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"Magnificent promises are always to be suspected."
By Theodore Parker
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"Make sure you have finished speaking before your audience has finished listening."
By Dorothy Sarnoff
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"Much speech is one thing, well-timed speech is another."
By Sophocles
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"Many things have fallen only to rise higher."
By Seneca
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"Modesty is a shining light; it prepares the mind to receive knowledge, and the heart for truth."
By Madam Guizot
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"Music is a discipline, and a mistress of order and good manners, she makes the people milder and gentler, more moral and more reasonable."
By Martin Luther
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"My thoughts are my company; I can bring them together, select them, detain them, dismiss them."
By Walter Landor
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"Man is free in his imagination, but bound by his reason."
By Israel Lipkin
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"Man has six organs to serve him and he is master only of three. He cannot control his eye, ear or nose, but he can his mouth, hand and foot."
By Leone Levi
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"Man can learn nothing unless he proceeds from the known to the unknown."
By Claude Bernard
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"May you live all the days of your life."
By Jonathan Swift
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"Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs than of their children."
By William Penn
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"Men can know more than their ancestors did if they start with a knowledge of what their ancestors had already learned....That is why a society can be progressive only if it conserves its traditions."
By Walter Lippmann
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"Make wisdom your provision for the journey from youth to old age, for it is a more certain support than all other possessions."
By Bias
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"Man is an animal which, alone among the animals, refuses to be satisfied by the fulfilment of animal desires."
By Alexander Graham Bell
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"Man perfected by society is the best of all animals; he is the most terrible of all when he lives without law, and without justice."
By Aristotle
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"Men in however high a station ought to fear the humble."
By Phaedrus
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"Modesty is the citadel of beauty."
By Demades
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"Many difficulties which nature throws in our way, may be smoothed away by the exercise of intelligence."
By Titus Livius
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"Men are only clever at shifting blame from their own shoulders to those of others."
By Titus Livius
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