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| 1 |
| As men, we are all equal in the presence of death. |
| Maxim 1. |
| 2 |
| To do two things at once is to do neither. |
| Maxim 7. |
| 3 |
| We are interested in others when they are interested in us. 1 |
| Maxim 16. |
| 4 |
| Every one excels in something in which another fails. |
| Maxim 17. |
| 5 |
| The anger of lovers renews the strength of love. 2 |
| Maxim 24. |
| 6 |
| A god could hardly love and be wise. 3 |
| Maxim 25. |
| 7 |
| The loss which is unknown is no loss at all. 4 |
| Maxim 38. |
| 8 |
| He sleeps well who knows not that he sleeps ill. |
| Maxim 77. |
| 9 |
| A good reputation is more valuable than money. 5 |
| Maxim 108. |
| 10 |
| It is well to moor your bark with two anchors. |
| Maxim 119. |
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|
| 11 |
| Learn to see in anothers calamity the ills which you should avoid. 6 |
| Maxim 120. |
| 12 |
| An agreeable companion on a journey is as good as a carriage. |
| Maxim 143. |
| 13 |
| Society in shipwreck is a comfort to all. 7 |
| Maxim 144. |
| 14 |
| Many receive advice, few profit by it. |
| Maxim 149. |
| 15 |
| Patience is a remedy for every sorrow. 8 |
| Maxim 170. |
| 16 |
| While we stop to think, we often miss our opportunity. |
| Maxim 185. |
| 17 |
| Whatever you can lose, you should reckon of no account. |
| Maxim 191. |
| 18 |
| Even a single hair casts its shadow. |
| Maxim 228. |
| 19 |
| It is sometimes expedient to forget who we are. |
| Maxim 233. |
| 20 |
| We may with advantage at times forget what we know. |
| Maxim 234. |
| 21 |
| You should hammer your iron when it is glowing hot. 9 |
| Maxim 262. |
| 22 |
| What is left when honour is lost? |
| Maxim 265. |
| 23 |
| A fair exterior is a silent recommendation. |
| Maxim 267. |
| 24 |
| Fortune is not satisfied with inflicting one calamity. |
| Maxim 274. |
| 25 |
| When Fortune is on our side, popular favour bears her company. |
| Maxim 275. |
| 26 |
| When Fortune flatters, she does it to betray. |
| Maxim 277. |
| 27 |
| Fortune is like glass,the brighter the glitter, the more easily broken. |
| Maxim 280. |
| 28 |
| It is more easy to get a favour from fortune than to keep it. |
| Maxim 282. |
| 29 |
| His own character is the arbiter of every ones fortune. 10 |
| Maxim 283. |
| 30 |
| There are some remedies worse than the disease. 11 |
| Maxim 301. |
| 31 |
| Powerful indeed is the empire of habit. 12 |
| Maxim 305. |
| 32 |
| Amid a multitude of projects, no plan is devised. 13 |
| Maxim 319. |
| 33 |
| It is easy for men to talk one thing and think another. |
| Maxim 322. |
| 34 |
| When two do the same thing, it is not the same thing after all. |
| Maxim 338. |
| 35 |
| A cock has great influence on his own dunghill. 14 |
| Maxim 357. |
| 36 |
| Any one can hold the helm when the sea is calm. 15 |
| Maxim 358. |
| 37 |
| No tears are shed when an enemy dies. |
| Maxim 376. |
| 38 |
| The bow too tensely strung is easily broken. |
| Maxim 388. |
| 39 |
| Treat your friend as if he might become an enemy. |
| Maxim 401. |
| 40 |
| No pleasure endures unseasoned by variety. 16 |
| Maxim 406. |
| 41 |
| The judge is condemned when the criminal is acquitted. 17 |
| Maxim 407. |
| 42 |
| Practice is the best of all instructors. 18 |
| Maxim 439. |
| 43 |
| He who is bent on doing evil can never want occasion. |
| Maxim 459. |
| 44 |
| One mans wickedness may easily become all mens curse. |
| Maxim 463. |
| 45 |
| Never find your delight in anothers misfortune. |
| Maxim 467. |
| 46 |
| It is a bad plan that admits of no modification. |
| Maxim 469. |
| 47 |
| It is better to have a little than nothing. |
| Maxim 484. |
| 48 |
| It is an unhappy lot which finds no enemies. |
| Maxim 499. |
| 49 |
| The fear of death is more to be dreaded than death itself. 19 |
| Maxim 511. |
| 50 |
| A rolling stone gathers no moss. 20 |
| Maxim 524. |
| 51 |
| Never promise more than you can perform. |
| Maxim 528. |
| 52 |
| A wise man never refuses anything to necessity. 21 |
| Maxim 540. |
| 53 |
| No one should be judge in his own cause. 22 |
| Maxim 545. |
| 54 |
| Necessity knows no law except to conquer. 23 |
| Maxim 553. |
| 55 |
| Nothing can be done at once hastily and prudently. 24 |
| Maxim 557. |
| 56 |
| We desire nothing so much as what we ought not to have. |
| Maxim 559. |
| 57 |
