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ܶƪSTRUGGLE
A man can fail many times, but he isn't a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.
J. Burroughs. Averican naturalist
 һ˿ʧܶΣֻҪûпʼˣһʧߡ
ѧҰ˹. J.
All of us bear witness to the dissolution of our piece of creation. Only the novelist can restore to us, in the miracle of ink that pours itself like blood onto paper, the lineaments of our lost worlds, alive.
Norma Rosen, American novelist
ǶۼԼı仯ΨС˵ƾīˮӵѪһϢעֽϵ漣Ϊǻָʧȥ磬ʹò֡
С˵ɭ. N. 
All that you do, do with your might; things done by halves are never done right.
R. H. Stoddard, American poet
 һ¶ӦΪ;ԶСʫ˹ϴ. R. H .
Between the annihilating fierceness of personal ambition and those who clutter its path, there is only one possible mediator, and that is love.
Norma Rosen, American novelist
 ʹյĸҰʵҰĵ֮䣬ֻһǿܵĵڼǾǡС˵ɭ. N.
Creativity is no more teachable than heritable, No more than the most detail-perfect doll can transubstatiate into a  living, breathing baby.
Norma Rosen, American novelist
 ȲŴģҲǽ̵ûġޣҲܹһĻӤС˵ɭ. N.
Dare and the world always yields. lf it beats you sometimes, dare it again and again and it will succumb.
W. M . Thackeray. British novelist
 սܻòʱ㱻ˣϵսܻġӢС˵. W. M.
Few things are impossible in themselves; and it is often for want of will, rather than of means, that man fails to succeed.
La Rocheforcauld, French writer
 иɵģɣ˵˵ھĲ
и£L.
Genius only means  hard-working all one's life.
Mendeleyev, Russian chemist
 ֻζиŬ
ѧŽҮ
Great works are performed not by strengh, but by perseverance.
Samuel Johnson, British writer and critic
 ΰҵڼͲεӢҺۼԼѷ. S.
         I  have nothing to offer but blood, boil, tears and sweat.
Winston Churchill, British politician
 ܷ׵ûֻѪ͡뺹ˮӢμ𼪶.W. 
If you have great talents, industry will improve them; if you have but moderate abilities, industry will supply their deficiency.
Joshuas Reynolds, American female essayist
 츳ʹƣһ㣬Ჹȱݡ
Ůɢļŵ. J.
It is easier to fight for principles than to live up to them.
Adlai Stevenson, British writer
 ΪԭʵԭҪס
Ӣʷɭ. A.
It is Enterprise which builds and improves the world's possessions. Thrift may be the handmaid and nurse of Enterprise. But equally she may not. For the engine which drives Enteprise is not Thrift, but Profit.
John Maynard Keynes, British economist
 ȡ˺ϵĲƸڼǽȡ˵ĻˣͬҲԲǡΪȡĶǽڼ󣬶
Ӣѧҿ˹.J. M.
It never will rain roses. When we want to have more roses we must plant trees.
G. Eliot, Btitish novelist
 ϲõҪõ壬ԼֲӢС˵Ұ. G.
Jovons saw the kettle boil and cried out with the delighted voice of a child; Marshal too had seen the kettle boil and sat down silently to build an engine.
John Maynard Keynes, British economist
 ˹ˣ˵ƵؽЪҲˣȴĵһӢѧҿ˹. J. M.
Man errs so long as he strives.
Johann Wolfgang Goethe, German poet and dramatist
 ˹ˣ˵ƵؽЪҲˣȴĵһӢѧҿ˹. J. M. 
Man errs so long as he strives.
Johann Wolfgang Goethe, German poet and dramatist ֻҪܶͻ᷸󡣵¹ʫˡҸ.J M. 
Miracles sometimes occur, but one has to work terribly for them.
C. Weizmann. Irish president 漣ʱǻᷢģΪ֮ƴŬͳκ.C. 
My fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country. My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what American will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.
John Kennedy, American president ͬǣҪʹΪЩʲôҪΪЩʲôȫĹǣҪΪЩʲôҪǹͬΪЩʲôͳ.J. 
Our destiny offers not the cup of despair, but the chalice of opportunity.
Richard Nixon, American president ˸ǵĲʧ֮ƣǻ֮
ͳɡR. 
Patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet.
Jean Jacques Rousseau,French thinker 
ʹģĹʵ۵ġ
˼¬.J.J 
Progress is the activity of today and the assurance of tomorrow.
Emerson, American thinker ǽĻı֤˼ҰĬ
Should the diver parse, from the ravening monster's jaw he'd never hold the precious pearl, the bright pearl, in his grasp.
Jaber, Kuwait king צĹס͵ò顣عֱȶ
The world can be changed by man's endeavor, and that this endeavor can lead to something new and better. No man can sever the bonds that unite him to his society simply by averting his eyes. He must ever be receptive and sensitive to the new; and have sufficient courage and skill to face novel facts and to deal with them.
Franklin Roosevelt, American president ˾Ŭı磬Ŭʹﵽµġõľ硣û˽ƾĿʵܸԼϵУʱ׼ȥµʵ⡣ͳ˹,F. 
There is no royal road to science,and only those who do not dread the fatiguing climb of its steep paths have a chance of gaining its luminous summits. 
Karl Marx, German revolutionary ڿѧûƽ̹ĴֻвηͿ֮·ʵǵˣϣﵽԵĶ㡣¹˶.K. 
The man who has made up his mind to win will never say "impossible".
Bonapart Naploeon, French emperor ǾȡʤǴ˵ܵġʵ.B. 
To do whatever needs to be done to preserve this last and greatest basin of freedom.
Ronald Reagan, American president Ϊ˱סġΰɱݣǱ뾡ܡͳ.R. 
To strive, to seek ,to find and not to yield.
Alfred Tennyson, British poet ҪܶҪ̽Ҫ֣Ҫ
Ӣʫ˶A. 
We cannot always build the future for our youth, but we can build our youth for the future.
Franklin Roosevelt, American president ǲΪǵδܹΪδǵһͳ˹F. 
We cannot wait for favors from nature; we must take them from her-- that is our task.
Ivan V.Michurin, Russian agronomist ǲܵȴȻĶͣǱȡǵ񡣶ѧI.V 
When the going gets tough, the tough get going.
Seebohm CAaroline, British writer ֮·ΨСӢҿգS. 
Where there is a will, there is a way.
Thomas Edison, American inventor ־ߣ¾ɡҰ.T. 
Where there is no hope, there can be no endeavor.
Sanuel Johnson, British writer and critic ûϣͲŬ
ӢҡۼԼѷ.S 
You can't build a reputation on what you are going to do.Henry Ford, American businessman 
㲻ܿƽҪȥʵҵҸ.H. 
You never know what you can do till you try.
Frederick Marryat, British novelist Գһ£Զ֪ܹʲôӢС˵ءF
 
ƪIDEAL
A man is not old as long as he is seeking something. A man is not old until regrets take the place of dreams.
J Barryomre, American Bctor  ֻҪһ˻׷ûϡֱȡ룬һ˲ϡԱ¶J
And love, young men ,and venerate the ideal. The ideal is the word of God. High above every country, high above humanity, is the country of the spirit, the city of the soul.
Giuseppe Mazzini, Italian statesman  ˰Ȱɣ羴ɡϵ۵ԡһйҺȫģǾĹ硣μ־ᣬG
Between the ideal and the reality, Between the motion and the act, Falls the shadow.
Thomas stearns Eliot,
British Poet and critic  ʵ֮䣬
Ϊ֮䣬
һӰ
ӢʫˡҰأTS
Do not, for one repulse, give up the purpose that you resolved to effect.
William Shakespeare,
British dramatist  ҪֻһʧܣͷԭﵽĿġ
ӢɯʿW 
Don't part with your illusions. When they are gone you may still exist, but you have ceased to live. 
Mark Twain. American writer  ҪĻ롣ûԺ㻹棬
Have an aim in life, or your energies will all be wasted.
R. Peters, American jurist  ӦĿ꣬ľװ˷ѡ
ѧҲ˹R
I want to bring out the secrets of nature and apply them for the hap-piness of man. I don't know of any better service to offer for the short time we are in the world.
Thomas Edison, American inventor  ʾȻܣ츣ࡣΪǵĶһУõĹĪڴˡ
Ideals are like the stars----we never reach them, but like mariners, we chart our course by them.
Carl Schurz, American statesman  ϵǣˮ֣䲻ܵϣǵĺ̿ƾָμģc. 
Ideal is the beacon. Without ideal, there is no secure direction; without direction, there is no life.
Leo Tolstory, Russian writer   ָ·ơû룬ûмᶨķûзûж˹̩L, 
If winter comes, can spring be far behind?
P. B. Shelley, British poet
 ˣ컹Զ
ӢʫѩP.B. 
If you doubt yourself, then indeed you stand on shaky ground.
Ibsen, Norwegian dramati 㲻Լôȷʵȹ
Ųײ
If you would go up high, then use your own legs! Do not  let yourselves carried aloft; do not seat yourselves on other people's backs and heads.
F. W. Nietzsche, German Philosopher
 ߵߴҪʹԼȣҪñ˰̧ߴҪڱ˵ıϺͷϡ
If you would hit the mark, you must aim a little above it. Every arrow that flies feels the attraction of earth.
Longfillow, America poet
 ҪаУ׼ȰΪЩΪ֮ܵӰ졣Ӣʫʷ
Imagination is not to be divorced from the facts: it is a way of illu-minating the facts.
Alfred North Whitehead, British phillsopher and mathematician
 ǿѨ磬ʵһַʽӢѧҡѧһغ. A. N.
It enables men to construct an intellectual vision of a new world, and it preserves the zest of  life by the suggestion of satisfying purpose.
Alfred North Whitehead, British philosopher and mathematician 
ʹǵع۲һ磬ͨʾĿʹ˱ֶ顣Ӣѧҡѧһغ. A. N. 
It is at our mother's knee that we acquire our noblest and truest and highest ideals, but there is seldom any money in them.
Mark Twain. American writer
 ĸ׵ϥϣǻǵСϺԶ룬κνǮˡ
It is great to be great, but it is greater to be human.
W. Rogers, American humorist
 Ϊΰõģһ˸áĬ޽˹.W.
Living without an aim is like sailing without a compass.
Alexandre Dumas(Davy de La Pailleterie).French writer
 ûĿ񺽺ûָ롣
Ҵ.A.
Most of the trouble in the world is caused by people wanting to be im-portant.
George Eliot, British novelist
 ĴնЩΪҪǳġӢС˵Ұ.G.
The ideals which have lighted my way, and time after time have given me new courage to face life cheerfully have been kindness, beauty and truth.
Albert Einstein, American scientist
 ЩΪ·ϸµȻЩǡ桢ơѧҰ˹̹.A.
The important thing in life is to have a great aim, and the determination to attain it.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German poet and dramatist
 ҪȷһΰĿ꣬ʵ¹ʫˡϷҸ.J. W.
The man with a new idea is a crank until the idea succeeds.
Mark Twain, American writer
 뷨뷨ʵ֮ǰǸˡˡ
The only limit to our realization of tomorrow will be our doubts of today.
Franklin Roosevelt, American president
 ʵΨһϰǽǡͳ˹F.
Well is it known that ambition can creep as well as soar.
Edmond Burke, British statesman
 ֪д־졣
ӢμҲ.E.
What makes life dreary is the want of motive.
George Eliot, British novelist
 ûĿģ޹⡣
ӢС˵Ҽ. G.
 
When an end is lawful and obligatory, the indispensable means to it are also lawful and obligatory.
Abraham Lincoln, American statesman
 һĿģﵽĿĵıҪֶҲȡġμֿ.A.
You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertisements.
Norman Dorglas. British writer
 һҵĹԿҵ롣Ӣҵ˹.N.
 
ɹƪSUCCESS
A man can succeed at almost anything for which he has unlimited enthusiasm.
C.M.Schwab, American brsinessman ۺ£ֻҪ޵ȡóɹ
ʵҵʩ߲.C.M. 
A chievement provides the only real pleasure in life.
Thomas Eeison, American inventor 
ɾΨһȤ
ҰT. 
Along with success comes a reputation for wisdom.
Euripides, Ancient Greek ramatist ɹǻ۵ǡ
ϣŷӵ˹
Assuredly, the most gifted man errs who, in dealing with humanity, depends upon his own insight 
and intelligence and discards the moral law of society, created by respect for the individual, 
and those principles of liberty, equality and fraternity, the basis of our civilization, and the 
essence of Christianity.
Ferdinand foch, Frcnch marshal ȷڴ˵ʱֻ˵ļʶǣΪظ˶ƶ·ɣΪ
ͻҪصɡƽȡԭôʹŵˣҲ϶᷸󡣷Ԫ˧F. 
But has the last word been said?Is all hope to be lost?Is the defeat fi-nal? No!
Charles De Gaulle. French Puesident ѵܾѶʤѾ˵
ͳ֣C. 
Character cannot be developed in ease and quiet. Only through expe-rience of trial and suffering 
can the soul be strengthened, vision cleared,ambition inspired , and success achieved.
Helen Keller,American writer ҪʹԸչǼ֮£ֻͨѺĥʹǿҰܣӶ
ɹĿġҿH. 
I might say that success is won by three things: first, effort;second, more effort;third, still 
more effort.
Thomas Hardy, British poet and novelist ˵ɹҪ²ӮãŬŬŬ
ӢʫˡС˵ҹ.T. 
I succeeded because I willed it; I never hesitated.
Bonapart Napoleon, French emperor ҳɹΪоģӲʵ.B. 
If you wish to succeed, you should use perdistence as your good friend, experiece as your 
reference, prudence as your brother and hope as your sentry.
Thomas Edison, American inventor  ϣɹԺΪѡԾΪıԽΪֵܡϣΪڱҰ
Never be unduly elated by victory or depressed by defeat.
H.Porter, American feneral ʤ棬ܲ١ϱսеĽ첨ءH. 
Only those who have the patience to do simple things perfectly ever acquire the skill to do 
difficult things easily.
Friedrich Schiller. Greman dramatist and poet ֻԲɼ򵥹ˣܹ׾ٵѵ¡¹ҡʫϯ.F. 
People often ask me if I know the secret of success, and if I could tell others how to make their 
dreams come true. My answer is, you do it by working.
Walt Disney, American brsinessman ʱǷóɹľϣܷ߱ʹǵΪʵҵĻشǣС
ʵҵҵ˹.W. 
Power invariably means both responsibility and danger.
Theodore Roosevelt, American president ʵԶζκΣա
ͳ˹. T. 
Recognition of the falsity of material wealth as the standard of success goes hand in hand with 
the abandonment of the false belief that public office and high political position are to be 
valued only by the standard of pride of place and persona l profit.
Franklin Roosevelt, American president ʲƸɹı׼ǴġӦΪΨһ׼ְ͸߼ελĴ
ͳ˹.F. 
Silence is the element in which great things fashion themselves.
Thomas Carlyle British essayist and historian ĬΰдءӢɢļҡʷѧҿ.T. 
Success covers a multitude of blunders.
George bernard Shaw, British ramatist ɹɴʧ͡
ӢФɡG. 
Success often depends upon knowing how long it will take to succeed.
Charles Montesquier, French thinker ɹȡ֪Ҫòܳɹ
˼ϵ˹.C. 
That is one of the rewards of competition: you can drop down a couple of notches on the food 
chain to be as brutal , unsympathetic , selfish and inhuman as you wish in the name of 
competition because success supposedly justifies any actions.
Howard Mel, American writer Ǿõһֱ꣺ԽԼʳϵݽͼΣžţԸ
Ұ顢˽Ͳ˵ΪݳƣɹʹκжΪģʤΪΪܣ
÷.H. 
That sort of defeats are only stepping-stones.
W.Reid. American journalist and diplomat ʧֻǰ̤ʯ
ߡ⽻¡W. 
The greater a man is ,the more distasteful is praise and flattery to him.
John Burroughs, American naturalist һԽΰ󣬶ԱͷоԽС
ѧҰ˹.J. 
The human being longs for a sense of being accomplished, of being able to do things. with his hand, with his mind, with his will. Each of  us wants to feel he of she has the ability to do something that is meaningful and that serves a tribute to our inherent abilities.
LeonardR. Saylis, British writer
 ǿһֳɾ͸УԼ֡ԼԡԼ־¡ÿ˶ϣԼ
ܹ塢ʾԼ츳Ӣ˹L.R. 
The people who get on in this world are the people who get up and look for circumstances they 
want,and if they cannot find them, they make them.
George Bernard Shaw, British dramatist ϣȡóɹЩŬѰҪˣҲᣬǾȥᡣ
ӢФɡG. 
The success is nothing more than doing well whatever you do without a thought of fame.
Henry Wadsworth Longrellwo.American poet ɹǺúùƽʫʷ.H.W. 
The world more frequently recommends the appearance of merit than merit itself.
Rochefoucauld, Frcnch writer. ƳĹƳĹи
There are two ways of rising in the world, either by your own industry or by the folly of others.
Jean De La Bruyere, French moralist ɹ֮·ԼŬ˵޴
¼Ү. J.D. 
There is only one success-----to be able to spend your life in your own way.
Morley Christopher, French writer 
ɹֻһԼķʽȥȹҿ˹.M. 
To conquer we need to dare, to dare again, ever to dare!
George Jacques Danton, French revolutionist ΪʤҪ¸ң¸ңԶ¸ҳɱ
ҵ.G.J. 
To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive, and the true success is to labor.
Robert Louis Stevenson, British writer 
ϣȥбȵִĿĵظ죻ĳɹڹ
ӢʷɭR.L. 
Victory won't come to me unless I go to it.
M. Moore, American pletess ʤǲģұԼʤ
Ůʫ¶M. 
Will, work and wait are the pyramidal cornerstones for success.
Louis Pasteur, French chemist ־͵ȴǳɹĽĻʯ
ѧҰ˹¡L. 
You have to believe in yourself.That's the secret of success.
Charles Chaplin, American actor ˱Լǳɹؾ
Ա׿.C. 

