Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 January 1912 — WOMAN IN EPIGRAM [ARTICLE]
WOMAN IN EPIGRAM
There la a woman at the beginning Of all great things.—Alphonse Do Lamartine. Friendship between Ewo women i« always a plot against each other.— Alphonse Karr. »*--• A woman is seldom tenderer to a man than immediately after she has deceived Mm. —Anonymous. One syllable of woman’s speech can dissolve more of love than a man’s, heart can hold. —Oliver Wendell 1 Holmes. Women, deceived by men, want to. t marry them; it is a kind of revenge, as good as any other. —Marquis De Beaumanoir. Discretion is more necessary to women than eloquence, because they have less trouble to speak well than to speak little. —Father Du BosC. There is in every true Roman’s heart a spark of heavenly fire, which beams and blazes in The dark hours of adversity.—Washington Irving. A Woman is never displeased if we please several other women, provided she is preferred. It is so many more triumphs for her.—Ninon De Lenclos. Those females who cry out loudest against the flightiness of their sisters and rebuke their undue encouragement of this man or that, would do as much themselves if they had the chance. —William Makepeace- Thackeray. , .* There remains in the faces of women who are naturally serene and .peaceful, and of those rendered so by religion, an after-spring, and later an after-summer —the reflex of their most beautiful bloom. —Jean Paul Richter.
