EPIGRAMS WISE AND WITTY.
Be rich in virtue though in goods you are poor. i There is in all men a longing to hour and know God. What wo know is very little to what we do not know. .. . j It. is better to acknowledge our faults than to boast of our.merits. ... iy. Fervent, well-directed prayers are the great artillery of Heaven. - , j Trust that man in nothing who has not a conscience in everything. j If a doctor who. has been twenty-five i years in practice is not a judge of men, he \ has probably mistaken his vocation.—The ‘ Hospital.’ It is much, easier; to he critical'than to be correct. From labor health, from'health contentment springs. I Judge not your neighbor till you are'nil his circumstances. A thing is dangerous only when you stop to think that it is- ■ * >! i '-' l Patience lies at' thd'root of aIT las well as of all powdrs. :/ . '' r , ' Slight the little" injuries vou receive, affif they will become none at all. Rest in the Lord' and wait patiently for and He shall give thee the desires of thy heart.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 13091, 26 October 1908, Page 7
Word Count
185EPIGRAMS WISE AND WITTY. Evening Star, Issue 13091, 26 October 1908, Page 7
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