ƪHEALTH
A healthy mind is in a healthy body.
Juvenal, ancient Roman satirist ˼Ԣڽ֮С
ݼŵ
A light heart lives long.
William Shaakespeare, British dramatist Ӣɯʿ.W. 
A man needs a purpose for real health.
Sherwood Anderson, American novelist Ŀ˲Ľ
С˵Ұɭ.S. 
An apple a day keeps the doctor away.
Anonymous ÿһƻʤ鵤ҩ
An irritable man is like a hedgehog rolled up the wrong way, torment-ing himself with his own prickles.
Thomas Hood, British poet ŭһֻĴ⬣ԼĴĥԼӢʫ˺
.T.Bath twice a day to be really clean. once a day to be passably clean, once a week to avoid being a public menace.
nthony Burgess. British novelist һϴɾһϴһҲ˵ĹȥһϴһֻǱԹȾӢС˵Ҳ˹.A. 
Bitter pills may have blessed effects.
Anonymous ҩڲ

Cheerfulness is the promoter of health.
Joseph Addison, British writer ǽ
ӢҰJ. 
Diseases of the soul are more dangerous than those of the body.
M. T Cicero.Ancient Roman orator and statesman 
ϵļϵļΣա
˵ҡμ.M.T. 
Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.
Benjamin franklin, American president 
˯ʹ˽кʹ
ͳ֡B. 
Good health is a corollary of having good habits.
Anonymous 
ϰߵĽ

Happiness lies, first of all, in health.
G.W. Curis, American writer 
Ҹڽ
ҿܵ˹G.W. 
Health is better than wealth.
John Ray, American naturalist ʤƸѧJ. 
Health is certainly more valuable than money, because it is by health that money is procured.
Samuel Johnson. British writer, critic ȻȽǮΪҪΪԻýǮľǽ
ӢҡԼ.S. 
If you believe the doctors, nothing is wholesome; if you believe the soldiers, nothing is safe.
Robert Salisbury, British statesman ҪҽĻʲôҲҪʿĻʲôҲȫ
ӢμȲR. 
Laugh, and the world laughs with you;snore and you sleep alone.
Anthony Burgess, British novelist Цȫ綼ЦֻԼ˯
ӢС˵Ҳ˹.A. 
Mischief comes by the pound and goes away by the ounce.
Anonymous ɽȥ˿
No animal ever invented anything so bad as drunkness----- or so good as drink.
Gibert Keith Chesteerton, British writer 
ûж﷢¡Ҳûзõܡ
Ӣ˹ض.G.K. 
None so old that he hopes not for a year of life.
John Ray, American naturalist Ҳٳѧ.J. 
One cannot help being old, but one can resist being aged.
H.L.Samusel.British philosopher and writer һ޷ϡԵ˥ࡣӢѧҡѶH.L. 
Physicians of all men are most happy; most good success so ever they have, the world proclaimth, 
and what faults they commit, the earth coverth.
Francis Quarles, British poet ҸĪҽǵķṦΰΪ˳̣ǵĹʧ򱻻ûˡ
Ӣʫ˿˹.F. 
Sickness is felt, but health not at all.
Thomas Fuller.British statesman ܸоȴо
ӢμҸ.T. 
Sloth, like rust, consumes faster than labor wears.
Benjamin Franklin, American president һȲ͸塣ͳ֡B. 
The cure for anything is salt water ------sweat, tears, or the sea.
Isak Dinesen, Danish writer ˮˮˮߺˮһеҩ
ҶI 
The love of beauty is an essential part of all healthy human nature.
John Ruskin, British writer and critic ǽԵҪɲ֡
Ӣҡ˹.J. 
There are no such things as incurable, there are only things for which man has not found a cure.
Bernard Baruch, American economist ûʲôֻ֢֮δƷ֢֮
ѧҰ³.B. 
There is a great difference between exposure of the mind and that of the body.
William Hazlitt, British critic and essayist ¶˼չ¶֮ڼĲͬӢҡɢļҹ.W. 
Without health no pleasure can be tasted by man.
Henry Bollingbroke, British statesman ûнûȤ
ӢμҲֲ³ˡH. 

ƸƪWEALTH
A penny saved is a penny gained.
Richard Brckminster Fuller.American srchitect ʡһǮڵõһǮʦ.R.B. 
All good things are cheap, all bad things are very dear.
Henry David Thoreau, Ameican writer  һкõĶǱ˵ģлĶǷǳġ
ޡH.D.  
All the splendor in the world is not worth a good friend.
Voltaire, French thinker  еٻһѡ
˼ҷ̩
Apply yourself to true riches; it is shameful to depend upon silver and gold for a happy life.
Lrcius Annaeus Seneca, Ancient Roman Philosopher  ҪȡĲƸıȡҸǲʵġ
ѧ.L.A.  
An ounce of prudence is worth a pound of gold.
Tobias Smollett, British writer  һ˾ֵһƽ
Ӣ.˹Ħ.T. 
Beggars cannot be choosers.
Du Bose Heywood, American writer  ؤʼݡ
Һ.D.B.  
Beggars do not envy millionaires, though of course they will envy other beggars who are more successful.
Betrand Russell, British philosopher  ؤḶ̌һĽֵöؤ
Ӣѧ.B.  
Creditors have better memories than debtors.
Benjamin Franklin. American president  ծıȽծԺá
ͳ֡B.  
Economy is in itself a source of great revenue.
Lucius Annaeus Seneca, Ancient Roman Philosopher  Լ.ѧӣL.A.  
Economy is the poor man' s mint; and extravagance the rich man ' s pitfall.  Լ˵ҳ˷Ǹ̵塣Ӣ.M  
Few rich men own their property.The property owns them.
Robert Green Ingersoll. American Iawyer  ٸӵǵĲƲǲƲӵǡʦӢ.R.G.  
He that has a full purse never lacks a friend. Even in a busy market, nobody cares to know a poor person.
Anonymors  ɽԶףƶʶ
I finally know what distinguishes man from the other beasts:financial worries.
Jules Renard, French playwright  Ұ޵ڣΪǮǡɶ.J.  
I would rather have my people laugh at my economies than weep for my extravagance.
Oscar ll, Swedish king  ԸҵЦҵĵСҲԸΪҵĻӻ˹
If rich, it is easy enough to conceal our wealth, but, if poor, it is not so easy to conceal our poverty. We shall find it less difficult to hide a thousand guineas, than one hole in our coat.
Charles C. Colton, British clergyman  Уظףƶƶȴѡǲѷ1000ұڸ·ϵһƶסӢױʦƶ.C.C  
If you would know the value of money, go and try to borrow some.
Benjamin Franklin, American presudent  Ҫ֪Ǯļֵ취ȥǮԡͳ.B.'  
If your Riches are yours, why don't you take them with you to the other world?
Benjiamin Franklin, American president  ƸģôΪʲôǺһһȥأ
ͳ.B.  
It is better to live rich than to die rich.
Samuel Johnson, British writer  ʱһǮŵʱ÷ḻɡӢԼѷ.S.  
It is good to have money to buy things that money can buy ,but it is better not to lose things money cannot buy. 
George H. Lorimer, American journalist  ǮȥܵõĶȻǲʧýǮ򲻵Ķá
Ĭ.G.H.  
Men do not desire merely to be rich, but to be richer than other men.
John Stuart Mill, British economist  ǲϣУϣ˸СӢѧ.J.S  
Money is a good servant and a bad master.
Francis Bacon, British Philosopher  ǮͣҲǶ
Ӣѧ.F.  
Money is a singular thing, It ranks with love as man's greatest source of joy. And with death as his greatest source of anxiety.
J.K, Galbraith, American economist  ǮֵضͰһʱҸԴȪϵһʱཹǵҪԵɡ
ѧҼӶ˹.J.K.  
Money is like muck, not good except it be spread.
Francis Bacon, BAritish phlosopher  Ǯñȷʣֻز֮Ӣѧ.F.  
Money is not the root of all eviles as is usually claimed, what is the root of all evils is the lust for money, that is the excessive, selfish and greedy pusuit of mnoey.
Nathaniell Hawthorn, American writer  Ǯƽ˵֮ԴԽǮ̰ͼȶԽǮֵġ˽ġ̰׷󣬲һаĸԴ
һɣ.N.  
Money is the sinews of love, as of war.
George Farquhar, Irish dramatist  Ǯǰ֧Ǯս֧һҷ.G.  
Money may be the husk of many things, but not the kernel. It brings you food, but not appetite; medicine, but not health; acquaintances, but not friends; servants, but not loyalty; days of joy, but not peace of happiness.
Henrik Ibsen, Norwegian dramatist  ǮණǣȴĹʵʳȴθڣҩȴʶȴꣻˣȴǵģܣȴҸ
Ųײ.H  
Money will buy a pretty dog, but it won't buy the wag of his tail.
J, Billings, American humorist  ǮһĹ򲻵ҡβ͡Ĭұ˹.J.  
No country, however rich, can afford the waste of its human resources.
Franklin Roosevelt, American pesident  κһңôԣ˷ѲԴ
ͳ˹.F.  
Poverty is an abnormality to rich people. It is very difficult to make out why people who want dinner do not ring the bell.
Walter Bagehot, Buetish economist  ڸ˵ƶǲ쳣ôҲŪףЩҪԷˣΪʲôҡأ
ӢѧҰͽ.W.  
Sometimes one pays most for the things one gets for nothing.
Albert Einstein, American scientist  ʱһΪǮõĶĴߡ
ѧҰ˹̹.A.  
That man is the richest whose pleasure are the cheapest.
Henry David Thoreau, American writer  ܴѰֵ˲еˡ.H.D  
The fly that sips treacle is lost in the sweet.
John Gay, British dramatist and plet  ǵĲӬɥ
Ӣҡʫ˸.J.  
The human species, according to the best theory I can form of it, is composed of two distinct races, the man who borrows, and the man who lends.
Charles Lamb, British essayist  ܹɵۣȻͬ幹ɵģ跽跽
Ӣɢļķ,C.  
The only thing wealth does for some people is to make them worry about losing them. 
A. R .Ricvarol, French writer  ƸЩֻһ£ʹǵĻʧȥƸ޶.A.R.  
The vices of the rich and great are mistaken for error, and those of the poor and lowly, for crimes.
Margrerite Blessington, Irish writer
 ˺ΰ˵񱻴˺ͷ˵Ĺʧȴ
Ҳ.M
There are only two families in the world, as a grandmother of mine used to say, the haves and the have-nots.
Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish novelist  ҵһλĸ˵ֻˣǾǸ˺ˡС˵˹.M.  
Those who have some means think that the most impo rtant thing in the world is love. The poor know that it is money.
Gerald Brenan, British writer  ͷеǮΪҪĶҪǽǮ
ӢҲ.G.  
To suppose, as we all suppose, that we could be rich and not behave as the rich behave, is like supposing that we could drink all day and keep absolute sober.
Logan Pearsall Smith, American weiter  ΪǱ主󲻻Ǯ£Ϊպܱͷѡ
ʷ˹.L.P.  
Wealth may be an exscellent thing, for it means power. leisure, and liberty.
James Russell Lowell, British plet and critic  ƸҲǺöΪζȨݺɡ
Ӣʫˡ.J.R.  

