MondayDec 30, 2024
Quotes: 53419 Authors: 9969
Thomas Fuller (1608 - August 16, 1661) was an English churchman and historian.
Fools names, like fools faces, Are often seen in public places.
He that would have fruit must climb the tree.
He that will not sail till all dangers are over must never put to sea.
Riches rather enlarge than satisfy appetites.
One that would have the fruit must climb the tree.
The Pyramids themselves, doting with age, have forgotten the names of their founders.
If an ass goes traveling he will not come home a horse.
A man is not good or bad for one action.
He was one of a lean body and visage, as if his eager soul, biting for anger at the clog of his body, desired to fret a passage through it.
He that will not be merciful to his beast is a beast himself.
Lavishness is not generosity.
He who cures a disease may be the skillfullest, but he that prevents it is the safest physician.
Their heads sometimes so little that there is no room for wit; sometimes so long that there is no wit for so much room.
He does not believe that does not live according to his belief.
Nothing costs so much as what is given us.
If you have one true Friend, you have more than your Share comes to.
No man can be happy without a friend, nor be sure of his friend until he is unhappy.
All things are difficult before they are easy.
The number of malefactors authorizes not the crime.
One that will not plead that cause wherein his tongue must be confuted by his conscience.
Associate with men of judgment, for judgment is found in conversation, and we make another man's judgment ours by frequenting his company.
'Tis skill, not strength, that governs a ship. Thomas Fuller, M.D.
They that worship God merely from fear, Would worship the devil too, if he appear.
A woman, a dog and a walnut tree, the more you beat them, the better they be.
It is a silly game where nobody wins.
Today is yesterdays pupil.
To smell to a turf of fresh earth is wholesome for the body; no less are thoughts of mortality cordial to the soul.
She commandeth her husband, in any equal matter, by constant obeying him.
Good is not good where better is expected.
He that sips of many arts, drinks of none.
A slip of the foot may be soon recovered; but that of the tongue perhaps never.
A little skill in antiquity inclines a man to Popery: but depth in that study brings him about again to our religion.
He is rich that is satisfied.
All rivers do what they can for the sea.
You cannot repent too soon, because you do not know how soon it may be too late.
A proverb is much matter decocted into a few words.
He is poor indeed that can promise nothing.
It is not poor that hath not much, but he that craves much.
Let him who expects one class of society to prosper in the highest degree, while the other is in distress, try whether one side of his face can smile while the other is pinched.
We have all forgot more than we remember.
Measure not men by Sundays, without regarding what they do all the week after.
He lives long that lives well, and time misspent is not lived, but lost.
Light, Gods eldest daughter, is a principal beauty in a building.
Of Edward Grindall: Worldly wealth he cared not for, desiring only to make both ends meet.
Those who are surly and imperious to their inferiors are generally humble, flattering and cringing to their superiors.
Honest men fear neither the light nor the dark.
Haste and rashness are storms and tempests, breaking and wrecking business; but nimbleness is a full, fair wind, blowing it with speed to the haven.
He is happy that knoweth not himself to be otherwise
A great man will not trample upon a worm, nor sneak to an emperor.
Believe and live according to belief.
A good garden may have some weeds.
There is a scarcity of friendship, but not of friends.
It is best to live as friends with those in time with whom we would be to all eternity.
The lion is not so fierce as painted.
The first faults are theirs that commit them; The second theirs that permit them.
Fame sometimes hath created something of nothing.
Drawing near her death, she sent most pious thoughts as harbingers to heaven; and her soul saw a glimpse of happiness through the chinks of her sickness-broken body.
Lord, often have I thought to myself, I will sin but this one sin more, and then I will repent of it, and of all the rest of my sins together. So foolish was I, and ignorant. As if I should be more able to pay my debts when I owe more: or as if I should say, I will wound my friend once again, and then I will lovingly shake hands with him but what if my friend will not shake hands with me?
All doors open to courtesy.
A quiet conscience sleeps in thunder.
Often the cockloft is empty in those whom Nature hath built many stories high.
Birth is the beginning of death.
But our captain counts the image of God nevertheless his image cut in ebony as if done in ivory, and in the blackest Moors he sees the representation of the King of Heaven.
He that is busy is tempted by but one devil; he that is idle, by a legion.
A book that is shut is but a block.
A danger foreseen is half avoided.
Anger is one of the sinews of the Soul; he that wants it hath a maimed mind.
No cross, no crown.
Adversity introduces a man to himself.
Absence sharpens love, presence strengthens it.
They that marry ancient people, merely in expectation to bury them, hang themselves in hope that one will come and cut the halter.
He knows little who will tell his wife all he knows.
All fame is dangerous: Good, bringeth Envy; Bad, Shame.
Act nothing in a furious passion. It's putting to sea in a storm.
A good life is the only religion.
A fox should not be of the jury at a goose's trial.
Choose a wife by your ear than your eye.
It is the bridle and the spur that make a good horse.
Pride, perceiving humility honorable, often borrows her cloak.
Search others for their virtues, and thyself for thy vices.
Trust not in him that seems a saint.
Suspicion may be no fault, but showing it may be a great one.
The more wit the less courage.
Purchase not friends by gifts; when thou ceasest to give, such will cease to love.
Venture not to the utmost bounds of even lawful pleasures; the limits of good and evil join.
What a day may bring, a day may take away.
When worthy men fall out, only one of them may be faulty first; but if the strife continue long, both commonly Become guilty.
Learning hath gained most by those books by which the printers have lost.
Contentment consisteth not in adding more fuel, But in taking away some fire.
Pride will spit in pride's face.
He that fears you present, will hate you absent.
Choose such pleasures as recreate much and cost little.
He that falls into sin is a man; that grieves at it may be a saint; that boasteth of it is a devil.
First get an absolute conquest over thyself, and then thou wilt easily govern thy wife.
One year of Joy, another of Comfort, the rest of Content, make the married Life happy.
If you have knowledge, let others light their candles At it.
If you have no enemies, it is a sign fortune has forgot you.
Fame is the echo of actions, resounding them to the world, save that the echo repeats only the last part, but fame relates all, and often more than all.
Never any weary traveler complained that he came too soon to his journey's end.
Nature hath appointed twilight as a bridge to pass us out of day into night.
If the wicked flourished, and thou suffer, be not discouraged; they are fatted for destruction, thou Art dieted for health.
Music is nothing else but wild sounds civilized into time And tune.
Moderation is the silken string running through the pearl-chain of all virtues.
Let not thy Will roar, when thy Power can but whisper.
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