Courteous Men Learn Courtesy
Courteous men learn courtesy from the discourteous.
Courteous men learn courtesy from the discourteous.
Credit is better than wealth.
As the wise man looks for a bridge the fool crosses the river.
All work is as seed sown; it grows and spreads, and sows itself anew.
As the best wine makes the sharpest vinegar, the truest lover may turn into the worst enemy.
Do not use words that are too big for your mouth.
An alive person needs life.
A mirror does not reflect a broken heart.
Aspiration is not a defect for youngsters.
Comfortable is he who doesn’t have a donkey — doesn’t know of its straw and barley.
By a sweet tongue and kindness, you can drag an elephant with a hair.
Beware a rickety wall, a savage dog, and a quarrelsome person.
Do not cut down the tree that gives you shade.
Courtesy on one side can never last long.
Courtesie is cumbersome to them that ken it not.
First prove your brotherhood, then claim inheritance.
God gives to us according to the measure of our hearts.
Forgiveness hides a pleasure that you can’t get back from revenge.
For his master the dog is a lion.
God provides, but he needs a nudge.