REFLECTIONS
..,.)!.•./■» —"—- m :■ - ; ' A certain class of novels may witl ! propriety be called fables.—Whatley. » ' »"" ■;.•..■.» A woman would be in despair if Nature had formed 1 ! her aa fashioi maltes her appear.-fMUS. d? nasse. -.■.-• % h To succeed in the world, it is mticl more necessary to possess the penetra tion to discover who is a fool than tc discover who is a clever man.—€ato. ■ ''.•.'■••■.' .-•.' • Too many individuals are like Shakespeare's definition of "echo"— babbling gossips of the air,—H. W Shaw. . s•. r ■: . If,the inner life of our fashionable women were know, how few woulc. deserve the title of lady.—nJamei Merrick, - ' ■ ■ ' ' » •».'.■'• " 9: An imposing air should always be taken as .an evidence of imposition Dignity is often a vfeil between us and the real truth of things.—Whipple. / .-••■. ' • .•'■'■•■. A miser grows rich by seeming *p6or: an extravagant man grows poor by seeming rich.—Shonstone.
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Wairarapa Age, 29 March 1920, Page 4
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139REFLECTIONS Wairarapa Age, 29 March 1920, Page 4
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