ҸƪHAPPINESS
A contented mind is the greatest blessing a man can enjoy in this world.
Joseph Addison. American wreter  ֪¡
Ұ.J.  
A lifetime of happiness!No man alive could bear it; it would be hell on erath.
G.Bernard Shaw.British dramatist  Ҹκλŵ˶޷ܵģǽ˼
ӢФ.G.  
A well-written life is almost as rare as a well-spent one.
Thomas Carlyle, British historian and essayist  дúܺõ͹úܺõһ١
Ӣʷѧɢļҿ.T.  
Absence of occupation is not rest, a mind quite vacant is a mind distress.
William Cowper, British poet  ²Ϣʮֿʹ顣Ӣʫ˿.W.  
All the blessings we enjoy are the fruits of labor, toil, and self-denial, and study.
Willian Graham Sumner, American sociologist  ǵõһҸͶࡢҿƺѧϰĳɹ
ѧķ.W.G.  
Blessed is the man who expects nothing, for he shall not be disap-pointed.
Alexander Pope. British Poet  һҸģΪԶҲʧӢʫѲ.A.  
Call no man happy till he dies, he is at best but fortunate.
Solon, ancient Athenian statesman  ˲ײģ˭ҲƲҸ಻ˡŵμ
For in all adversity of fortune the worst sort of misery is to have been happy.
A.M S. Boethius, Ancient Roman statesman  вУҵҸμҲ˹.A.M.S.  
Happiness grows at our own firesides, and is not to be picked in strangers' garden.
D.W.Jerrold, British dramatist  ҸԼĻ¯ߣܴӱ˵Ļ԰вɵáӢҽ޶.D.W.  
Happiness is a butterfly, which ,when pursued, is always just beyond your grasp, but which, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you.
N. Hawthorn, American writer  ҸһֻҪ׷ʱ׷ĵҲ䵽ϡһɣ.N.  
Happiness is a form of courage. 
H.Jackson, British writer  ҸһʽӢҽܿѷ.H.  
Happiness is an imaginary condition, formerly often attributed by the living to the dead , now usually attributed by adults to children, and by childuren to adults.
Szasz Thomas, American psychiatrist  ҸеĶǰΪҸΪҸ
ѧ˹. S.  
Happiness is a way station between too much and too little.
C.Pollock ,British jutist  Ҹ̫̫֮һվӢѧҲ.C.  
Happiness is not a goal, it is a by--product.
Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, American president's wife  ҸĿģһָƷͳ˹ķ˰ŵ
Happiness is not something you experience; it's something you re-member.
O.Levant, Ameican pianist  Ҹ㾭£ǵõ¡
ټ.  
Happy is the man who is living by his hobby.
G.Bernard. Shaw, British dramatist  ĳõҸġ
ӢФ.G.  
Happiness lies in the consciousness we have of it.
George Sand, French woman writer  Ҹ֪ӵҸ
ŮΡɣ
Happiness lies not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the joy of achievement, in the thrill of creative effort.
Frandlin Roosevelt, American President.  ҸӵнǮڻóɾʱϲԼļ顣
ͳ˹. F.  
Hope is itself a species of happiness which this world affords.
Samuel Johnson. British writer.  ϣһҸҲṩҪҸӢԼѷ.S.  
Human felicity is produced not so much by great pieces of good fortune that seldom happen, as by little advantages that occur every day.
Benjamin Franklin, American president  ˵Ҹżĺˣ˵ÿ춼еСʵݡ
ͳ.B.  
Industry is fortune's right hand, and frugality her left.
John Ray, Averican naturalist  ǲƸ֣ڼ֡
ѧ.J  
It is not easy to find happiness in ourselves, and it is not possible to find it elsewhere.
A. Repplier, American fimale essayist  ҪҵҸǲ׵,ҪڱĵطҵҸǲ.ġ
Ůɢļ.A.  
Jobs and work do much more than most of us realize to provide happi-ness and contentment.
Leonard R. Sayles, American writer  ְҵ͹ʹ˵õҸ㷽ñǴʶҪöࡣ˹.L.R.  
Man is the artificer of his own happiness.
Henry David Thoreau, American writer  ԼҸߡ
.H.D.  
Most folks are about as happy as they make up their minds to be.
Abraham Limcoln . American ruesident  ڴ˵϶ԼжҸжҸͳֿ
No society can surely be flourishing and happy, of which the far greater part of the members are poor and miserable.
Adam Smith , British economist  һеĴ󲿷ֳԱƶֱң̸ϷҸ
Ӣѧǵ˹
Nothing is more fatal to happiness than the remembrance of happiness.
Gide Andre, French writer  ûʲôȻҸʹˡ
Ұ.G.  
One is never as unhappy as one thinks, nor as happy as one hopes.
Francois La Rochefoucauld, Frcnch writer  һԶңҲϣҸ
ʲ.F.  
Only when a man's life comes to its end in prosperity dare we pro-nounce him happy.
Aeschylus.Ancient Greek dramatist  ֻܵһ˵ڻԻнʱǲŸ˵Ҹġ
ϣҰ˹˹
There ae two things to aim at in life: first, to get what you want; and ,after that, to enjoy it , only the wisest of mankind achieve the sceond.
P. Smith Logan, American writer  ˵һĿ꣺һõҪĶڶõĶֻ˲ʵֵڶĿꡣ
.P.S.  
The secret of being miserable is to have leisure to bother about whether you are happy or not.
Gerge Bernard Shaw. British dramatist  ʹйԼǷҸ
ӢФ.G.  
The supreme happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved.
Vitor Hugo, French novelist  ʹйԼǷҸ
ӢФ.G.  
The supreme happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved.
Vitor Hugo, French novelist  ҸǼ˰ǡ
С˵.V.  
There is no paradise on earth equal to the union of love and innocence.
Jean Jecques Rousseau.French thinker  ˼ҸĪаϾ
˼¬.J.J  
There is only one happiness in life, to love and be loved.
George Sand. French woman writer  ΨһҸǣͱ
ŮΡɣ
The only way on earth to multiply happiness is to divide it.
Paul Herman Scherer,Swiss physicist  ΨһɱҸİ취ǽ̯
ʿѧϯն.P.H.  
To be without some of the things you want is an indispensable part of happiness.
B. Russell, British philosopher  òõһЩҸһزٵɲ֡
Ӣѧ.B.  
To fill the hour --- that is happiness.
Ralph Woldo Emerson, American thinker  ʱóʵЩǲҸ
˼ҰĬ,R.W.  
To really understand a man we must judge him in misforrune.
Bonapart Napoleon, French emperor  Ҫ˽һˣڲп
ʵأB.  
True happiness is of a retired nature, and an enemy to pomp and noise.
Joseph Addison, British writer  ҸԳ¶ˮ
ӢҰ.J.  
Unhappiness is best defined as the difference between our talents the difference between our talents and our expectations.
Edward de Bono.British physician  ԲҵýǵĲ֮ܺĲ졣
Ӣҽﲩŵ.E.  
We have no more right to consume happiness without producing it than to consume wealth without producing it.
George Bernard Shaw, Brittish dramatist  ȨֻܲƸƸһҲȨֻҸҸ
ӢФ.G.  
When pleasure is the business of life, it ceases to be pleasure.
Thomas Chandler Haliburton, Canadian English expert  ܳΪҪʱͲһܡ
ôӢרҹ.T.G.  
ʱƪTIME
A generation without a cause in its youth has no legacy in its old age.
Eeward Kennedy. American plliticia  һʱûҵ˾ͲŲԴȥ
μҿ.E.  
Age is a matter of feeling, not of years.
George William Crutis, American witer  ֻǸо⣬µ⡣
ҿµ˹.G.W.  
An energetic middle life is ,I think, the only safe precursor of a vitally happy old age.
Vida Drtton Sucader, Averycan educator and writer  ΪʢҸΨһɿԤס
ҡ˹.V.D.  
As soon as you feel too old to do a thing, do it.
M.Deland, American writer  һĳ̫ˣϽ
ҵ.M.  
At twenty years of age, the will reigns; at thirty, the wit; and at forty, the judgement.
Benjamin Franklin, American president  ʮʱ֧õ־ʮʱǻǣʮʱжϡ
ͳ. B.  
Do you love life? Then do not squander time; for that's the stuff life is made of .
Benjamin Franklin, American President  Ȱô˷ʱ䣬Ϊʱɵġ
ͳ.B.  
Each moment in history is a fleeting time, precious and unique.
Richard Nixon, American Puesident  ʷַתַʱ䶼ʮֱҲ塣
ͳ.R  
Experience proves that most time is wasted, not in hours, but in minutes. A bucket with a small hole in the bottom gets just as empty as a bucket that is deliberately kicked over.
Paul Meyer, French linguist  ֤󲿷ʱ䶼ǱһһӵضһСʱһСʱ˷ѵġһֻײиСͰһֻ߷Ͱͬա
ѧ÷Ү.P.  
Fish and vesitors smell in three days.
Franklin Benjamin, American president  췢סӡ
ͳ.B.  
Gather your rosebuds while you may, Old time is still flying; And this same flower that smiles today, Tomorrow will be dying.
Herrick Robert, British poet  лֱۣʱȻڷţ˻ڻЦȴҪҶ
Ӣʫ޲,H.  
He who will not when he may, when he will he shall have ma.y
Thomas Heywood, British dramatist  ΪʱΪҪΪʱѾΪ
ӢҺ.T.  
I am a slow walker, but I never walk backwards.
Abraham lincoln. American president  ߵúҴˡ
ͳֿ.A.  
I cannot afford to waste my time making money.
L Agassiz.Swiss naturalist  ˷Ѳʱȥ׬Ǯ
ʿѧҰ˹L
If you do not think about the future, you cannot have one.
John Galsworthy.British novelist and dramatist  㲻δôͲӵδ
ӢС˵ҡҸ߶˹.J.'  
If you want to understand today, you have to search yesterday.
Pearl Buck, American female writer  Ҫý죬ͱо졣
Ů
In delay there lies no plenty, Then come kiss me ,sweet and twenty, Youth's a stuff that will not endure.
Willian Shakespeare, British dramatist  Ǩɣ޶࣬ʮ正ң˥ݿഺ׹
Ӣɯʿ.W.'  
In reality killing time is only the name for another of the multifarious ways by which time kills us.
O,S itwell British writer  ʵϣĥʱֻʱĥ廨ŵķʽһַʽѡ
ӢΤ.O.  
Let bygones be bygones.
Homer ancient Greek poet  ȥ¾ȥɡ
ϣʫ˺
Life is measured by thought and action, not by time.
J. Lubbock British banker and statesman  ĳ߶˼жʱ䡣
Ӣмҡμ¬.J.  
Like coral incects multitudinous, the minutes are what of our life is made.
J.Ingelow, British female writer  Լɺǵһɷַ빹ɵġ
ӢŮӢ,J,  
Live as long as you may, the first twenty years are the longest half of your life.
Robert Southey, British writer and poet  öãͷʮ궼һһ롣
Ӣҡʫɧ,R.  
Lost wealth may be replaced by industry, lost knowledge by study, lost health by temperance of medicine, but lost time is gone for ever.
Samuel Smiles, British writer  ʧȥĲƸԿڷܻʧȥ֪ʶԿѧϰʧȥĽԿҩʧȥĹһȥ
Ӣ˹˹.S.  
Make use of time if you love eternity, yesterday cannot be recalled; tomorrow cannot be assured ;only today is yours, which if you procrastinate, you lose, and which lost is lost forever, One today is worth two tomorrow.
Anatole France, French novelist and critic  㰮㣬͸úܺõʱ䡣ղѱ֤ס죬ԵҲȥʧȥĽٸһֵ졣
С˵ҡۼҷʿ.A.  
Never leave that until tomorrow, which you can do today.
Benjamin Fuanklin, American president  ²Ҫϵ졣
ͳ.B.  
Old age is like everything else. To make a success of it, you have got to start young.
Fred Astaire, American dancer  һҪʹ֮ɹʱʼ
赸Ұ˹̩.F.  
Ordinary people merely think how they shall spend their time;a man of talent tries to use it.
Arthur Schopenhauer, German philosoher  ֻͨ뵽ζȹʱ䣬вܵ跨ʱ䡣
¹ѧ屾A.
 
Procrastination is the thief of time .
Young edward, British poet  Ӽ͵ʱ䡣
Ӣʫ˰».Y.  
The best way to suppose what may come, is to remember what is past.
George Halifax. Btritish statesman  Ʋ⽫ҪʲôõķǼסѾʲô
Ӣμҹ˹.,G.  
The golden age is before us, not behind us. 
Mark Twain ,American writer  ƽʱǰǱ
ˡ
The simple life is not necessarily living in a cabin, cultivating beans,. It is refusing to let our lives be frittered away by detail.
Wlkomir Richard, American writer  ʵ޻Ǳסľֲ㶹ֻǲǵһһε˷ѵ
.W.
 
The stream of time, which is continually washing the dissoluble fabrics of other poets, passes withut injury by the adamant of Shakespeare.
Samuel Johnson, British writer  ʱ֮ͣٵسˢʫǵЩ״ݻٵ񣬵ɯʿǵľǰȴһζֺ
ӢԼѷ.S.  
The time of life is short; to spend that shortness basely, it would be too long.
William Shakespeare, British dramatist  ̣껪ݵ̫ˡ
Ӣɯʿ.W.  
There is an important trick in this time-using formula ; you must get into your work quickly.
John Erskine, American educator and mustician  ʱ׼иҪľѸͶ빤
ҡּҰ˹.J.  
Time cures sorrows and squabbles because we all change, and are no longer the same persons. Neither the offender nor the offended is the same.
Blaise Pascal, French mathematician and philosopher  ʱȥǺΪǴҶڸı䣬ǰһߺͱ߶ѾǴǰǸˡ
ѧҡѧ˹.B.  
Time drops in delay, like a candle burnt out.
William Butler Yeats, Irish Plet and playwright  ʱεεʧȼ
Ҷ֥W.B   
Time is a bird for ever on the wing.
T.W.Robertson, British dramatist  ʱһֻԶ
Ӣ޲ѷ.T.W  
Time is a great judge, even in the fields of morals.
H.L Mencken , American arts artic  ʱΰķ٣ʹڵˡ
ۼſϡH L  
Time is a versatile performer. It flies, marches on , healsall wounds, runs out and will tell.
leonhard Frank, Cerman novelist  ʱǸŶıߡܷɣܴǰһдˣʹţҲӰ졣
¹С˵ҸˣL.  
Time is money. 
Benjamin Frankin.American President  ʱǽǮ
ͳ֣B.  
Time still, as he flies, brings increase to her truth, and gives to her mind what he steals from her youth.
Edward Moore, British dramatist  ʱڷȻʹʶഺʧĶ
Ӣ¶. E  
Time tames strongest grief.
Walt Kelly.British Picture story book painter  ʱܳ嵭޴ıˡ
ӢҿW.  
Today's today. Tomorrow, we may be ourselves gone down the drain of eternity.
Euripides ancient Creek playwright  ǽ죬Ǿʧ֮С
We always have time enough, if we will but use it aright.
Johann Wolfgang von Coethe.Cerman poet
 ֻҪʱ䣬Զʱ䲻á
 
Weep no more, no sigh, nor groan. Sorrow calls no time that's gone.
John Fletcher, British dramalist  ̾Ϣ˻ŵʱ⡣
ӢҸJ  
Write it on your heart that every day is the best of the year.
Ralph Waldo Emerson. American thinker  ģÿһ춼һõӡ
Youth is a blunder; manhood a struggle; old age a regret.
Benjamin Disraeli, British tatesman  ³çֹܶ
Ӣμҵ˹B.  
ƪFREEDOM  
A man is either free or he is not. There cannot be any apprenticeship for freedom.
I Baraka. French Writer  ҪôɵģҪôǲɵģͲڹɽ׶Ρ
ҰA.  
A new breeze is blowing --and a nation refreshed by freedom stands ready to push on : there is new ground to be broken, and new action to be taken.
Ceorge Bush, American President  һӱķڴ,Ϊʱ׼ǰƽµĵ·дأµждȡ
Among a people general corrupt, liberty cannot long exist.
Edmond Burke, British statesman  һձ鸯ܵɲܳڴڡ
ӢμҲ.E.  
Freedom is always and exclusively freedom for the one who thinks differently.
Rosa Luxemburg. Cerman revolutionary.  ʼǡֻǳֲͬ˼ߵɡ
¹¬ɭ. R  
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two makes four. If that is granted, all else follows.
Ceorge Eric Blair Orwell.
British novelist  ָ˵2+2=4ɣһ֤һб֮
ӢС˵ҰΤ.G.E.B.  
I intend no modification of my hope ...expressed personal wish that all men everywhere could be free.
Abraham Lincoln. American president  ıʱĸԸԸе˶ɡ
ͳֿ. A  
Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! -- I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty, or give me death!
Patrick Henry. Americna revolutionary  ѵ˱󣬺ƽڲϧԼūΪȥȡܵϵۣǧ鷢Ҳ֪˻ʲô·ǾҶԣɣ
Һ.P.  
It is conflict and not unquestioning agreement that deeps freedom alive. In a free country there will always be coflicting ideas, and this is a source of strength.
Thomas Jefferson. American president  ʹɱֻǳͻǾԵһ¡һɵĹܻиͻ˼룬ԴȪ
ͳѷ.T.  
It is true that liberty is precious ...... so precious that it must be rationed. Vladimir liyich lenin,. Russian revolutionary  ģɺñ밴䡣
.V. L.  
Liberty and civilization are only fragments of rights wrung from the strong hands of wealth and book learning.
Wendel Dhillips. American Social reformer  ɺǴǮ˺ͶǿһЩȨƬ
ĸҷ˹.W.  
Liberty is in every blow! Let us do or die.
Robbert Burns, British poet.  һֶһɣڶڵȴ
Ӣʫ˹.R.  
Liberty is the only thing you cannot have unless you give it to others.
William A White . American journalit.   ɾĶԼҲ޷õ
߻. W. A.  
Liberty, when it begins to take root, is a plant of rapid growth.
Ceorge Washington, Father of the United States  һѸֲ
ʢ.G.  
None is of freedom or of life deserving unless he daily conquers it anew.
Erasmus, Dutch humanist  ֻÿٶսʤȡɵˣɡ
˹Į
Nothing is more precious than independence and freedom.
Ho Chi Minh, Vietnamese statesan  ûʲôȶɸɱˡ
ԽμҺ־
Smokers and nonsmokers can not be equally free in the same railway carriage. 
Ceorge Bernard shw. British dramatist.  ߺͲͬһڳ޷ͬɡ
ӢФɣ.G.  
The history of liberty is a history of the limitation of government power.
Woodrow Wilson, American president   ɵʷȨʷ
ͳѷ.W
The most normal and the most perfect human being is the one who most thoroughly addresses himself to the activity of his best powers ,gives himself most thoroughly to the world around him ,flings himself out into the midst of humanity ,and is so preoccu pied by his own beneficent reaction on the world that he is practically unconscious of a sep arate existence...  ˾ǳͶԼóĻˣȫΧˣǺȺڴһƬˡȫר־ãڼʶԼ绹ھ롭
Frences E .C. Willard. American Social activist   £FEC
The only man who is really free is the one who can turn down an invitation to dinner without giving any excuse .  Ψһɵܹܾ룬ҽڵˡ
Jules Renard. French playwriter and novelist    ҡС˵ɶ.J.  
The truth is cruel ,but it can be loved ,and it makes free those who have loved it.
Jxartre,American writer   ģҲǿɰģʹɡ
. J.  
That freedom and order are not incompatible ;that reverence is the maid of knowledge; that free discussion is the life of truth, and of true unity in a nation.  򲢷ǱȻų⣬֪ʶϣҲǹŽͳһ
That freedom and order are not incompatible ;that reverence is the maid of knowledge; that free discussion is the life of truth, and of true unity in a nation.
Thomas Henry Huxley, British naturalist   ӢѧҺ.T. H.  
There is in liberty as in innocence and virtue a satisfaction one can only feel in their enjoyment and a pleasure which can cease only when lost.   ͬһֻʱŸе㣬һʧȥǣͻеֹͣˡ
 
Rousseau,French thinker  ˼¬
Those who deny freedom to others hardly deserve it for themselves.  ǲɵˣԼҲ޷õ
Alexander PoPe.British writer  ӢʫѰأA  
Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must undergo the fatigue of supporting it .  Ҫջ֮ˣάɵͿࡣ
Thomas Paine, British writer   Ӣ˶T
Where the press is free and every man able to read ,all is free .
Tshomas Jefferson,American President   ڳɡ˶ʶֵĵط˵ýš
ͳѷT  
ƪJOY
A good laugh is sunshine in a house.
William Makepeace Thackeray.British novelist
 ĻЦǷ⡣
ӢС˵סW.M.
 
