| Robert Conger Pell - Anecdotes - 1850 - 196 pages
...echo in his auditor's ears a good while afterward. — Fuller. SUSPICION. Always to think the worst, I have ever found to be the mark of a mean spirit and a base soul. — ' Bolingbroke. CANNIBALS. Lamb writes to his friend Manning, to dissuade him from going to China,... | |
| Robert Conger Pell - Anecdotes - 1853 - 252 pages
...echo in his auditor's ears a good while afterward. — Fuller. SUSPICION. Always to think the worst, I have ever found to be the mark of a mean spirit and a base soul. — • Bolingbroke. CANNIBALS. Lamb writes to his friend Manning, to dissuade him from going to China,... | |
| Tryon Edwards - Quotations, English - 1853 - 442 pages
...than meets the eye, betrays affinity for it. — Sigourney. SUSPICION. — Always to think the worst, I have ever found to be the mark of a mean spirit and a base soul. — Bolingbroke. SYMPATHY. — One of the greatest of all mental pleasures, is, to have our thoughts... | |
| Tryon Edwards - Quotations, English - 1908 - 776 pages
...that can support despair, supports not thee. — Mallet. SUSPICION. — Always to think the worst, ryon !"••* euul. — liniiiuite-ute. Suspicion is no less an enemy to virtue thaii to happiness. He... | |
| Tryon Edwards - Quotations, English - 1908 - 788 pages
...soul that cnn support despair, supports not thee. — Mallet. SUSPICION.— Always to think the worst, W+ » b»«« soul.— Boliitgfrrote. Suspicion is no less an enemy to \irtue than to happiness. He that... | |
| Edwin Hamlin Carr - Oratory - 1922 - 314 pages
...acceptance against honest but mindbiind students. — Sir William Osier. Always to think the worst, I have ever found to be the mark of a mean spirit and a base soul. — Bolingbroke. Good manners is the art of making those people easy with whom we converse. — Swift.... | |
| Edwin Hamlin Carr - Oratory - 1922 - 312 pages
...to acceptance against honest but mindblind students.—Sir William Osier. Always to think the worst, I have ever found to be the mark of a mean spirit and a base soul.—Bolingbroke. Good manners is the art of making those people easy with whom we converse.—Swift.... | |
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