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Multum in Parvo.

' Patience is the key ot content.—Mohammed. Command is anxiety; obedience, ease. Paley. \ Merry larks are ploughmen's clocks.— Shakspere. After victory strap tbo helmeb tighter.— Japanese. Opinion is a medium between knowledge and ignorance.—Plato. The sure way to miss success is to miae the opportunity.—Chasles. It ie the penalty of fame thab a man tnusb ever keep rieing.—Chapin. Minds which never rest are eubjecb to many digressions.—Joubert. The pursuit even of the best things ought to be calm and tranquil—Cicero. ■ There are some people who give with the air of refusal.—Queen Christiana. The greatest events dawn with no more noise than the morning star makes in rising. —Beecher. Fiction is a pofcenb agent for good—in the hands of the good—Md'tne Necker. The shortest way to do many things is to do only one thing at once.—Smiles. Fo3ter the beautiful, and every hour thou callesb new flowers to birth.—Schiller. He shall be immortal who liveth till ho be, stoned by one withoub faulb.—Fuller. A cheerful face is nearly as good for an invalid as healthy weather.—Franklin. Money often costs too much, and power and pleasure are not cheap.—Emerson.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS18950907.2.51.26

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume XXVI, Issue 214, 7 September 1895, Page 12

Word Count
189

Multum in Parvo. Auckland Star, Volume XXVI, Issue 214, 7 September 1895, Page 12

Multum in Parvo. Auckland Star, Volume XXVI, Issue 214, 7 September 1895, Page 12