A man who is never satisfied with himself and whom therefore nobody can please.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe , German poet
 ҪǴԼͲܹʹ⡣
¹ʫ˸.J.W.
  
A smile is ever the most bright and beautiful with a tear upon it. What is the dawn without its dew? The tear, by the smile is made precious above the smile itself.
Susanne K.Langer, American Philosopher and educator
 Цݴޡġû¶ˮʲô峿ЦݣͱЦݻ
ѧҡS.K
 
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. 
James Howell, British witer
 ֻʹ޶ۡ
ӢҺά.J.
 
Anticipating pleasure is also a pleasure.
Friedrich Schiller.German dramatist and plet
 ԤڿֱҲһֿ֡
¹ҡʫϯ.F.
 
  Better by far you should forget and smile than that you should remem-ber and be sad.
Chtistina Georgina Rossetti.British poetess.
 ЦһЦȳüؼסҪõöࡣ
ӢŮʫ.C.G.
 
But headlong joy is ever on the wing. 
John Milton,British poet
 ʵĿ˲Ϣš
Ӣʫֶ.J.
 
Energy is eternal delight.
W.Black. American poet and artist
 Ŀ֡
ʫˡҲ.W.
 
Everything considered, work is less boring than amusing oneself.
Baudelaire Charles, French poet
 ֱȹ˷ζ
ʫ˲˹.B.
 
He laughs best who laughs last.
Walter Scott, British writer
 Զ߼Ŷࡣ
Ӣѧ.J.
 
He who can conceal his joys is greater than he who can hide his griefs.
Johnann Lavater, Seiss writer
 ػֵ˱رʹ˸˲
ʿ.J.
 
I like the laughter that opens the lips and the heart, that shows at the same time pearls and the soul.
Victor Hugo, French writer
 ϲܲ˫ЦϲչʾݺЦ
.V.
 
I never condider ease and joyfulness as the purpose of life itself.
Albert Einstein, American scientist
 ҴΪݺͻ־Ŀġ
ѧҰ˹̹.A.
 
I wish to preach, not the doctrine of ignoble ease, but the doctrine of the strenuous life.
Theodore Roosevelt, American statesman
 ԸǼܷǱ΢µİݡ
μ˹.T.
 
It is a curious fact that in bad days we can very vividly recall the good time that is now no more; but that in good days we have only a very cold and imperfect memory of the bad.
Arthur Schopenharer, German philosopher
 ֵúܣڵ鹵ʱܻػѾȥʱ⣬ڵʱ򣬶ԶʱֻһֵĮȫļ䡣
¹ѧ屾.A.
 
It is a poor heart that never rejoices.
F rederick Marryat, British novelist
 Զֵĺܿɱ
ӢС˵.F.
 
Joys are our wings, sorrows are our spurs.
Jean paul Richter,French writer
 ǵ˫ǷߵĶ
.J.P
 
Labor is often the father of pleasure.
French Philosopher and historian
 Ͷǿ֮
ѧҡʷѧҷ̩
 
One of the greatest pleasure in life is conversation.
Logan Peasall Smith, Americen writer
 Ȥ֮һǽ̸
ʷ˹L.P.
 
Perfect understanding will sometimes almost extinguish pleasure.
A.E. Housman, British scholar and poet
 ȫʱʹȤʧ
Ӣѧߡʫ˺˹.A.E.
 
Never less idle than when wholly idle, nor less alone than when wholly alone.
John Clare, British poet
 ҪоȫУҪ徲ȫ徲
Ӣʫ˿J.
 
People who cannot find time for recreation are obliged sooner or later to find time for illness.
John Wanamaker,American merchant
 ڲʱֵˣᱻڳʱ
˻÷.J.
 
Pleasure is nothing else but the intermission of pain, the enjoying of something I am in great trouble for till I have it.
John Selden , British jurist
 ֲʹļЪ֮ǰҪмŬ
Ӣѧ.J.
 
Praise is ilde sunlight to the human spirit, we cannot flower and grow without it.
Graham Green, British writer
 ˵ľ˵һûǱ㲻ܿ
ӢҸ.G.
 
Rest is a good thing, but boredom is its brother.
Voltaire, French philosopher
 ϢǼ飬ȴֵܡ
ѧҷ̩
 
Sunday clears away the rest of the whole week.
Joseph Addison, British essayist
 ȥһڵ⼣
ӢɢļҰ.J.
 
The foundation of true happiness is in the conscience.
Lucius Annaeus Seneca, ancient Roman Philosopher
 ֮ġ
ѧ.L.A.
 
The greatest pleasure I know, is to do a good action by stealth, and to have it found out by accident.
Charles Lamn, British essayist
 ֪ȤǰֱżȻ֡
Ӣɢļķ.C.
 
The man who agrees with everybody is not worth having anybody agree with him.
Henry John Palmerston, British statesman
 ͬ˵ˣõκ˵ͬ
ӢμĬ˹.H.J.
 
Travel, in the younger sort, is a part of education; in the elder, a part of experience.
Francis Bacon,British Philosopher
 ζһֽһ顣
Ӣѧ.F.
 
Variety is the mother of enjoyment.
Benjamin Disraeli, British statesman and writer
 仯Ϊ֮ĸ
Ӣμҡҵ˹.B.
 
Work while you work; play while you play; This is the way to be cheerful and gay. 
Richard Stoddart, Averican poet
 ƴظɣ棻㣬ܻ֡
ʫ˹д.R.
 ƪETHICS 
A light heart can bear everything.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German poet
 ܹһС
¹ʫ˸.J.W
 
Beauty and  the lust for learning have yet to be allied.
Sirmax Beerbohm, British writer
 Ͷ֪ʶĿӦóΪһҡ
Ӣұȶķ.S.
 
Beauty is like a rich stone, best plain set.
Francis Bacon, Btitish Philosopher
 òʯװá
Ӣѧ.F.
 
Beauty lives with kindness.
William Shakespeare, British dramatist
 Ԣơ
Ӣɯʿ.W.
 
Delia M. Rios, Differences-----both real and  imagined ---- are invariably exaggerated in the media and in society as a whole.American writer
 𡪡ʵĻġǱý
.D.M.
 
Envy is a most terrible thing, and would spoil anybody's nature.Oscar Wilde, British dramatist
 ǺܿµĶٻ˵ԡ
Ӣ.O.
 
Everything that lives, lives not alone, nor for itself.
William Black ,British poet.
 ϵһȷǹ棬ֻΪ档Ӣʫ˲.W.
 
Fame is very much like an animal chasing his own tail who, when he captures is , does not know what else to do but to continue chasing it, Fame and the exhilarating celebrity that accompanies it, force the famous person to anticipate in his own destruction.Howads Melvin, Ameican essayist
 һֻ׷Լβ͵Ķץס˼׷֮⣬Ҳûˡ֮˷ܵʹ˵ԼĻɢļ.H.
 
Fame turns all the lights on and while it gives power and prestige, it takes the you out of you; you must be what the public thinks you are .not what you really are or could  be.
Howards Melvin, American essayist
 һеƹһ߸ȨһҲѡ㡱ϳ֮Ϊе㣬Ǹʵܵ㡣
ɢ.H.
 
He who can does, he who cannot teaches.
George Bernad Shaw, British dramatist
 ֵܶ£ֵܶĽˡ
ӢФ.G.
 
He who will not reason, is a bigot; he who cannot is a fool ;and he who dares not is a slave.
William Drummond. British engineer
 Ը˵̷ӣ˵ɵϣ˵ū
Ӣʦɵ.W.
 
How differences between men and women might be used for our mu-tual benefit in everything from our relation with one another to a better undrestanding of how our brains work.
Delia M.Rios .American writer
 ŮĲڸ桪˼ʹϵʽ⡪ʹ˫档
˹.D.M.
 
How many a pear which presents a blooming face to the would is rotten at  the core, How many an innocent-looking apple, is harbouring a worm in the bud,. But the orange has no secret faults. Its outside is a mirror of its inside.
Allen.A.Milne,American writer
 ۿɰں˱仵ϲ֪ж١ȥͳ˳ƻϲ֪ж١Ȼȴȱⲿĵһ澵ӡ
׶.A.A
 
I believe that fame and celebrity, influence and power, success and failure, reality and illusion are all somehow neatly woven into a seamless fabric we laughingly call reality.
Howards Melvin, American essayist
 ӰȨɹʧܡʵͻ붼Ǿķ֯һƥ޷֯Ʒ֮УЦ֮ΪʵĶ
ɢļ.H.
 
I  sometimes wonder whether the greater rule of all is --- to know how to please.
Moliere, J.B. French writer
 ʱƣĪһΪ淶Ҫһѧȡ
Īﰧ.J.B.
 
If the orange is going to be bad ----for the best of us are bad sometimes ---it begins to be bad from the outside , not from the inside.
Allen A. Milne, American writer
 ӱ仵мõʱҲ仵Ǵ濪ʼ𣬶Ǵڲ
׶.A.A
 
If you wish to lower yourself  in a person's favor, one good way is to tell his story over again, the way we heard it.
Mark Twain, American writer
 ҪԼֺñˣһоǰĹ£ԭⲻؽһһ顣
ˡ
 
In almost every face and every person, they may discover fine feathers and defects, good and bad qualities.
Benjamin Franklin, American rpesident
 ˸棬ȱ㣬г̴
ͳ.B.
 
Labour to keep alive in your breast that spark of celestial fire, called conscience.
George Washington, Father of the United States
 Ŭʥ𼴳ĵĻ𻨾ȼϢ
ʢ.G.
 
Men and women use their brains differently, but that their brains may actually be designed differently.
Delia M. Rios American writer
 ŮԷʽͬԽṹʵҲܲͬ
.D.M
 
No artist of performer can entirely escape the lure of fame and its promise of endless admiration and respect, but there is a heavy price one must pay for it.
Howads Mesvin, American essayist
 ûһλһݼȫӱգǴͳ羴ҪĴҲǷǳġ
ɢļ.H.
 
Our enemy has made us human and civilized by forcing us to suppress our narcissistic urges and desires for the good of all.
Howards Mel, American writer
 ǵĵʹǿԼΪеıҸĳ嶯ԸʹǳΪͨˣˡ
÷.H.
 
The fame of great men ought to be judged always by the means they used to acquirde it.
La Rochefoucauld, French writer
 ΰ˵ԶӦεõ
ʲ
 
The more things a man is ashamed of , the more respectable he is.
George Bernard Shaw, British dramatist
 һ˸е߳ܵԽ࣬Խ档
ӢФ.G.
 
The reasonble man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable man persists in trying to adapt the world to himself, Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
George Bre4nard Shaw, British dramatist
 ʹԼӦ磬˼ҪӦԼһнÿˡ
ӢФ.G.
 
The emotional differences exist, at least, between  the genders.
Delia M. Rios, American writer
 Ůϴڲ졣
.D.M.
 
There are two tragedies in li
George Brenard Shaw, British dramatist
 󱯾磬һǲԸһԸ
ӢФ.G.
 
Two men  look out through the same bars:one sees the mud, and one the stars.
Frederick Langbridge, British writer
 ˴ͬһդȥһ˿Ţһ˿ǡ
Ӣ.F.
 
We need enemies to help define ourselves and our lives; they help us to know who we are not or  who we do not want to be.
Howards Mel.American writer
 ǽǵ¶壻ǰʶǲʲôʲôˡ
÷.H.
 
When a stupid man is doing something he is ashamed of ,he always declared that it is his duty.
George Bernard Shaw, British dramatis
 һһʹе߳ܵ£ִ
ӢФ.G.
 
You will never enjoy the world aright, till he sea itself  floweth in your vein, till you are clothed with the heavens, and  crowned  with the stars.
|Thomas Ttaherne, British poet
 ֱԲ£ǳڣѪźˮǲ
Ӣʫն.T.
 ƪMORALITY
All men are liable to error; and most men are, in many points, by passion or interest, under temptation to it.
John Locke, British Philosopher
 ˶᷸£Ȥնġ
Ӣѧ.J.
 
Character is what you are in the dark.
D. L Moody. USA churchman
 ܷӳһƷ
ʿµ.D.L
 
Courage is the ladder on which all the other virtues mount.
Clare Boothe Luce, RSA dramatist
 һӣȫȥ
¬˹.C.B.
 
Despite all the life danger, with one selfless act from one common person, someone is saved, A hero is made.
Norman Stephens, USA writer
 һΣգһͨ˵˽ж˵þˣӢ۾Ӧ˶
˹ٷ˹.N.
 
Distrust can be contagious. But, so can trust.
Robbins Stacia, British writer
 дȾԡҲˡ
Ӣ˹￨.R.
 
Fame is the chastisement of meit and the punishment of talent.
Nicolas Chamfort, French writer
 ʢǵ²֮ɡ
и.N.
 
God was constructed out of mankind's need for hope , for purpose, for meaning:an invisible protector and conscientious father.
Howards Mel. USA       writer
 ڶϣĿҪһλڤڤ֮еıߺ;ߡ
÷.H.
 
He who would do good to another must do  it in minute particulars; general good is the plea of the scoundrel , hypocrite and flatterer.
William Black, British poet
 ǾġضģġͳǶαӺߵдǡ
Ӣʫ˲,W.
 
I  know only that what  is moral  is what you feel good after and what is immoral is what you feel bad after.
Ernest Hemingway, USA writer
 ֻ֪νָºúõĶνָºòõĶ
Һ.E.
 
If you would convince others ,you seem open to conviction yourself.
Philip Dormer Chesterfield, British statesman
 Ҫ˵ˣȵ˵Լ
Ӣμ˹طƶ.P.D.
 
If your morals  make  you dreary. depend upon it, they are wrong.
Robert Louis Stevenson, British novelist
 ƷʹѻôЩƷǴġ
ӢС˵˹ɭ.R.L.
 
