| Robert Christy, comp. Proverbs, Maxims and Phrases of All Ages. 1887. | | | | Hatred |
| | | Hate knows no age but death. | 1 |
| Hate no one; hate their vices not themselves. | 2 |
| Hatred is blind as well as love. | 3 |
| Hatred is self-punishment. Hosea Ballou. | 4 |
| Hatred renewed is worse than at first. Italian. | 5 |
| How apt men are to hate those they injure. Fielding. | 6 |
| I like a good hater. Dr. Johnson. | 7 |
| It is human nature to hate him whom you have injured. Tacitus. | 8 |
| Let them hate while they fear. Cicero. | 9 |
| Many will hate you if you love yourself. Latin. | 10 |
| Men hate sometimes those who have obliged them and cease to hate those who have injured them. French. | 11 |
| The greatest hate springs from the greatest love. | 12 |
| To hate whom we have injured is a propensity of the human mind. Tacitus. | 13 |
| We always hate those we have wronged. | 14 |
| When our hatred is violent, it sinks us even below those we hate. Rochefoucauld. | 15 | | |
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