +In the ardor of pursuit men soon forget the goal from which they +start.--_Schiller._ + +Experience shows that success is due less to ability than to zeal. The +winner is he who gives himself to his work, body and soul.--_Charles +Buxton._ + +Tell zeal it lacks devotion.--_Sir W. Raleigh._ + +Nothing to build and all things to destroy.--_Dryden._ + +Nothing can be fairer, or more noble, than the holy fervor of true +zeal.--_Moliere._ + +People give the name of zeal to their propensity to mischief and +violence, though it is not the cause, but their interest, that inflames +them.--_Montaigne._ + +The frenzy of nations is the statesmanship of fate.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ + +~Zealot.~--When we see an eager assailant of one of these wrongs, a +special reformer, we feel like asking him, What right have you, sir, to +your one virtue? Is virtue piecemeal?--_Emerson._ + +What I object to Scotch philosophers in general is, that they reason +upon man as they would upon a divinity; they pursue truth without caring +if it be useful truth.--_Sydney Smith._ + +I have never known a trader in philanthropy who was not wrong in his +head or heart somewhere or other.--_Coleridge._ + +They have an idol, to which they consecrate themselves high-priests, and +deem it holy work to offer sacrifices of whatever is most +precious.--_Hawthorne._ + + * * * * * + +The end crowns all; and that old common arbitrator, Time, will one day +end all.--_Shakespeare._ + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearls of Thought, by Maturin M. 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