It is an open question whether any behavior based on fear of eternal punishment can be regarded as ethical or should be regarded as  merely cowardly.
Magaret Mead, USA humanist
 һдǣǺֹĳͷΪǱеµأӦñųģ
ѧ׵.M.
 
It is not enough to do good; one must do it the right way.
John Morley, British statesman
 ˲Ҫ£Ҫȷķʽ¡
ӢμĪ.J.
 
Lying disguises our mortality, our inadequacies, our fears and anxieties, our loneliness in the midst of the crowd. We yearn for the comfort of familiar lies to create a more amenable reality.
Howards Mel, USAwriter
 ˵ڸıȻԡȱݡ־塢ǺȺеĹ¶ĻԻᴴһӦʵ˿Щеõο
÷.H.
 
Morality is not really the doctrine of how to make ourselves happy but of  how we are to be worthy of  happiness.
Immanuel Kant, German Philosopher
 ȷʵָʹԼҸĽָҸѧ˵
¹ѧҿ.I.
 
Morality is the custom of one's country ;cannibalism is moral in a cannibal country.
Samuel Brttler, British writer
 һڹҵķϰߣڳ˵ĹǺϺµġ
ӢҲ.S.
 
Morality is the  herd  instinct  in the  individual.
German Philosopher
 ǸĿеȺӱܡ
¹ѧ.F.
 
Morality may consist solely in the courage of making a choice.
Leon Nlum, French statesman
 ¿ܽ
μҲ³ķ.L.
 
Mutual forgiveness of each vice, such are the gates of Paradise.
William Black, British poet
 ໥ݶԷȱ㣬֮ͨš
Ӣʫ˲.W.
 
No mourality can be founded on authority, even if the authouity were divine.
  A. J. Ayer. USA writer
 ²ܽȨĻϣʹȨϵġ
Ұ.A.J.
 
Nothing is easier than to deceive one's self.
Demothenes, Ancient Greek statesman
 ûʲôƭԼ׵ˡ
ȻϣμҵĦ
 
Personality is to man what perfume  is to a flower.
C C Schwab. US A  Businessman
 Ʒ֮ˣ緼֮ڻ
ʵҵʩ߲C .C.
 
Plain  living and high thinking.
william Wordsworth, British poet
 ҪأҪС
Ӣʫ˵.J
 
Rich gifts wax poor when givers prove unkind.
william shakewspeare   British dramalist
 ˲ǳģٹصҲʧȥļֵ
Ӣɯʿ. W
 
There is , however, a  limit at which forbearance ceases to be a virtue.
E  Burke, British statesman
 Ҳи޶ȣ޶ȾͲ¡
μҲ.  E.
 
Virtue is bold, and  goodness never fearful.
William shakespeare,  British dramatist
 ¸ҵģη塣
Ӣɯʿ. W.
 
We all tell lieslittle lies, big lies, necessity lies in order to insure social and psychological peace and comfort.
Howard Mel, USA writer
 е˵ĻѡСѡѡĻѡΪȷᰲʲȡıҪֶΡ
  ÷H
 
We know the good, we apprehend it clearly, but we can't bring it to achievement . To persevere, trusting in what hopes he has, is courage in a man.
Euripides , ancient Creek dramatist.
 Ƕƣƣ޷ʵơ˵ǼԼϣܹʵ֣Ϊ֮вӵŬ
J. P
 
Wherever  true valor is found, true modesty will  there abound.
William Gillbert, British dramatist and poet
 ¸ңǫ顣
Ӣҡʫ˼.W.
 
Words may be false and full of arts ,sighs are the natural language of the heart.
Thomas Shadwell, British dramatist
 ǻԲмɣ̾ϢȻ¶
ӢɳΤ.T.
ƪSELF-CULTIVATION
A beautiful form is better than a beautiful face; a beautiful behavior than a beautiful form.
Ralph Waldo Emerson. American thinker
 ʤƯΪʤΡ
˼ҰĬ.R.W
 
A little credulity  helps one on through life very smoothly.
Elizabeth Gaskell, British female writer
 еűˣͻ⡣
ӢŮҸ˹.E.
 
A man is called selfish ,not pursuing his own good ,but neglecting his neighbour's.
Richard Whately, American churchman
 ׷棬˽ֻк˵棬˽
ʿ.R.
 
A man is only as good as what he loves.
Saul Bellow, American writer
 һҪĶƷ
ұ.S.
 
A man's own manner and character is what most becomes.
Marcus Tullius Cicero, American statesman
 ԼķȺƷ񹹳ɵġ
μ.M.T.
 
A truly elegant taste is generally accompanied with excellence of heart.
John Keats .British poet
 ŵȤ֮ɷ֡
Ӣʫ˼ô.J.
 
After the verb to love, to help is the most  beautiful verb in the world.
Aldous Leonard Huxley. British novelist
 ˡ֮⣬Ķʡ
ӢС˵Һ.A.L.
 
All for one, one for all.
Alexandre Dumas (Davy de La Pailleterie). French writer
 ΪңΪˡ
Ҵ.A.
 
All men are poets at heart.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker
 еʫˡ
˼ҰĬR.W.
 
Anger is a  wind which blows out the lamp of the mind.
Robert Green Ingersoll, American lawyer
 ŭ֮Ƶķ硣
ʦӢ.R.G.
 
Be not angry that you cannot make others as you wish them to be, since you cannot  make yourself as you wish to be.
Thomas Mann, German writer
 Ҫڱ˲ܳΪϣ˶ŭΪԼҲܳΪԼϣˡ
¹˹
 
Beauty gains little, and homeliness and deformity lose much , by gaudy attire.
Arthur Zimmermann, German diplomat
 ˶Ҳγª͡
¹⽻Ĭ.A.
 
Being a well-dressed man is a career, and he who goes in for it has no time for anything else.
Heywood Broun, American columnist
 һְҵ׷ŵûʱ顣
רҲ޶.H.
 
Better a  frank denial than unwillig compliance.
V Hugo, French writer
 ǿӦʲ̹Ͼܾ
 .V.
 
Birth is nothing where virtue is not.
Moliere, French dramatist
 Ʒ²ãٺҲá
Īﰧ
 
By ignorance is pride increased; those most assume who know the least.
ohn Gay, British dramatist
 ֪Խ֪ǳԽǽ
ӢҸ.J.
 
Charms strike the sight, but merit wins the soul.
Alexander pope, British poet
 ɫп¸ˡ
ӢʫѲ.A.
 
Custom, then is the great guide of human life.
David Hume, British philosopher
 ΰ򵼡
Ӣѧ.D.
 
Envy is blind and kows nothing except how to depreciate the excellence of others.
Titus Livins Livy, Ancient Rooman historian
 Ϲӣ˱ͱ˵ŵ֮⣬ʲôҲ֪
ʷѧά.T.L.
 
Genius is  formed in quiet, character in the strenm of life.
ohann Wolfgang German poet
 γƽУԸļ
¹ʫ˸.J.W.
 
Honesty and diligence should be your eternal mates.
Brnjamin Franklin, American president
 ʵ㣬ӦóΪõĻ顣
ͳ.B.
 
Honesty is the germ from which all growth of nobleness proceeds.
George Sandys,American traveler and poet
 ʵǸ߹Էչѿ
мҡʫɣ˹.G.
 
I  cannot and will not cut my conscience to fit this year's fashions.
Lillian Hellman ,American dramatist
 ҲܡҲԸҵȥӭʱС
Һն.L.
 
In a complex world ,to insist upon simplicity is  foolish.
Richard Wlokomir, Amercan writer
 ڸӵϣֵ޴ġ
ֿġҡ
 
In scandal , as in robbery ,the receiver is always thought as bad as the thief.
Philip Doumer Chesterfield, British statesman
 ܻͬ٣ʼΪܻһ֮ѡ
Ӣμ˹طƶ.P.D
 
It is only when the mind and character slumber that the dress can be seen.
R.W.Emerson , American thinker
 ֻһ˵Ʒ˯ʱǲŻע⵽ķΡ
˼ҰĬ.R.W
 
It is with narrow-minded people as with narrow-necked bottle; the less they  have in them the more  noise they make in pouring out.
Alexandre Pope British poet
 ˾СƿӣװĶԽ٣ʱԽ
ӢʫѲ,A.
 
It takes a lot of thought and effort and downright determination to be agreeable.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker
 ҪǢദҪϸ˼Ŭʹ¾ġ
˼ҰĬ.R.W.
 
Man will become better only when you will make him see what he is like.
Chekov, Russian writer
 ֻʹ˿ԼΪˣܱøá
·
 
Politeness is like an air cushion;  there may be nothing  in it ,but it eases ours jolts wonderfully.
Samuel Johnson, British writer
 òֻ棺ʲôҲûУȴؼٵ
ӢԼѷ.S.
 
Silence is the most perfect expression of scorn.
George Bernard Shaw, British dramatist
 Ĭı﷽ʽ
ӢФ.G.
 
Temperance is the greatest of virtues.
Plutarch ,Ancent Greek dramatist
 ҽ¡
|ϣ³
 
The highest possible stage in moral culture is when we recognize that we ought to control our thoughts.
Charles Darwin, British narurlist
 ܴﵽ߼۶ΣʶӦÿǵ˼롣
ӢѧҴ.C.
 
The horizon of life is broadened chiefly by the enlargement of the heart.
H.Black American writer
 ķΧصĿġ
Ҳ,H.
 
The noble soul has reverence for itself.
Heinrich Gotthard Treitschke, German historian
 е˱
¹ʷѧ.H.G.
 
The principal thing in this world  is to keep one's soul aloft.
Flaubert, French writer
 ҪǱĸС
Ҹ¥
 
There is always a first brave person who breaks step with the stam-peding masses fleeing in panic, who pauses to help another to his feet ,creating his own eye in the storm, The stuff of heroes is made, forged in the midst of tragedy, in the blink of an eye.
Norman Stephens ,American writer
 ھӵȺУеһ¸߳ͣվڷ籩ԼۡӢ۵ת˲֮Σ֮С
˹ٷ˹.N.
 
Thinking is , or ought to be, a coolness and a calmness; and our poor hearts throb, and our poor brains beat too much for that.
H, Melville, American writer and poet
 ˼ǻӦ侲ŵģǿ˷ܣʹǲ˼
ҡʫ÷ά.H.
 
Three passions, simple but overwhelmingly controlling my life: the longing  for love, the search for knowledge, and unbearable pity for the suffering of mankind.
Bertrand Russell, British philosopher
 Ӷʮǿҵļһֱ֧ҵ԰֪֮ʶѵ
Ӣѧ.B.
 
We are like wheat, here on earth to ripen. We ripen intellectually by letting in as much of the universe's complexity as we can. Morally we ripen by making our choices. And we ripen spiritually by openig our eyes to Creation's endless detail.
Richard Wolkomir, American writer
 ǾСϵȴų졣ͨܶĸʹϳ죬ͨѡʹǵϳ죬ͨ۾͵޾ϸʹϳ졣
ֿġ.R.
 
We must deal with pleasure as we do with honey, only touch them with the tip of the finger, and not with the whole hand for fear of surfeit.
aint Bede, British bishop
 ӦԷԴܣָֻպֻȥץԵ̫ࡣ
Ӣ̱ȵ.S.
 
What is a man's first duty? The answer is brief ; to be himself.
Ibsen, Nowegian dramatist
 ˵ĵһְʲô𰸺ܼ򵥣αԼ
Ųײ
 
You can tell the size of a man by the size of the things which make him mad.
Adlai Stevenson, Averican statesman
 ݶʹһ˱ףжϳ˵ķ
μʷɭ. A.
 ѧϰƪSTUDY
A little learning is a  dangerous thing.
Alexander Pope, British poet
 ѧǳı
ӢʫѰ.A.
 
Beauty in things exists in the mind which contemplates them.
D.Hume, British Philosopher
 ϸ۲ĿС
Ӣѧ.D.
 
Cultivation to the mind is as necessary as food for the body.
Cicero, Ancient Roman state4sman and orator
 ѧϰͷԣͬʳһȱ١
μҡ˵
 
Eternal truths will be neither true nor eternal unless they have fresh meaning for every  new social situation.
Franklin Roosevelt, Averican president
 µ¸µ壬ҪôͲҪôġ
ͳ˹.F.
 
Experience   teaches slowly, and at the cost of mistakes.
Janes Anthony Froude, British historian
 ӾѧϰЧҪԴΪۡ
ӢʷѧҸ·J.A.
 
Fools learn nothing from wise men , but wise men learn much from fools.ohann kaspar Lavater, Swiss writer
 ɵѧ֮٣ȴɵѧ֮ࡣ
ʿ.J.K.
 
Grammar must be learned through language, and not language through grammar.
Johann G. Herdor, German philosopher
 ѧϰ﷨Ǵ﷨ѧϰԡ
¹ѧҺն.J.G.
 
He  who nothiong questions, nothing learns.
Sthephen Gosson, British writer
 ʲôҲʵʲôҲѧ
ӢҸɣ.S.
 
He that sips of many arts, drinks  none.
Thomas Fuller, Bdritish clergyman
 ʲôѧˣʲôҲѧ
Ӣʦ.T.
 
Histories make men wise; poems witty; the mathematics subtle; natural philosophy deep; moral grave; logic and rhetoric able to contend.
Francis Bacon, British Philosopher
 ʷʹǣʫʹ㣻ѧʹܣȻѧʹ̣ʹׯأ߼ѧʹƱ硣
Ӣѧ.F.
 
I  forget what I was taught, I only remember what I have learned.
Patrick White, British novelist
 ˱˽ҵĶֻǵԼѧĶ
ӢС˵һ.P.
 
If you don't learn to think when you are young, you may never learn.
Thomas Edison, American inventor
 ʱûѧ˼ǾԶѧ˼
Ұ.T.
 
It is not shame for a man to learn that which he knows not, whatever his age.
Soctates, Ancient Greek Philosopher
    һ˲󣬶ҪѧϰԼĶⲻ߳ܡ
ѧո
 
It is only when we see without any preconception, any image, that we are able to be in direct contact with anything in life.
Jiddu Krishnamurti, Indian religious philosopher
 ֻеǲκ֮κȥ۲ʱǲеｨֱӵϵ
ӡڽѧҿϣĻ.J.
 
Learning is the enterprise of a lifetime.
W,Wilson, Averican president
 ѧϰҵ
ͳѷ.W.
 
Live to learn, not learn to live.
Francis Bacon, British philosopher
 žҪѧϰѧϰΪ˻š
Ӣѧ.F.
 
Maxims are the condensed good sense of nations.
James Mackingtosh, British philosopher
 ʶĽᾧ
Ӣѧʲ.J.
 
Naturl abilities are like natural plants that need pruning by study.
Francis Bacon, British philoslpher
 ĲŸֲͬһҪѧϰ޼
Ӣѧ.F.
 
Never too old to learn.
Thomas Middleton , British writer
 ѧϡ
Ӣܵ¶.T.
 
Reading good books is like having a conversation with the hihgly worthy persons of the past who wrote them; indeed, it is like having a prepared conversation in which those persons disclose to us only their thinking.
Renes Descartes, French Philosopher and mathematician
 飬ͬЩ˾صǽ̸ȷǺһƪ׼̸̸֮Уֻ¶ǵļ⡣
ѧҡѧҵѿ.R.
 
The three foundations of learning:seeing much ,suffering much, and studying much.
Willa Cather, American writer
 ѧ۲졢ĥ¡о
ҿɪ.W.
 
The  years  teach much which the days never know.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Averican thinker
 ѧʻɣÿղ֪
˼ҰĬ.R.W.
 
There is no royal road to learning.
Anthony Trollope, British novelist
 ѧûƽ̹Ĵ
ӢС˵.A.
 
There is no whetstone like praise, to sharpen a good wit and encourage a will to learn.
Roger Ascham, Bdritish scholar and writer
   ڴ̼չ
ӢѧߡҰ˹ķ.R.
 
To read without reflecting is like eating without digesting.
Edmund Burke, British statesman
 ѧ˼ʳ
ӢμҲ,E.
 
