Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 November 1891 — Wise Sayings. [ARTICLE]

Wise Sayings.

Tiie love of nsooey is the root of* ail evil.—Paul. The best hearts are ever the bravest —Laurence Sterne. Night brings, out stars, as sorrow shows us truths.—P. J. Bailey. A prince who ialleth out with laws breoketb with his best friends—Seville. A single grateful thought towardi heaven is a most effective prayer.—Lessing. The gem cannot be polfsned without* friction, not the man perfected without totals. He who has not a good memory should! never take upon him the trade of lying! —Mental gee The true danger Is when liberty is nibbled awav for expedients andi by parts—Burke Moderation is the silken string; cuening through the pearl chains of all virtues—Fuller. The sufficiency of my merit is to know that my me: it Is not suffiaieuk — Saint Augustine. I never knew a man who could not boar the misfortunes of another perfectly like a Christian —swift. No cord or cable can draw s® forcibly or b nd so fast as love cam do with only a single thread—Burton. As the fire-fly only shines when oo the wing, so it is with the human mind —when at rest it darkens A miser grows rich by seeming poor; an extravagant nan grows poor by seeming rich —SUeu&toae. Mirth should be the embroidery of conversation, not th ; web and wtt the ornament of th ■ mind, not the fu*»iture. SiNGi i.Authat the word misery so o f te% expressive es one who is rich, bhou’d, in, its origin, signify one that h