Life and Literature

Chapter 13

Who, knowing nothing, claim to know it all.

What each intends, or will intend, they know.

What in the queen"s ear the king said, they know.

What never was, or is--they know it, though!

--_Plautus._

170

The would-be buyer, alas! so often depreciates.

171

The road to "bye and bye" leads to the town of never.

--_Spanish._

C

172

CALAMITY.

Do not insult calamity: It is a barb"rous grossness, to lay on The weight of scorn, where heavy misery Too much already weighs men"s fortunes down.

--_Shakespeare._

173

I can"t, does nothing.

I"ll try, effects miracles.

I will, accomplishes everything.

--_Unknown._

174

Among the ancient warriors it was a custom, when any one did a meritorious action, to say: "That will be a feather in his cap."

175

Whom the cap fits, let him wear it.

--_Latin._

176

Capacity without education is deplorable.

--_Saadi._

177

As to cards and dice, I think the safest and best way is never to learn to play them, and so be incapacitated for those dangerous temptations and encroaching wasters of time.

178

Cards were at first for benefits designed, Sent to amuse, not to enslave the mind.

179

To carry care to bed is to sleep with a pack on your back.

--_Haliburton._

180

Put off thy cares with thy clothes; so shall thy rest strengthen thy labour; and so shall thy labour sweeten thy rest.

181

To win a cat, and lose a cow. (Consequences of litigation).

--_Persian._

182

Deliberate well on what you can do but once.

183

A life of caution is overpaid by the avoidance of one serious misfortune.

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