Turn off the TV and read great books ,They open doors in your brain.
Wolkomir Bichard, American writer
 صӣĶΰǻ֮š
,W.
 
You can learn from everyone.
Derek Boke, American president of Harvard University
 κѧϰ
ѧУ.D.
 
You will never have what you like until you learn to like what you have .
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German poet
 ѧϲеĶǰԶõϲĶ
¹ʫ˸.J.W.
 
ƪWORK
Behavioral research discloses that human relations at work are just easier, perhaps because they are more regular and predictable and thus simpler to adjust to than the sporadic, the more intense and less regular relationship in the community.
R.Sayles Leonard, British writer
 Ϊѧоʾ֮ϺദΪϵ˼ʹϵйɣϣ֮ĹϵǶ϶ģȽϽţҲйɿѭ
Ӣɵ.R.S.
 
Don't gild the lily.
William Shakespeare, British dramatist
 Ҫٺϻƽ/㡣
Ӣɯʿ.W.
 
Every man's work, whether it be literature of music of pictures or architecture of anything else, is always a portrait of himself.
Samuel Brtler, Averican educator
 ÿ˵Ĺѧ֡Լһ
Ҳ.S.
 
Growth and change are the law of all life. Yesterday's answers are inadequate for today's problems ----just as the solutions of today will not fill the needs of tomorrow.
Franklin Roosevelt, Averican president
 仯һķյĴ𰸲ڽյ⡪ķܽ
ͳ˹,F.
 
Happiness, I have discovered, is nearly always a rebound from hard work.
David Grayson, American journalkist
 ҷ֣ڹı꼸Ҹ
߸ɭ.D.
 
I can live for two months on a good compliment.
Mark Twain, American writer
 ֻƾһĻҾͿԳʵػ¡
ˡ
 
I do not like work ---no man does --but I like what is in the work -----the chance to find your self.
Conrad Joseph, British novelist
 Ҳϲû˻ϲϲµĹСҵԼĻᡣ
ӢС˵Լɪ.C.
 
In order that people may be happy in their work, these things are needed: they must be fit for it; they must not do much of it; and they must have a sense of success in it.
John Ruskin, British writer
 Ϊʹڹʱе֣㣻һҪʤԼĹǲ̫ࣻǱԼĹгɾ͸С
Ӣ˹.J.
 
In our efforts to adjust differences of opinion we should be free from intolerance of passion, and our judgements should be unmoved by alluring phrases and unvexed by selfish interests.
Grover Cleveland, American president
 ŬЭķʱӦƫִ£ǵжϲӦƭҲӦ˽ҡ
ͳ.G.
 
In silence, in steadiness, in severe abstraction, let him hold by him-delf, add observation to observation, patient of neglect, patient of reproach , and bide his own time , happy enough if he can satisfy himself alone that thia day he has seen something truly.
Ralph Waldo Emersom, American thihker
 ѧӦø߶ȼоᶨ׷󣬼ּĬ۲졣Ҫǵĺ𱸣ȴԼΪĳЩϲʱ
˼ҰĬ.R.W.
 
It is impossible to enjoy idling thoroughly unless one has plenty of work to do.
Jerome Klapka Jerome, British humorist
 дĹ
ӢĬҽķ.J.K.
 
It is no use doing what you like; you have got to like what you do.
Winston Churchill, British prime minister
 ܰвŸУҪаС
Ӣ𼪶,W.
 
My philosophy of life is work.
Thomas Alva Edison, Averican inventor
 ҵѧǹ
Ұ.T.A.
 
One of the symptoms of approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one's .work is terribly important, and that to take a holiday would bring all kinds of disaster, If I were a medical man , I should precribe a holiday to many patient who consicered his  work important.
Bernard Russell, British philosopher
 񾭼֢״֮һԼĹҪݼٽѡҽҸĲ˿ҩǣݼ١
Ӣѧ.B.
 
The best preparation for good work tomorrow is to do good work today.
Elbert Hubbard, Bitish writer
 ΪĹãõ׼ǰѽĹá
Ӣҹ.E.
 
The office of the scholar is to cheer, to raise, and to guide men by showing them facts amidst appearances.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker
 ѧߵĹͨʾеʵڡڡڡ
˼ҰĬ.R.W.
 
To do great work a man must be very idle as well as very industrious.
Samuel Bubler, American educator
 ҪΰĹһ˱ȷǳַǳС
Ҳ.S.
 
To him I owe the discovery that even very short periods of time add up to all useful hours I need, if I plunge in without delay.
Johm Erskine, American educator
 ҸмʹҷּʹǺ̵ܶʱֻ̣ҪҷһͷͳΪҪرõļͷ
Ҷ˹.J.
 
To youth I have three words of counsel ---work, work and work.
Otto Btismarck, Greman statesman
 ꣬ҵҸֻʡ
¹μ˹.O.
 
We often hear of people breaking down from overwork, but in nine cases out of ten they are really suffering from worry or anxiety.
John Lubbock , British banker
 ǳ˵ȶʵʮа˾Ϊܵǻǵĥ
Ӣм¬.J.
 
Whoever is in a hurry shows that the thing he is about is too big for him. ˭Ҵææֻ˵ܴµĹ
Ӣμ˹طƶ.P.D.
 
We should work be such a significant source of human satisfaction.A good share of the answer rest in the kind of pride that is stimulated by the job , by the activity of accomplishing.
Leonard R.Sayles, British writer
 ΪʲôȻǻҪԴȪأҪĴ𰸾ڣͨȡõĳɾܼͣһԺС
Ӣ˹.L.R.
 
Work banishes those three great evils: boredom, vice ,and poverty.
Voltaire, French Philosopher
 ħģƶ
ѧҷ̩
 
Work is more that a necessary for most human  beings; it is the focus of their lives , the souece of their identity and creativity.
Leonard R.Sayles, British writer
 Դ˵һֱ裬Ľ㣬ǵĸԺʹԵԴȪ
Ӣ˹.L.R.
 
Work is the grand cure for all the maladies and miseries that ever beset mankind.
Thoas Carlyle, British historian
 ҩҽһ˵ļࡣ
Ӣʷѧҿ.T.
 
Work is worth doing of worth doing well .
Thomas Carlyle, British historan
 һֵãֵȥ
Ӣʷѧ.T.
 
ƪFRIENDSHIP
A friend is , as it were, a second self.
Cicero, Ancient Roman statesman ˵һҡ
μ
A man should keep his friendship in constant repair.
Samuel Johnaon, British writer ֻоࡱܱ쳤ؾá
ӢԼѷ.S. 
A true friend is for ever a friend.
Grorge Macdonald, British novelist Ҫ˽¸ѣҪ佱ѡ
ʿ.P. 
Animals are such agreeable friends --they ask no questions, they pass no criticism.
George Eliot, British novelist ǼദѣǴʣҲӲ
ӢС˵Ұ.G. 
Be slow in choosing a friend, slower in changing.
Benjamin Franklin, American pesident ѡҪѸҪ
ͳ.B. 
Because friendships enhance our lives ,it is important to cultivate them.
Robert Louis Stevenson, British novelist and poet ֲʮҪΪļֵ
ӢС˵ҡʫʷɭ.R.L. 
Betraying a trust is a very quick and painful way to terminate a friendship.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker Ѹٶʹضꡣ
˼ҰĬ.R.W.
 
Don't try to win a friend by presenting gifts. You should instead contribute your sincere love and learn how to win others 'heart through appropriate ways.
Socrates, Ancient Greek philosopher
 ҪȥѣֿİѧķӮñ˵ġ
ϣѧո
Friendship is an essential ingredient in the making of a healthful, rewarding life.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker ʹ˵һȱٵɲ֡
˼ҰĬ.R.W. 
Friendship is both a source of pleasure and a component of good health. 
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker ǿ֮ԴȪǽ֮Ҫء
˼ҰĬ.R.W. 
He that will not allow his friend to share the prize must not expect him to share the danger.
Aesop, Ancient Greek fable writer ѹʵˣҪָѡ
ϣԢ
If a friend tells a fault, imagine always that he has not told the whole.
Robert Louis Stevenson, British novelist and poet Ѹһȱ㣬ûкг
ӢС˵ҡʫʷɭ. R.L. 
It is not enough to help the feeble up, but to support him after.
William Shakespeare, British dramatist ߷ǲģҪվ֧֮
Ӣɯʿ.W. 
No man is the whole of himself; his friends are the rest of him.
Harry Emerson Fosdick, American churchman κԼģಿ֡
ʿ˹Ͽ,H.E. 
No matter how strong you are how notable your attainments, you have endruring significance only in your relationship to others.
Ziegler Edward, American writer жôǿĳɾͶôԻֻͣб֮ĹϵһвŻг־õ塣
Ұ».Z . 
People need to know one another to be at their honest best.
Robbins Staca, Britsh writer Ҫ໥˽ܴﵽʵľ硣
Ӣ˹￨.R. 
Some components of a thriving friendship are honesty, naturalness, thoughtfulness, some common interests.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker ȷ곣ҪǣʵʵȻĳЩͬȤ
˼ҰĬR.W. 
Suspicion is the poison of friendship .
St, Augustine, Bishop of hippo  Ƕ¶ҩ
ϣʥ¹˹
The only way to have a friend is to be one.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker Ψһܻѵİ취Լѵ
˼ҰĬ.R.W. 
Throughout life, we rely on small groups of people for love, admira-tion, respect, moral support, and help.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker һǶڴһЩȺлѰʶءֺ֧Ͱ
˼ҰĬ.R.W. 
To make your life a sound structrure that will serve others and fulfil your own potential, you have to remember that strength, however massive , can't endure unless it has the interlocking supprt of others. Go it alone and you'll inevitably tumble.
Zichler Edward, Admerican writer ҪʹΪͬʱܷԼǱι̵Ľס˵֧ϵһ𣬷۶ôԳ־ãǹƥؽһ޳ɡ
Ұ».Z. 
True friendship is like sound health .The value of it is seldom known until it is lost.
Charles Caleb Colton, British writer 罡ֻʧȥʱŻʶļֵ
ӢҿƶC.C. 
Two persons cannot long be friends if they cannot forgive each other's little failings.
Jean de La Bruyere, French moralist ˶ڱ˴˵Сȱ㲻໥ԭ£ǵ㲻ܳ־á
¼Ү.J.D. 
Very close and trusted friends share confidences candidly. They feel secure that they will not be ridiculed of derided ,and their confidences will be honored.
Robert Louis Steveson, British novelist and poet ܶε֮˴˳ǲᱻϷŪͳЦ̤ʵǣ֮λܵء
ӢС˵ҡʫʷɭ.R.L. 
We can not tell the precise moment when friendship is founded, As in filling a vessel drop by drop, there is at last a drop which makes it run over ; so in a serics of kindness there is at last one which makes the heart run over.
James Boswell, British writer ޷ȷʱ̣һһεעһһһʹ磻ˣԽӶĺ⣬ôһλᶯң硣
ӢҲ˹Τ,J. 
When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker ϲ£ѷ֣ϲϼϲ֮澳ɥͬĵ߳Żʹࡣ
˼ҰĬ.R.W. 
With close friends in their lives ,people develop courage and positive attitudes.Teenagers have the moral support to assert their individuality;the elderly approach their advanced years with optimism and an interest in life.
Ralph Waldo Emerson. American thinker  ֿѣǾܹû꾭˾о֧ԼĸԣỳֹȤꡣ
˼ҰĬR.W. 
 ƪLOVE 
jiddu Krishnamurti, lndia-born religious philosop A  man who does not know what passion is will never know   love because love can come into being only when there is total self aban -donment .
 һԶᶮðΪֻȫҵʱ򣬲дﵽľ硣ӡȳڽѧҿϣ¶.J.
 
Absence to love is what wind is to fire .lt extinguishes the small; it inflames the great.Roger de Bussy-Rabutin, French writer
 ֮ڰñȷ֮ڻܽСϨʹȼաұ-ȵ.R.
 
Every man is a poet when he is in love Plato. ancient Creek philosopher 
 ÿе˶ʫˡϣѧҰͼ
 
First love is only a little foolishness and a lot of curiosity. George Bernard Shaw
 һ㱿׾档ӢФ.G
 
Friendship is like earthenware: once broken, it can be mended; love is like a mirror: once broken, that ends it.  Josh Billings. American humorist
 ˿޲ñȾӣһƾԲĬұ˹.  .J
 
Friendship is love without his wings.George Gordon Byron, Bdritish poet
 ûİӢʫ˰.G,G
 
Gravitation is not responsible for people falling in love.Albert Einstein, American scientist
 ǵʹ׹밮ӡѧ
 
The greater the power, the more dangerous the abuse.
Burke Edmund, British statesman
 ȨԽְȨΣվԽ
ӢμҰ.B.
 
The greatest of evils and the worst of crims is poverty.
George Bernard Shaw, British dramatist
 Ķ׵ƶ
ӢФ.G.
 
The paramount duty of Congress is to stop deficiencies by the restoration of that protective legislation which has always been the firmst prop of the Treasury.
William Mckinley, American president ְǻָʼǹҲʵ֧ıֹ֡
ͳƽ.W. 
The people may safely be trusted to hear everything true and false, and to form a correct judgment,Were it fall to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers of newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.
Thomas Jefferson, American president ȫģӦһʵαĶȻȷжϡʹӦһҪֽأӦбֽҪһԥѡߡ
ͳѷ.T. 
The tyrant dies and his rule ends, the martyr dies and his rule be-gins.
Soren Kierkegaard, Danish religious philowopher ˣͳҲͽʿˣͳθտʼ
ڽѧһ˸.S.
 
There is something behind the throne greater than the king him-self.
William Pitt, British statesman
 ĺ滹бȹ˸ΰ
ӢμƤ.W.
 
To be acquainted with the merit of ministry, we need only observe the condition of the people.
Junius, Unidentified letter writer Ҫ˽ֻҪ۲顣
Ŵ˹
To know the pains of power, we must go to those who have it; to know its pleasure, we must go to those who are seeking it :the pains of power is real, its pleasures imaginary.
C.Colton Charles, British churchman ֪Ȩʹ࣬ȥЩȨߣ֪ȨȤȥЩ׷ȨߣȨʹʵģȨȤֻƾġ
Ӣʦ˹.C.C. 
Too fond of the right to pursue the expedient.
Oliver Goldsimith, British poet ϲȨͻ᲻ֶΡ
Ӣʫ˸˹˹.O. 
We need in politics man who have something to give, not men who have something to get.
Bernard Baruch, Averican economist Ҫ׵ˣջˡ
ѧҰ³.B. 
When a man assumes a public trust, he should consider himself as public property.
Thomas Jefferson, American President һܵʱӦðԼڵĲƲ
ͳѷ.T. 
When society requires to be rebuilt, there is no use attempting to rebuild it on the old plan.
John Stuart Mill, BAritish economist Ҫؽʱͼīؾɵͼؽͽġ
Ӣѧ.J.S. 
ͥƪFAMILY
A mother is not a person to lean on but a person to make leaning un-necessary.
D.C,Fisher, American female novelist ĸײˣʹΪҪˡ
ŮС˵ҷϯ.D.C. 
All happy families are like one another; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.
Leo Tolstoy ,Russian writer ҸļͥʮƣÿҵļͥиԵĲҡ
ѧж˹̩.L. 
All I am , or can be, I owe to my angel mother.
Abraham lincoln, American president ֮У֮ܣ鹦ʹĸס
ͳֿ
As a modern parent, I know that it's not how much you give children those counts, it's the love and attention you shower on them.A caring attitude can not only save you a small fortune, but also even make you feel good about being tight-fisted and offering more care than presents.
O,Hare Noel, American writer ΪһִĸĸҺҪĲ˺ǶʵĶעϵĹĺͰĵ̬Ȳܰʡһʿɹ۵ǮʹеһοΪ㻨ǮಢҸʤĹػ
ŵ.O. 
Be it ever so humble , there is no place like home.
John Howard Payne, Averican drmatist and actor ѣѣԼҵĲѡ
ҡԱ. J. H. 
Every soil where he is well, is to a valiand man his natural country.
Masinger Phililp, British dramatist
 ¸ҵ֮ǹ硣
Ӣҷ.M.
 