| It is only the ignorant who despise education. |
| Maxim 571. |
| 58 |
| Do not turn back when you are just at the goal. 25 |
| Maxim 580. |
| 59 |
| It is not every question that deserves an answer. |
| Maxim 581. |
| 60 |
| No man is happy who does not think himself so. 26 |
| Maxim 584. |
| 61 |
| Never thrust your own sickle into anothers corn. 27 |
| Maxim 593. |
| 62 |
| You cannot put the same shoe on every foot. |
| Maxim 596. |
| 63 |
| He bids fair to grow wise who has discovered that he is not so. |
| Maxim 598. |
| 64 |
| A guilty conscience never feels secure. 28 |
| Maxim 617. |
| 65 |
| Every day should be passed as if it were to be our last. 29 |
| Maxim 633. |
| 66 |
| Familiarity breeds contempt. 30 |
| Maxim 640. |
| 67 |
| Money alone sets all the world in motion. |
| Maxim 656. |
| 68 |
| He who has plenty of pepper will pepper his cabbage. |
| Maxim 673. |
| 69 |
| You should go to a pear-tree for pears, not to an elm. 31 |
| Maxim 674. |
| 70 |
| It is a very hard undertaking to seek to please everybody. |
| Maxim 675. |
| 71 |
| We should provide in peace what we need in war. 32 |
| Maxim 709. |
| 72 |
| Look for a tough wedge for a tough log. |
| Maxim 723. |
| 73 |
| How happy the life unembarrassed by the cares of business! |
| Maxim 725. |
| 74 |
| They who plough the sea do not carry the winds in their hands. 33 |
| Maxim 759. |
| 75 |
| He gets through too late who goes too fast. |
| Maxim 767. |
| 76 |
| In every enterprise consider where you would come out. 34 |
| Maxim 777. |
| 77 |
| It takes a long time to bring excellence to maturity. |
| Maxim 780. |
| 78 |
| The highest condition takes rise in the lowest. |
| Maxim 781. |
| 79 |
| It matters not what you are thought to be, but what you are. |
| Maxim 785. |
| 80 |
| No one knows what he can do till he tries. |
| Maxim 786. |
| 81 |
| The next day is never so good as the day before. |
| Maxim 815. |
| 82 |
| He is truly wise who gains wisdom from anothers mishap. |
| Maxim 825. |
| 83 |
| Good health and good sense are two of lifes greatest blessings. |
| Maxim 827. |
| 84 |
| It matters not how long you live, but how well. |
| Maxim 829. |
| 85 |
| It is vain to look for a defence against lightning. 35 |
| Maxim 835. |
| 86 |
| No good man ever grew rich all at once. 36 |
| Maxim 837. |
| 87 |
| Everything is worth what its purchaser will pay for it. 37 |
| Maxim 847. |
| 88 |
| It is better to learn late than never. 38 |
| Maxim 864. |
| 89 |
| Better be ignorant of a matter than half know it. 39 |
| Maxim 865. |
| 90 |
| Better use medicines at the outset than at the last moment. |
| Maxim 866. |
| 91 |
| Prosperity makes friends, adversity tries them. |
| Maxim 872. |
| 92 |
| Whom Fortune wishes to destroy she first makes mad. 40 |
| Maxim 911. |
| 93 |
| Let a fool hold his tongue and he will pass for a sage. |
| Maxim 914. |
| 94 |
| He knows not when to be silent who knows not when to speak. |
| Maxim 930. |
| 95 |
| You need not hang up the ivy-branch over the wine that will sell. 41 |
| Maxim 968. |
| 96 |
| It is a consolation to the wretched to have companions in misery. 42 |
| Maxim 995. |
| 97 |
| Unless degree is preserved, the first place is safe for no one. 43 |
| Maxim 1042. |
| 98 |
| Confession of our faults is the next thing to innocency. |
| Maxim 1060. |
| 99 |
| I have often regretted my speech, never my silence. 44 |
| Maxim 1070. |
| 100 |
| Keep the golden mean 45 between saying too much and too little. |
| Maxim 1072. |
| 101 |
| Speech is a mirror of the soul: as a man speaks, so is he. |
| Maxim 1073. |
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Note 1. We always like those who admire us.Francis, Duc de La Rochefoucauld: Maxim 294. [back] |
Note 2. See Edwards, Quotation 1. [back] |
Note 3. It is impossible to love and be wise.Francis Bacon: Of Love (quoted). [back] |
Note 4. See Shakespeare, Othello, Quotation 53. [back] |
Note 5. A good name is better than riches.Cervantes: Don Quixote, part ii. book ii. chap. xxxiii. [back] |
Note 6. The best plan is, as the common proverb has it, to profit by the folly of others.Pliny the Elder: Natural History, book xviii. sect. 31. [back] |
Note 7. See Maxim 995. [back] |
Note 8. See Plautus, Quotation 10. [back] |
Note 9. See Heywood, Quotation 12. [back] |
Note 10. See Bacon, Quotation 27. [back] |
Note 11. See Bacon, Quotation 16.
