151. There
is always a first brave person who breaks step with the stam-peding masses fleeing in panic, who pauses to help another to his feet,creating his own eye in the storm, The stuff of heroes is made, forged in the midst of tragedy, in the blink of an eye.
152. Money
is like muck, not good except it be spread.
153. It
is impossible to defeat an ignorant man in argument.
154. A handful of common sense
is worth bushel of learning.
155. Life
is made up of sobs, sniffles and smiles with sniffes predomi-nating.
156. Propagada
is the art of persuading others of what one does not beliver oneself.
157. It
is a good horse that never stumbles; and a good wife that never grumbles.
158. He
is not a wise man who cannot play the fool on occasion.
159. Painting
is silent poetry,(www.Sentencedict.com) and poetry is a apeaking picture.
160. Poverty on an old man’s back
is a heavy burden.
161. We never know the worth (or value) of water till the well
is dry.
162. Expericence
is a hard teacher because she gives the test first, the lesson afterwards.
163. What
is there sadder under the sun than a day that is gone and notyhing done.
164. He who will not reason,
is a bigot; he who cannot is a fool ;and he who dares not is a slave.
165. The more the well
is used, the more water it gives.
166. Marriaage
is the bloom or blight of all men's happiness.
167. He who hath good health
is young, and he is rich who owes nothing.
168. It
is easy to learn something about everything, but difficult to learn everything about anything.
169. A man, like a watch,
is to be valued by his manner of going.
170. Habit
is habit, and not to be flung out of the window by any man, but coaxed downstairs a step a time.
171. The tongue
is not made of steel, yet it cuts.
172. A word
is no arrow, but it can pierce the heart.
173. It
is no good hen that cackles in your house and lays in another’s.
174. A thief
is a thief, whether he steals a diamond or a cucumber.
175. In science, the importance
is something that has been reached out, not the researcherhimself.
176. The moon
is a moon whether it shines or not.
177. Love
is sweet in the beginning, but sour in the end.
178. Satire
is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover ev-erybody's face their own.
179. The tongue
is but three inches long, yet it can kill a man six feet high.
180. Genius
is formed in quiet, character in the strenm of life.