Go where he will, the wise man is at home His harth the earth, his hall the azure dome.
R.W.Emerson, American thinker  ĺΪ--ı¯Ŀ
˼ҰĬ.R.W. 
Happy are the families where the government of parents is the reign of affection, and obedience of the children the submission to love.
Francis Bacon, British philosopher ҸļͥĸȰңҲǳڶԸĸİ˳Ӵˡ
Ӣѧ.F. 
He is the happiest ,be he King or peasant , who finds peace in his home. 
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German dramstist and poet ǹũ򣬼ͥҸġ
¹ҡʫ˸. J.W. 
Home is the girl's prison and the woman's workhouse.
Grorge Bernard Shaw, British dramstist ǹļŮ˵ĽԺ
ӢФ.G. 
Home is the place where ,when you have to go there , it has to take you in .
Frost Robert, American poet ۺʱεؼԶӳŵĵط
ʫ޲.F. 
How sharper than a serpent's tooth is to have a thankless child.
William Shakespeare, British dramatist Ы
ӢɯʿW. 
Husbands and wives in the process of divorce (and those in the throes of another argument )easily fall into the trap of denigraging the other, publicly if possible, and as often as possible.
Howards Mel, American writer ģЩڳֲͣʹеģǺڶԷв԰ΣڮǾܹģƵؽС
÷.H. 
I don'nt know who my grandfather was. I' m much more concerned to know what his grandson will be.
Abraham Lincoln, American prisident Ҳ֪үүʲôˣҸĵǣӻΪʲôˡ
ͳֿ.A. 
If you want your children to keep their feet on the ground, put some responsibility on their shouldres.
Joh Brnyan Btitish ssayist ϣĺǽ̤ʵأҪǸЩΡ
ӢɢļҰJ. 
It was the policy of the good old gentlemen to make his chileren feel that home was the happiest place in the world; and I value this delicious home---feeling as one of the choicest gifts a parent can bestow.
Irvng Washington, Father of literature of the United States. úӸеͥҸĵطкĴǵļͥУҿʹǵЩµһ
ѧ֮ʢ. I. 
Mariage may be compared to a cage:the birds outside deapair to get in and those within despair to get out.
Michel de Montaigne, French thinker and ssayist ñȥ
˼ҡɢļ.M.D. 
My father had always said that there are four things a child needs plenty of love, nourishing food, fegular sleep , and lots of soap and water---and after those, what he needs most is some intelligent neglect.
Ivy Baker Priest, American officer of government Ҹ˵һҪ--ֵİӪʳйɵ˯ߡķˮ--ЩأҪһЩǵķΡ
Ա˹.I.B. 
The brotherly spirit of science , which unites into one family all its votaries of whatever grade ,and however widely dispersed throughout the different quarters of the globe.
Franklin Rosevelt, American president ѧĲѷɢءĿѧһͥ
ͳ˹.F. 
The family is one of nature's masterpieses. 
George Santayana, American Philosopher and poet ͥǴȻĽ֮һ
ѧҡʫɣ.G. 
The family you came from isn't as important as the family you are going to have.
D.Herbert Lawrence, British writer 㽫ӵеļͥǸͥҪ
Ӣ˹.D.H. 
The fundamental defect of fathers is that they want their children to be a credit to them.
Bretrand Rrssell, British philosopher ȱҪԼĺΪԼ⡣
Ӣѧ.B. 
The house of every one is to him as his castle and fortress.
E.Coke, British jutist ÿ˵ļҶԼǳǱҪ
Ӣѧҿƿ.E. 
The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one.
William John Locke, British novelist ԽĶӵˣԽΪˡ
ӢС˵.W.J. 
There is a skeleton in every house. 
William Makepeace Thackeray, Bdritish novelist ҼҶһľ
ӢС˵.W.M. 
To make a lasting marriage we have to overcome self-centeredness.
Grorge Goreon Byron, Nritish poet Ҫʹã˷ʶ
Ӣʫ˰,G.G. 
We never know the love of the parents until we become parents ourselves.
Henry Ward Beecher, American clergyman and orator ֪ĸ
ʦ˵ұ.H.W. 
ƪPOLITICS
A man may build himself a throne of bayonets, but he cannot sit on it.
William Ralph lnge, British churchman  һ˿ΪԼ֧һ̵ȴ޷ȥ
ӢʦӢ.W.R.  
A nation reveals itself not only by the men it produces but also by the men it honors, the men it remembers.
John , F.Kennedy, American prersident  һ岻ͨ͵ˣҲͨ˺ǵչʾԼ
ͳ.J.F.  
A politician is a man who undertands government, and it takes a poiltician to run a government. A statesman is a politician who's been dead ten or fifeen years.
H.S.Turman, American president  ˣҪͣμȥʮʮ͡
ͳ³.H.S.  
A powerful idea commissions some of its strength to him who challenges it.
Marcle Proust, French writer  Ȩ˼뽫ĳЩսˡ
³˹.M.  
A state which dwarfs its men ,in order that they may be more docile instruments in its hands even for beneficial purposes will find that with small men no great thing can really be accomplished.
John Stuart Mill, British economist  һѹʹǳΪԼеѱߡΪĿġҲ֣ᷢѹƵǲɾʲôµġ
ӢѧJ.S.  
All great truths begin as blasphemise.
George Bernard shaw, British dramstist  ΰʼ뾭ѵ
ӢФ.G.  
All is not lost that is in danger.
Anonymous.  ˰

All politics are based on the indifference of the majority.
James Reston, Amreican editor  һζǽھĮĻϵġ
༭˹١ʡ
Ambition, in a private man a vice, is in a prince, a virtue.
Philip Massinger, British dramatist  Ұģƽڵȴ¡
Ӣ.P.  
Assassination is the extreme form of censorship.
Gegorge Bernard Shaw, British dramatist  ɱǼƶȵļʽ
ӢФ.G.  
Democracy means not "I am as good as you are "but you are as good as I am ."
Theodore Parker, American theologian  ĺ岻ǡҺһáǡһá
ѧˡ.T.  
Destiny: A tyrant's authority for crime, and a fool's excuse for failure.
Ambrose Bierce, American writer  ˣʩŰȨɵʧܵĽڡ
ұȶ˹.A.  
Everyone is born king, and most people die in exile.
Oscar Wilde, British dramstist  ÿȴڷȥ
Ӣ.O. 
Great men are the guide posts and landmarks in the state;are they who see that spiritual is stronger than any material force, that thoughts rule the world.
Jimmy Ellis, American boxer ΰһ·ʯЩʶκ˼ͳˡ
ȭ˶Ա˹.J. 
I will not accept if nominated , and will serve if selected.
William Sherman, American general ҲԸܣѡϣЧ
.W. 
If democracy is to survive, it is the task of men of thoughts, as well as men of action, to put aside pride and prejudice; and with courage and single-minded devotion---- to find the truth and teach the truth that shall keep men free.
Franklin Roosevelt, American pesident ƫҪȫȫҪҪǫ龫ȥѰ봫ʹɵ
ͳ˹F. 
If national pride is ever justifiable or excusable it is when it springs, not from power or riches, grandeur of glory, but from convicton of ntational innocence, iformation , and benevolence.
John Adams, American presidnet ˵Ժ޿ɷпԭôԺбضȨƺͲƸԺҫԼĴ桢ʶʰ
ͳǵ˹.J. 
It is a strange desire to seek power and to lose liberty, or to seek power over others and to lose power over a man's self.
Francis Bacon, British Philosopher Ϊ׷ȨʧȥɣΪ׷ͳα˵ȨʧȥȨһֲ˼
Ӣѧ.F. 
No government can be long secure without a formidable opposition.
Benjamin Disraeli, British statesman ûһԶԸķԵκܳȶ
Ӣμҵ˹.B. 
Politics, as a pracitice, whatever its professions , has always been the systematic organization of hatreds.
Adams Henry, American historian ΪһʵαףʼɵԶ޵֯
ʷѧ.A. 
Politics is usually the executive expression of human immaturity.
Brittain Vera, American writer ͨ಻ıΪ
ޱ.B. 
Politics is perhaps the only profession for which no preparation is thought necessary.
Robert Louis Stevenson, British novelist ҲΪΨһκ׼ܴµְҵ
ӢС˵˹ɭ.R.L. 
Power is the great aphrodisiac.
Herry A Kissiger,American diplomat ȨҵĴ
⽻һ.H.A. 
Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely; great man are almost always bad manThere is no worse heresy than that the office sactifies the holder of it.
Lord Acton, British historian Ȩ¸ܣȨԵ¸ܡΰ˼ˡҲûбȨ߸а˵ˡ
ӢʷѧҰ˶پʿ
Propagada is the art of persuading others of what one does not beliver oneself. 
A.Eban, Israel diplmat Ȱ˵ȥԼŵĶ
ɫ⽻Ұ.A. 
Pubic officers are the servats and agents of the people, to execute the laws which the people have made.
Crover Cleveland, American president ԱĹͺʹˣӦִƶķɡ
ͳ.C. 
Since a politician never believes what he says ,he is surprised when others believe him.
Charles de Gaulle, French president ʹԼ˵ĻԣĻʱضһ
ͳ.C. 
The administration of jusice is the firmest pillar of government.
George Washington, American president ᶨ֧
ͳʢG. 
The first method for estimating the intellingence of a ruler is to look at the men he has around him.
Niccolo Machiavelli, Italian statesman һͳߵһǿߵˡ
μŸ.N. 
The governmet of the people, by the people, and for the poeple shall not perish from the earth.
Abraham Lincoln, American president СΡ档
ͳֿ.A. 
The greater the power, the more dangerous the abuse.
Burke Edmund, British statesman ȨԽְȨΣվԽ
ӢμҰ.B. 
The greatest of evils and the worst of crims is poverty.
George Bernard Shaw, British dramatist Ķ׵ƶ
ӢФ.G. 
The paramount duty of Congress is to stop deficiencies by the restoration of that protective legislation which has always been the firmst prop of the Treasury.
William Mckinley, American president ְǻָʼǹҲʵ֧ıֹ֡
ͳƽ.W. 
The people may safely be trusted to hear everything true and false, and to form a correct judgment,Were it fall to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers of newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.
Thomas Jefferson, American president ȫģӦһʵαĶȻȷжϡʹӦһҪֽأӦбֽҪһԥѡߡ
ͳѷ.T. 
The tyrant dies and his rule ends, the martyr dies and his rule be-gins.
Soren Kierkegaard, Danish religious philowopher ˣͳҲͽʿˣͳθտʼ
ڽѧһ˸.S. 
There is something behind the throne greater than the king him-self.
William Pitt, British statesman ĺ滹бȹ˸ΰ
ӢμƤ.W. 
To be acquainted with the merit of ministry, we need only observe the condition of the people.
Junius, Unidentified letter writer Ҫ˽ֻҪ۲顣
Ŵ˹
To know the pains of power, we must go to those who have it; to know its pleasure, we must go to those who are seeking it :the pains of power is real, its pleasures imaginary.
C.Colton Charles, British churchman ֪Ȩʹ࣬ȥЩȨߣ֪ȨȤȥЩ׷ȨߣȨʹʵģȨȤֻƾġ
Ӣʦ˹.C.C. 
Too fond of the right to pursue the expedient.
Oliver Goldsimith, British poet ϲȨͻ᲻ֶΡ
Ӣʫ˸˹˹.O. 
We need in politics man who have something to give, not men who have something to get.
Bernard Baruch, Averican economist  Ҫ׵ˣջˡ
ѧҰ³.B. 
When a man assumes a public trust, he should consider himself as public property.
Thomas Jefferson, American President һܵʱӦðԼڵĲƲ
ͳѷ.T. 
When society requires to be rebuilt, there is no use attempting to rebuild it on the old plan.
John Stuart Mill, BAritish economist Ҫؽʱͼīؾɵͼؽͽġ
Ӣѧ.J.S. 
ڽƪRELIGION
All are not saints that go to church.
Anonymous  ȥݵĲʥͽ