Marius said, I see the cure is not worth the pain.Plutarch: Life of Caius Marius. [back] |
Note 12. Habit is second nature.Montaigne: Essays, book iii. chap. x. [back] |
Note 13. He that hath many irons in the fire, some of them will cool.Hazlitt: English Proverbs. [back] |
Note 14. See Heywood, Quotation 60. [back] |
Note 15. The sea being smooth, How many shallow bauble boats dare sail Upon her patient breast. William Shakespeare: Troilus and Cressida, act i. sc. 3. [back] |
Note 16. See Cowper, Quotation 63. [back] |
Note 17. Judex damnatur cum nocens absolvitur,the motto adopted for the Edinburgh Review. [back] |
Note 18. Practice makes perfect.Proverb. [back] |
Note 19. See Shakespeare, Measure for Measure, Quotation 22. [back] |
Note 20. See Heywood, Quotation 61. [back] |
Note 21. Yet do I hold that mortal foolish who strives against the stress of necessity.Euripides: Hercules Furens, line 281. [back] |
Note 22. It is not permitted to the most equitable of men to be a judge in his own cause.Blaise Pascal: Thoughts, chap. iv. 1. [back] |
Note 23. See Milton, Quotation 106. [back] |
Note 24. See Chaucer, Quotation 24. [back] |
Note 25. When men are arrived at the goal, they should not turn back.Plutarch: Of the Training of Children. [back] |
Note 26. No man can enjoy happiness without thinking that he enjoys it.Samuel Johnson: The Rambler, p. 150. [back] |
Note 27. Did thrust as now in others corn his sickle.Du Bartas: Divine Weekes and Workes, part ii. Second Weeke.
Not presuming to put my sickle in another mans corn.Nicholas Yonge: Musica Transalpini. Epistle Dedicatory. 1588. [back] |
Note 28. See Shakespeare, Hamlet, Quotation 109. [back] |
Note 29. Thou wilt find rest from vain fancies if thou doest every act in life as though it were thy last.Marcus Aurelius Antoninus: Meditations, ii. 5. [back] |
Note 30. See Shakespeare, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Quotation 7. [back] |
Note 31. You may as well expect pears from an elm.Cervantes: Don Quixote, part ii. book ii. chap. xl. [back] |
Note 32. See Washington, Quotation 2. [back] |
Note 33. The pilot cannot mitigate the billows or calm the winds.Plutarch: Of the Tranquillity of the Mind. [back] |
Note 34. In every affair consider what precedes and what follows, and then undertake it.Epictetus: That everything is to be undertaken with circumspection, chap. xv. [back] |
Note 35. Syrus was not a contemporary of Franklin. [back] |
Note 36. No just man ever became rich all at once.Menander: Fragment. [back] |
Note 37. See Butler, Quotation 46. [back] |
Note 38. See Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, Quotation 58. [back] |
Note 39. See Bacon, Quotation 18. [back] |
Note 40. See Dryden, Quotation 25. [back] |
Note 41. See Shakespeare, As You Like It, Quotation 75. [back] |
Note 42. See Maxim 144. [back] |
Note 43. See Shakespeare, Troilus and Cressida, Quotation 2. [back] |
Note 44. Simonides said that he never repented that he held his tongue, but often that he had spoken.Plutarch: Rules for the Preservation of Health. [back] |
Note 45. See Cowper, Quotation 112. [back] |
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