Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 14, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 April 1895 — MULTUM IN PARVO. [ARTICLE]
MULTUM IN PARVO.
Let the end try the man.—Shakspeare. Poverty is the sixth sense.—German proverb. Light is the task whore many share the toil.—Homer. 11l company makes this earth a hell. —Omar Khayyam. Praise undeserved is satire in disguise.—Broadhurst. Those who would make us feel must feel themselves.—Churchill. Benevolence is allied to few vicus: selfishness to fewer virtues.—Home. I have fire-proof perennial enjoyments, called employments.—Richter. I know of nothing sublime which is not some modification of power.— Burke. The desires and longings of man are vast as eternity, and they point him to it.—Tryon Edwards. The little Shakspeare in the maid en’s heart makes Romeo of a plowboy on his cart— Emerson. The arrogant man does but blast the blessings of life and swagger away his own enjoyments.—Collier. Never rail at the world; it is just as we make It. We see not the flower if we sow not the seed.- Swain. Drunkenness places man as much below the level of the brutes as reason elevates him above It- Sinclair. There is a consanguinity between benevolence and humility.' They are virtues of the same stock. -Burke.
