IN PASSING.
Friendship often ends in love, but love' in friendship, never. —Colton. One understands only the women whom one does not love.—Michael Arlen. Description, is always a bore, both to the describer and the describee.—Disraeli. The stoical scheme of supplying our wants by lopping off our desires is like cutting off our feet when we want shoes —Swift. Men judge on rational grounds; the women's judgment is her love; where she does not love she has judged.— Schiller Remember that to change thy mind, and to follow him that sets thee right, is to be none the less the free agent that thou wast before.—Marcus Amelias What people actually think rather than what they ought to think if they were mathematically, philosophically, or econo mically minded, is of primary importance. —Sir Josiah Stamp. The most artful manoeuvre iis to nretend to fall into the trap that is laid for us; for we are never so easily deceived as when we think we are deceiving others.—La Rochefoucauld.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19502, 4 December 1926, Page 7 (Supplement)
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167IN PASSING. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19502, 4 December 1926, Page 7 (Supplement)
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