The Family Economist, Vol. 2 A Penny Monthly Magazine, Devoted to the Moral, Physical, and Domestic Improvement of the Industrious Classes, 1849 (Classic Reprint)

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The Family Economist, Vol. 2
A Penny Monthly Magazine, Devoted to the Moral, Physical, and Domestic Improvement of the Industrious Classes, 1849 (Classic Reprint)

  • Wydawnictwo: FB &c Ltd
  • EAN: 9781331759126
  • Ilość stron: 246
  • Format: 15.2x22.9cm
  • Oprawa: Miękka
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Opis: The Family Economist, Vol. 2 - Author Unknown

Excerpt from The Family Economist, Vol. 2: A Penny Monthly Magazine, Devoted to the Moral, Physical, and Domestic Improvement of the Industrious Classes, 1849

He who promiseth runs in debt.

A punctual man can always find leisure, a negligent one never.

One good head is better than several hands.

Civility is a kind of charm that attracts the love of all men.

Little and often fills the purse.

As is the gardener, such is the garden.

Success is the child of confidence and perseverance.

Sin like a disease is often caught by infection.

A man may buy gold too dear.

God's mercies are as houndless as his being.

Deliberate slowly; execute promptly.

He that is hasty fishes in an empty pond.

Redeem misspent time by industry.

He doubles his gift who gives in time.

He who swims in sin will sink in sorrow.

He who avoids the temptation avoids the sin.

Gold may be bought too dear.

A good character is a fortune.

Prudence saves what passion wastes.

Riches take to themselves wings, and fly away.

Much would have more and lost all.

Be thrifty that you may have wherewith to be charitable.

True economy is something better than stinginess.

It is more blessed to give than to receive.

He who has no shame, has no conscience.

An inquisitive fellow is a spy in disguise.

Fortune sometimes favours those whom she afterwards destroys.

Love labour; if you need it not for food, you do for physic.

Make not your sail too large for your ship.

That man is rich whose desires are poor.

Do well and doubt no man; do ill and doubt all men.

A crown will not cure the headache, nor a golden slipper the gout.

Ignorance is the parent of many injuries.

Imitate a good man, but never counterfeit him.

Hear no evil of a friend, and none of an enemy.

It is less painful to learn in youth than to be ignorant in age.

If you have done a good deed boast not of it.

It is never too late to learn.

Improvement of parts is by improvement of time.

Intemperance is the grossest abuse of the gifts of providence.

Industry and cheerfulness are sworn friends.

Idleness and melancholy keep constant company,
The more a man does, the more he can do.

Method and order are the secret of great workers.

Lying is the vice of a mean mind.

Profaneness is the sign of an ignorant and wicked mind.

Kind words cost no more than angry ones.

Civility is a debt we owe to all.

Overcome evil with good.

Kindness is a powerful weapon too seldom fought with.

By cheerfulness, half the miseries of life might be assuaged.

A fretful temper multiplies and magnifies every calamity.

Love is often extinguished by thoughtlessness.

True politeness is a christian virtue.

If angry, count fifty before you speak, if very angry, count a hundred.

Anger has made many a man a fool.

Be at peace with mankind, at war with their vices.

A man may be a fool with wit, but never with judgment.

To say little and perform much is the characteristic of a great mind.

We confess our faults in the singular, and deny them in the plural.

Honour and esteem a true friend whatever be his fortune.

Great efforts are directed to great ends.

Adversity overcome is the greatest glory; and cheerfully undergone, the greatest virtue.

The best test of a man's principles is his practice.

The soul is man's higher nature.

Pleasures which are merely sensual are soon exhausted.

The coward blusters, the better to disguise his fears.

The mind that is truly noble descends not to mean resentment.

That man who disclaims pride, proclaims it aloud.

The woman who marries for money is not overstocked wit


Szczegóły: The Family Economist, Vol. 2 - Author Unknown

Nazwa: The Family Economist, Vol. 2 A Penny Monthly Magazine, Devoted to the Moral, Physical, and Domestic Improvement of the Industrious Classes, 1849 (Classic Reprint)
Autor: Author Unknown
Wydawnictwo: FB &c Ltd
Kod paskowy: 9781331759126
Języki: angielski
Ilość stron: 246
Format: 15.2x22.9cm
Oprawa: Miękka


Recenzje: The Family Economist, Vol. 2 - Author Unknown

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