|
#2641 | | A quarrel is quickly settled when deserted by one party; there is no battle unless there be two. -- Seneca
|
|
#2642 | | Nothing ever becomes real till it is experienced -- even a proverb is no proverb to you till your life has illustrated it. -- John Keats
|
|
#2643 | | The fancy is indeed no other than a mode of memory emancipated from the order of space and time. -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
|
|
#2644 | | What we anticipate seldom occurs; what we least expect generally happens. -- Bengamin Disraeli
|
|
#2645 | | Nothing in progression can rest on its original plan. We may as well think of rocking a grown man in the cradle of an infant. -- Edmund Burke
|
|
#2646 | | For every problem there is one solution which is simple, neat, and wrong. -- H. L. Mencken
|
|
#2647 | | Don't tell me how hard you work. Tell me how much you get done. -- James J. Ling
|
|
#2648 | | One friend in a lifetime is much; two are many; three are hardly possible. Friendship needs a certain parallelism of life, a community of thought, a rivalry of aim. -- Henry Brook Adams
|
|
#2649 | | Remember thee Ay, thou poor ghost while memory holds a seat In this distracted globe. Remember thee! Yea, from the table of my memory I'll wipe away all trivial fond records, All saws of books, all forms, all pressures past, That youth and observation copied there. Hamlet, I : v : 95 William Shakespeare
|
|
#2650 | | Obviously, a man's judgement cannot be better than the information on which he has based it. Give him the truth and he may still go wrong when he has the chance to be right, but give him no news or present him only with distorted and incomplete data, with ignorant, sloppy or biased reporting, with propaganda and deliberate falsehoods, and you destroy his whole reasoning processes, and make him something less than a man. -- Arthur Hays Sulzberger
|
|
|
... ... |