Proverbial wisdom, with preface by B. JerroldWilliam Blanchard Jerrold 1874 |
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Page 9
... follow a sorrowful morning . A kindly word cools anger . A lass that has mony wooers aft wails the warst . A leaky ship needs muckle pumping . A leal heart never lied . A lie begets a lie till they come to generations . A light - heeled ...
... follow a sorrowful morning . A kindly word cools anger . A lass that has mony wooers aft wails the warst . A leaky ship needs muckle pumping . A leal heart never lied . A lie begets a lie till they come to generations . A light - heeled ...
Page 29
... follow . Farthest frae the kirk aye soonest at it . Fat housekeepers make lean executors . Fate leads the willing , but drives the stubborn . Faults are thick where love is thin . Faults of ignorance are excusable only where the ...
... follow . Farthest frae the kirk aye soonest at it . Fat housekeepers make lean executors . Fate leads the willing , but drives the stubborn . Faults are thick where love is thin . Faults of ignorance are excusable only where the ...
Page 30
... follow thee . Follow the river and you will get to sea . Follow the wise few rather than the vulgar many . 30 PROVERBIAL WISDOM .
... follow thee . Follow the river and you will get to sea . Follow the wise few rather than the vulgar many . 30 PROVERBIAL WISDOM .
Page 31
William Blanchard Jerrold. Follow the wise few rather than the vulgar many . Follow virtue in youth and you will fly sin in old age . Folly is the product of all countries and ages . Foolish pity spoils a city . Fools and obstinate men ...
William Blanchard Jerrold. Follow the wise few rather than the vulgar many . Follow virtue in youth and you will fly sin in old age . Folly is the product of all countries and ages . Foolish pity spoils a city . Fools and obstinate men ...
Page 39
... follows nature is never out of his way . He that forgets to pray bids not himself good morrow nor good day . He that gets an estate will probably never spend it . He that gives his goods before he be dead , take up a mallet and knock ...
... follows nature is never out of his way . He that forgets to pray bids not himself good morrow nor good day . He that gets an estate will probably never spend it . He that gives his goods before he be dead , take up a mallet and knock ...
Common terms and phrases
auld beauty better Beware bird BLANCHARD JERROLD canna comes counsel danger deceived devil Dinna drink DUNN AND WRIGHT enemy fair fat kitchen fault fear folly fool fortune frae friendship Friezland gang give GLASGOW goes gold greatest gude hame hang happy haud heart heaven honest honour hope JOHN MENZIES keep kens knave knows lawyer lies long live looking-glass Love thy neighbour mair man's Marriage marry maun maxims mind misfortune mony morning naething nane neighbours never night old fox ower owls to Athens pleasure plough praise PROVERBIAL WISDOM purse rich Rolling stones servant SIR WALTER SCOTT speak There's things thinks thou thyself tongue trust truth twice vice virtue weel wife wind winna Wisdom rides wise wolf words worse worth young
Popular passages
Page 78 - And again, Pride is as loud a beggar as Want, and a great deal more saucy. When you have bought one fine thing, you must buy ten more, that your appearance may be all of a piece ; but Poor Dick says, It is easier to suppress the first desire, than to satisfy all that follow it.
Page 38 - If you have no enemies, it is a sign fortune has forgot you. If you have one true friend, you have more than your share.
Page 39 - Certainly, in taking revenge, a man is but even with his enemy ; but in passing it over he is superior : for it is a prince's part to pardon. And Solomon, I am sure, saith, It is the glory of a man to pass by an offence?
Page 67 - There is no reputation so clear but a slanderer may stain it. There is no short cut of a way, without some ill way. There is no such flatterer as a man's self. There is no sufficient recompense for an unjust slander.
Page 65 - There are some solitary wretches, who seem to have left the rest of mankind, only as Eve left Adam, to meet the devil in private. The vanity of human life is, like a river, constantly passing away, and yet constantly coming on.
Page 70 - Tis easy to fall into a trap, but hard to get out again. 'Tis easier to avoid a fault than acquire perfection.
Page 51 - No man can be happy without a friend, nor be sure of his friend till he is unhappy.
Page 72 - To travel safely through the world, a man must have a falcon's eye, an ass's ears, an ape's face, a merchant's words, a camel's back, a hog's mouth, and a hart's legs.
Page 60 - the best laid schemes o' mice and men gang aft a'-gley." The Captain's hopes were totally frustrated.