Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 201, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 August 1910 — WITH THE SAGES. [ARTICLE]
WITH THE SAGES.
Man has no lordship to command the conscience.—Milton. Any truth faithfully faced Is strength In Itself.—Richter. Life Is too short for Its possessors to wear long faces.—Farrar. Give and receive; If we would have> first we must give.—Whittier. Mirth bars a thousand harms and lengthens life.—Shakespeare. Before enterprise and Industry avery barrier mast yield.—Plait Whoever Is sensible of his own faults carps not at another’s fallings. ' What is too hard for the head to do is seldom too hard for the heart.— Norman. . Those who are greedy of praise prove that they are poor in merit Plutarch, No man tastes pleasure truly who ! does not earn It by previous business. —Chesterfield. The poorest education that' teaches self-control Is better than the best that neglects it—Sterling. I take him to be the only rich man that lives upon what he has, owes nothing and is contented.—Howe. To the formation of a good character It is of the highest importance that you have a commanding object in view and that your aim In life be elevated.—Joel Hawes.
