WORDS OF THE WISE.
Nothing is achieved before it is thoroughly attempted.-—Sir Philip Sidney. All love that is worthy of tlie name now and forever uplilts.—G. Macdonald .
Fine patriotic love is not a vindictive passion; it is a magnanimous one. Aubrey do Vore. That wick comes after ever conforms to that which has gone.—Marcus Aurelius. A tyrant is but like a king upon a stage, a man in a visor, and acting the part of a king in a play; lie is not really a king.—Alilton. The longest time that man may live Bears no proportion to eternity. —•,'s. Knowles.
Know how to give without hesitation, how to lose without regret, how to acquire without meanness. —George Sand.
For a home to he happy there must bo much love and great- loving-kind-ness in it. Loveless and austere people are the banc of home. Errors, like straws, upon the surface flow ; He who would search for pearls must dive below. —D ryden. Countless mistakes bang about the minds of men; and it is a difficult thing to discover what now and also in the end is best to happen to a man.—Pindarus.
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Bibliographic details
Gisborne Times, Volume XLV, Issue 3978, 10 July 1915, Page 7
Word Count
191WORDS OF THE WISE. Gisborne Times, Volume XLV, Issue 3978, 10 July 1915, Page 7
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