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heart_n ear_n eye_n fat_a 2,377 5 10.2276 5 false
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A35352 Sentences for children, English and Latine collected out of sundry authors long since / by Leonard Culman ; and now translated into English by Charles Hoole, for the first enterers into Latin.; Sententiae pueriles anglo-latinae. English Culmann, Leonhard, 1498?-1562.; Hoole, Charles, 1610-1667. 1658 (1658) Wing C7476; ESTC R22504 32,428 91

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torment thy minde with cares Stir not a bad matter that is well ended Nothing is more base than to quarrel with a friend There is no man in whom there is not some fault It is not a benefit which is done for advantage He maketh no small gain that escapeth loss Do not learn any filthiness neither do you suffer it Gold doth not set out a woman but good manners Nature hath not granted women to rule A woman knoweth nothing but what she hath a mind to Nature doth not suffer a woman to bear rule There is nothing happy on all parts Nothing is worse than heaviness in things that concern men Thou canst bear no burden more troublesome than poverty I pray you do not believe all men withall things Do not study to do mischief presuming upon thy wealth There is nothing so grievovs as poverty Do not haste to be rich lest you quickly become poor Naughtiness of manners doth quickly infect nature There is nothing so unkind but you may make it friendly Nothing is better than health in this life No man doth so diligently look after other mens business as he doth after his own Do not go about that which cannot be done There is nothing so long-lasting which continuall diligence cannot make easie The night love and wine do perswade filthy things It hurts not any man to hold his peace it hurts to have spoken The same man cannot say many things and to the purpose There is nothing more odious than that which is allwayes the same It is an hard thing to take from nature it s own right Fearn that is to be burnt grows in fields that are not husbanded Servants do nothing well unless the Master be by All things do not befall which you purpose in your mind Every thing that is too much is to be avoided in all things We are rather to believe our eyes than our ears Things devised for the best do oft-times fall out for the worst A man should alwayes learn something even when he grows old All the best things have difficult ends All men wish better to themselves than to another man Every thing breeds errour by making haste Every evil at its first coming up is easily suppressed All delay though it be very little doth seem very long We must take that which we have at present in good part It is the best for one to take a fit time Vndertake not a burden which thou art unfit for Every superfluous thing doth flow from a full brest Death is the utmost of all things Those things which cannot be altered are to be patiently born Our fathers manners are not to be found fault withall but endured Few men are moderate in prosperity Anger is the worst perswader in doing things His own countrey is most pleasant to every man We are wise for the most part after a thing be done Horns shoot out on a sudden to Rams that are well fed Anger and lust are the worst advisers It is better to be envied than pittied Very many things are to be known but the best to be reteined Rash anger is the causer of many evils Medicines are to be applyed to a breeding evil The beauty of the body is a brittle good thing It presently appears what plant is fruit full A little spark being neglected hath caused a very great fire It is a dangerous thing to adventure ones self to the waters There is the most scarcity of the best things It is the part of a wise man to do nothing rashly Like are easily gathered together with like Good ware doth quickly finde a chapman Things past may be blamed but they cannot be amended More are overcome by fair means than by hard means It is a fine thing to know the season of every time It is better to die than to lead a dishonest life Grief will be well eased with sweet words It is good to keep a measure in anger and pleasure It is better to stand in need than to grow rich by wickedness It is better to hold ones peace than to speak unseemly things One eye-witness is more worth than ten ear witnesses The tongue kills more than the sword Nothing is pleasant to a troubled heart A fat belly doth not beget a fine wit The smoke of our countrey is brighter than a strange fire Every man hears more at home than he doth abroad Eyes see more than an eye Honest deeds proceed from honest minds It is a mans country wheresoever he lives well He is a poor man not who hath little but who desires much Naughty company brings forth bad fruit When shame is lost all vertue quickly decays Things present make us to have consideration of things t● come It is a fine thing to change injuries into curtesies It doth children hurt to drink wine That which is taken up suddenly is not long-lasting Those things that are seen are more certain than those tha● are heard What any one hath a great mind to that he cannot forget Thou must not do that which thou blamest others for Whatsoever happens besides hope account it to be gain They that avoid labours wish far holy-dayes Whosoever refuseth labour doth get no good See often what you say of any man and to whom It is not presently good which many men do That which seems good to one man seems bad to another That which is not used to it refuseth labour He that hasteth too much dispatcheth somewhat late i. e. the most haste the worst speed He that knoweth not how to dissemble knoweth how to rule He that hath enough let him wish no more He that knoweth not that he doth amiss will not be corrected How many mischiefs doth idleness bring upon men You can corect by no pains that which is inbred by nature i. e. What is bred in the bone will never out of the flesh Every man is carefull about that which he hath a mind to He that bestoweth a benefit upon an unthankfull person loseth his labour Whatsoever is natural is not easily changed He that catcheth at a double profit at once is deceived of both What the destinies have decreed no man can avoid What is done cannot he undone Let every man exercise himself in the art which he knoweth They that vaunt proudly of themselves have bad neighbours Those things are to be born patiently which you suffer deservedly A contrary state is to be feared especially in prosperity Means cannot last when the charge exceeds the gain A small matter in the beginning doth increase to a greater A thing hard to be done is yet overcome by continual industry The custome of an evil thing is the worst that can be Humane things are by nature prone to corruption It is an evil thing to covet many things He is a great King whosoever shall rule well A friend that suffers with us is a comfort in miserie Prosperity maddeth and destroyeth unwary men Leisure and rest belong to old age Wisdom is