All things are artificial , for nature is the art of God.
Sir Thomas Brown, British physician  һжģȻҲϵ۵Ľ
Ӣҽʾʿ.T.  
An honest God is the noblest work of man.
Robert G.Ingersoll, American orator  һֱϵߵƷ
˵ӢR.G.  
For me the different religions are beautiful flowers from the same garden, or they are branches of the same majestic tree. Therefore they are equally true, though being received and interpreted through human instruments equally imperfect.
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Indian statesman  ҿڽ̶ǳͬһ԰䣬߿˵ͬһŴķ֦ԣڽ̶ͬʵȻƾͬȲƵĹΪܲҲǡ
ӡμҸʵ.M.K.  
God has no religion.
Mohandas Daramchand Gandhi, Indian statesman  ϵڽ̡
ӡ쵼˸ʵ.M.K.  
God is a circle whose centre is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere.
Empedocles, Ancient Greek Philosopher  ϵǸԲԲĵɼԲ޴Ѱ
ϣѧҶ
God is Love, I dare say, but what a mischievous devil Love is .
Samuel Butler, British writer  Ҹ˵ϵ۾ǰ񣬵Ƕôħѽ
ӢҲ.S.  
God will pardon me, it is his trade.
Heinrich Heine, German writer  ϵۻԭҵģְҵ
¹Һ.H.  
Heathen: n. A benighted creature who has the folly to worship something that he can see and feel.
Ambrose, Bishop of Milan  ͽʣ֪ˣĳֿüŵĶ
̰˹
I believe that our Heaven Father invented man because he was dis-appointed in monkey
Mark Twain, American writer  ţǵ츸֮ԴΪʹʧˡ
ˡ
I count religion but a children toy, and hold there is no sin but igno-rance.
Marlowe Christopher, British poet and dramstist  ڽΪͯߣΪʲôֻ
ӢϷҡʫ˿˹.M.  
If God did not exist , it would be necessary to invent Him.
Voltaire, French Philosopher  ϵ۲ڣҲбҪ
ѧҷ̩
It is only fear first in the world that made gods.
Samuel Johnson, British writer  ϴģ޷ǿ־ѡ
ӢԼѷ.S.  
It is the final proof of God's omnipltence that he need not exist in order to save us.
Peter De Vires, American novelist  ֤ϵܵģǾΪǶڡ
С˵ҵ·˹.P
Man was made at the end of the week's work when God was tired.
Mark Twain, American writer  ϵĩʱģۣϵѾƣˡ
ˡ
Men have lost their reason in nothig so much as their religion, wherein stones and clouts make martyrs.
Sir Thomas Brown, British Physician  ڽʧȥ࣬ʯͷƲѳߡ
Ӣҽʾʿ.T.  
Men will wrangle for religion, write for it, fight for it , die for it ; anything but live for it. 
C.Colton Charles, British clergyman  Ϊڽ̶Ϊڽ̶дΪڽ̶սΪڽ̶Ϊڽ̶š
Ӣʦ˹.C.C.  
My object will be , if possible, to form Christian men, for Christian boys Ican scarcely hope to make.
Thomas Arnold, American humorist  ҵĿꡪܵĻŷĺӡ
ĬҰŵ.T.  
Riligion converts despair, which destroys , into resignation, which submits.
Blessingtom Marguerite, Irish writer  ڽ̽ƻľתΪ˸ľ
.B.  
Riligion is the opirm of the pople.
Karl Marx, German revolutionary  ڽѻƬ
¹˼.K.  
Science without religion is lame , religion without science is blind.
Algert Einstein, American scientist  ڽ̵ĿѧȳӣûпѧڽϹӡ
ѧҰ˹.A.  
Superstitions is the religion of feeble minds.
Edmund Bruke, British artist  ־ߵڽ̡
ӢҲ.E.  
The noblest work of God ?Man , Who found it out ?Man.
Mark Twain American writer  Ķ߹Ʒǡࡱ˭ҳĴ𰸣Ҳǡࡱ
ˡ
The religion we call false was once true.
Ralph Walco Emerson,American thinker  ǳ֮ΪڽһǶԵġ
˼ҰĬ.R.W.  
The two great European narcotics:alcohol and Christianity.
Friedrich Nietzxche ,German philosopher  ŷǣԾƺͻ̡
¹ѧF.  
There is a holy, mistaken zeal in politics , as well as religion, by per-suading others we convince.
Junius ,Unidentified letter weiter  κڽ̶һʥġ飺ȰŵĶ
Ŵ˹
To give and not to count the cost;
To fight and not to heed the wounds; 
To toil and not to seek for rest;
To labor and not ask for any reward;
Save that of knowing that we do thy will.
St Ignatius of Loyola Spanish priest  裬ƽϴۣ
ս
Ѱݣ
׶Ҫ͡
ֻҪϵ۵ּ⡣
ʦҫʥɾ
Who the gods wish to destroy they first call promising.
Cyril Connolly, British writer  ϵϣٵˣȰǳΪΪˡ
Ӣҿŵ.C.  
Whom the gods wish to destroy, they first made mad.
Euripiedes, Ancient Greek dramatist  ϵҪ˭
ϣŷӵ˹
Witiout philosopher man cannot know what he makes ;without religion he cannot know why .
Eril Gill. Uk sculptor  ûѧǲ֪Լʲôûڽ̣ǲΪʲô
ӢܼҼ.E.  
Your honesty is not to be based either on religion of policy ,.Both your religion and policy must be based on it.
John Ruskin , UK art critic  ʵӦڽ̻ߵĻϡ෴ڽ̺߶ԳʵΪ
Ӣ˹.J.  
սƪWAP
Afarewell to Arms.
Ernest Hemingway, American writer ˣ
Һ.E. 
All dlays are dangerous in war.
John Drydon, British poet սУκӶΣյġ
Ӣʫ˵.J. 
But bombs are unbeliveable until they actually fall.
Patrick White, British-born Australian novelist ֱըĵǲը
ӢĴС˵һP. 
Every kind of peaceful cooperation among men is primarily based on mutual trust and only secondly on institutions such as courts of justice and police.
Albert Einstein, American scientist һкƽĻ໥ΣβǷͥ;һĻ
ѧҰ˹̹.A. 
Force , and fraud , are in war the two cardinal virtues.
Thomas Hobbes, British philosopher ʵıսĻ
Ӣѧһ˹.T. 
He who fears being conquered is sure of defeat.
Bonaparte Napoleon, French enperor ³԰̵˱ȻҪ̡
ʵ.B. 
I am not a bit anxious about my battles If I am anxious Idon't fight them, I wait until I am ready.
B.Montgomery, Bdritish Marshal Ҫ̣һҲġҪǵҾͲҪȵ׼ʱŴ
ӢԪ˧ɸ.B. 
In war, there is no second prize for the runner-up.
Omar Bradley, Aerican general սУڶûнġ
O. 
In war, whichever side may call itself the victor, there are no winners, but all are losers.
Nerille Chamberlain,British prime minister սֻңûӮң˫һԳΪʤߡ
ӢŲףN
Information is power, The information domain is the future battlefield.
Cebrows Arthur, Aerican economist ϢϢδս
ѧҰɪC. 
Real peace doesn't mean absence of war.
Ceorge Bush, American president ĺƽζûս
ͳʲG
Swearing was invented as a compromise between running away and fighting.
Finley Deter Dunne.American journalist and humorist ǰΪܺʹ֮һԡ
ߡĬҵ˶.F. D. 
The way to win an atomic war is to make certain it never starts.
Bradley Omar American General ӮúսķȷԶᷢ
ϽB. 
There can be no war nowadays between civilized nations, nor any peace that is not hollow and delusive unless sustained and backed up by the sentiment of the people who are parties to it.
E. J. Phelps. American lawyer ңòĵ֧֣ͷսƽҲǿնãġ
ʦѶ˹EJ
There is a moment in every battle at which the least maneuver is decisive and gives superiority as one drop of water causes overflow.
Bonaparle Napoleon French emperor ÿһս֮Уôһ̣һԾǾԵĲƣһˮͿԴٳһ㡣
ʵB 
There is many a boy here today who looks on war as all glory, but boys, it is all hell.
Willam Tecumsch sherman, American general в˰սһҫǺǣǿʵʵڵĵ
W , T. 
War is much too important to be left to the military.
Ceorge Cleenceall French statesan ս̫Ҫˣɾ˾
μҿϺ.G 
War is nothing but a continuation of politics with the admixture of other means.
karl von Clausewitz. Drussian general  սεļһЩֶΡ
³ʿ. K 
War is the continuity of policies during peace time, and vice versa.
V. I. Lenin.Russian revolutionist սǺƽʱߵļƽսʱߵļ
VL
We must go on to do all in our power to conquer the doubts and the fears, the ignorance and the greed, which made this horror possible.
Franklin Roosevelt, Aerican president ǱһŬսʤ־塢֪̰ǲµսĸԴ
ͳ˹F 
We shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be . We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing-grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender.
Winston Churchill British prime minister ҪĴۣҲҪǵĵҪսں̲Ҫսڵ½شҪսҰҪսɽԡ꣬ǾͶ
Ӣ𼪶W
When peace has been broken anywhere, the peace of all countries everywhere is in danger.
Franklin Roosevelt. American president ĸĺƽ⵽ƻĺƽܵв
ͳ˹.F. 
Wherever in the world a people knows desperate want, there must appear at least the spark of hope, the hope of progress--or there will surely rise at last the flames of conflict.
Dwight Eisenhower,Commander in chief of the Allied forces in the second World War κεطһֻҪ֪ԼҪʲôͻϣĻ𻨣ֽϣ仰˵ضȼĻ档
ڶս˾˾ɭD. 
֪ʶƪKNOWLEDGE 
Activity is the only road to knowedge.  
Ceorge Bernard shaw,   British dramalist 
 ж֪ͨʶΨһ·
ӢФɣG   
 
A free man obtains knowledge from many sources  besides books.  
Thomas Jefferson   American president 
 һɵ˳˴鱾ϻȡ֪ʶ⣬ԴԴ֪ʶͳѷ.T.   
 
A great part of the information I have was acquired by looking up something and finding something else on the way.  
Adas Franklin. Aerican humorist 
 ҵĴ󲿷֪ʶõģѰĳʱķϡ
ĬҸ֣A.   
 
A  little learning is a dangerous thing, but a lot of ignorace is just as bad.  
Harry Edward, Aerican writer 
 ֪ʶǳΣյģ֪ͬ⡣
Ұ»
 
A  man should keep his little brain attic stocked with all the furniture that he is likely to use, and the rest he can put away in the lumber room of his library, where  he can get it if  he wants it.  
Doyle Arthur Conan   British writer   
 һ˵ĴӦһС¥ƽʱҪõ֪ʶ԰µ֪ʶͼԱҪʱá
Ӣҿϵ
 
A strong climbing-rope, made by twisting together confidence, determination and perseverance, can help you scale the summits of knowledge and science.  
Anonymous 
 ġĺͺģšһʵʹﵽ֪ʶͿѧĸ߷塣
ϡ
 
Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects.  
Will Rogers, American humorist   
 е˶֪ģֻǶԲͬĿĿ֪ѡ
Experience is the father of wisdom and memory the mother.  
Charles Bernard,  French philosopher 
 ǻ֪֮ʶ֮ĸ
ѧұ.c.   
 
Fools act on imagination without knowledge; pedants act on knowledge without  imagination.  
Alfred North Whitehead, British philosopherand  mathematician 
 ֪ƾ£ѧ֪ʶȱ
ӢѧҡѧһغA. N. 
 
I like to have  a man's knowledge comprehend  more than one class of topics, one row of shelves. I  like a man who likes to see a fine barn as well as a good tragedy.   
Ralph Waldo Emerson,  American thinker 
 ϣ˵֪ʶһĿһܡҼϲһùȲ֣Ҳϲһñ硣
˼ҡĬR. W.   
 
If a man empties his purse into his head, no man can take it away from him, an investment in knowledge always pays the best interest.  
Benjamin Franklin.  Aerican president 
 ׷֪ʶû֪ܶʶͶʣѡ
ͳ.B. 
 
Imagination is more important than knowledge.  
Albert Einstein,   American scientist 
 ֪ʶΪҪ
ѧҰ˹̹A
 
It is the  pecularity of knowledge that those who really thirst for it always get it.  
Richard Jefferies. British naturalist 
 ֪ʶߣܵõ֪ʶԡ
Ӣѧҽܸ˹. R   
 
Knowledge is a comfortable and necessary retreat and shelter for us in an advanced age; and if we do not plant it when young, it will give us no shade when we grow old.  
Chesterfield  British diploat and writer 
 ֪ʶʹʱʵˣУʱ֪ʶʹ¸ʱǾͲ档
Ӣ⽻ҡ˹طƶ
 
Knowledge is a treasure, but practice is the key to it.  
Thomas Fuller, British churchman 
 ֪ʶһ⣬ʵǲԿס
ӢʿT. 
 
Knowledge is power.  
Francis Baco, British philosopher 
 ֪ʶ
ӢѧF
 
Love is ever the beginning of knowledge as fire is of  light.  
Thomas Carlyle.  Brithsh historian and essayist 
 ֪ʶǴӰÿʼǴӻʼһ
Ӣʷѧҡɢѧҿ.T. 
 
Not ignorance, but the ignorance of ignorance, is the death  of knowledge.  
A N. Whitehead,  British philosopher 
 ֪Ƕ֪֪֪ʶ
ӢѧһغA. N 
 
Our life is frittered away by detail, simplify it , simplify it.  
David Thoreau Henry  American writer 
 ǵ˷ѵˣ򵥵㣬򵥵㡣
ҺT 
 
Republic trusts the states wholly to the intelligence and moral sense of the people.  
Wendell Phillips.  American leader against slavery 
 һ͹ȫȡ֪ʶĳ̶Ⱥ͵¸С
ū˶˹W 
 
Scientific and historical facts are occasionally altered or ignored for a purpose.  
Howards Mel . American  historian 
 ѧʷʵʱĳͼ۸Ļӡ
ʷѧ÷H 
 
The good life is one inspired by love and guided by knowledge  are necessary, love is in a sense more fundamental, since it will lead intelligent people to seek knowledge, in order to find out how to benefit those they love. Delight without well-wishing may be cruel; well- wishing without delight easily tends to become cold and little superior.  
Bertrand Russell  British philosopher 
 ɰ֪ʶָ.....֪ܰʶҪĳϰҪΪȥѰ֪ʶʹ˵档...ûԸϲÿǲп᣻ûϲõױĮͰһС
ӢѧأB.  
The  empty vessels make the greatest sound.  
William shakespeare,  British dramatist   
 ƿ죬ƿ۵
ӢɯʿW   
 
The enlargement consists, not merely in the passive reception into the mind of a number of ideas hitherto unknown to it, but in the mind's  energetic and simultaneous action upon and towards and among those new ideas.  
Jonh Henry.  British Newman Priest 
 ֪ʶǱĽһԭ֪Ĺɵǰӿ¹ڻԾԲһּߴж
ӢŦ̺.J   
 
The foundation of knowledge must be laid by reading, General principles must come from books, which, however, must be brought to the test of real life.  
amuel Johnson, British writer 
 ǻ֪ʶĻԭԴ鱾뾭ʵļ顣
ӢԼѷ.S. 
 
The world makes history, and scholars write it, one half truly and the other half as their prejudices blur and distort it.  
Wendell    Phillip.  American leader against slavery 
 紴ʷѧ߰ʷдһʵһȴѧߵƫģ
ū˶˹.W. 
 
This atmosphere of excitement, arising from imagination, transforms knowledge.  
Alfred Norty Whitehea    British philosopher and mathematician 
 ˼άӪһ˷ܵķΧֿתΪ֪ʶ
Ӣѧҡѧһغ. A. N.   
 
To spread knowledge is to spread happiness....The progress of scientific research and the everexpanding fields will arouse hope while the bacteria existence in our body and mind will gradually disappear.  
Alfred Nobel   Swedish    chemist   
 ֪ʶǲҸ...ѧоĽչ򽫻ǵϣĵϸʧ
仯ѧŵ.A.   
 
True science teaches, above all, to doubt and be ignorant. 
 de  Unamuno   Spanish philosopher 
 Ŀѧǽ˻ɲ֪
ѧŵ
 
When you want knowledge like you want air under water then you will get it.  
Scrates.Ancient Greet philosopher     Ancien  Philosopher 
 Ҫ֪ʶˮҪʱ׼ܵõ
ϣѧո
 
ƪEXPERIENCE 
All is but lip-wisdom that wants experience.   
Philip Sideney ,British satesman 
 ûʵʾģֻǿͷǻۡ
ӢμD ..  
 
Expericence is a hard teacher because she gives the test first, the lesson afterwards.   
Law Vernon, British writer 
 һλвȻڿĽʦ
ӢҸũ.  L. 
 
Experience is not interesting till it begins to repeat itself, in fact, till it does that ,it hardly is experience.   
Elizabeth Bowen, British novelist 
 ֱظʱű壬ʵϣֱʱϾ顣
ӢС˵ұE. 
 
Expericence is not what happens to a man ; it is what a man does with what happens to him .  
Aldous Leonard Huxley, American writer   
 鲻ֻͨʵܻá
Һ.A.L. 
 
Experience is the child of thought , and thought is the child of action. We cannot learn men from books.   
Benjamin Disraeli, British statesman   
 ˼֮ӣ˼ж֮ӣ˽˲鱾ΪݡӢμҵ˹B  . 
 
Experience is the na me give  their mistakes.   
Oscar Wilde, British playwriter and poet 
 ÿΪѰҵĴʡ
ӢҡʫO. 
 
Experience is what you get when you don't get what you want.   
Dan Stanfort, American brsinessman   
 ǵûõõ֮ʱõĶ
ʵҵ˹̹D.
 
Expreience keeps a dear school, yet fools will learn in no other.  Benjamin Franklin, Americna president 
 ʼշѸߵѧУȻǽѧУɡ
ͳB 
 
 Experience more than sufficiently teaches that men govern nothing with more difficulty than their tongues .   
Bendict de spinoza, Dutch philosopher    
 ̫ĽѵѹƵĶĪԼͷ.   
ѧ˹ŵɳB 
 
Experience never misleads; what you are missed by is only your judgement, and this misleads you by anticipating results from experience of a kind that is not produced by your  experements.   
Leonardo Da Vinci, Italian painter   
 ԶֻԼжϣж֮Զ㷢󵼵ãֲǽʵľԤϵĽ
Ҵ
 
Experience without learning is better than learning without excperi-ence.   
Bertuand Russell, British philosopher and mathematician
 оѧʤѧʶ޾顣
Ӣѧҡѧ.B. 
 
I  have but one lamp wait which my feet are guided ; and that is the lamp of experience. I know of no way of judging of the future but by the past.  
Patrick Henry, Americna statesman 
 ֻһյָҵĽŲյƾǾ飬δֻԹȥжϡ
μ.P.   
 
Mistakes are an essential part of education.  
Bertrand Russell, Bdritish philosopher   
 ӴȡѵǽΪҪһ֡
Ӣѧ. B .
 
Neither beliver nor reject anything, because any other person has rejected of believed it . Heaven has given you a mind for judging truth and error,. Use it.   
Thomas Jefferson, American president   
 ҪΪŻʲôҲȥϵһжͷԡȥ/   
ͳѷ.T.   
 
One thorn 4  of experience is worth a whole wilderness5  of warning. James Russell Lowell, British Poet and critic 
 һʹľֵǧٴεĸ롣
Ӣʫˡ.J. R .
 
Practical wisdom is only to be learned in the school of experience.   
Samuel Smiles, British writer   
 ʵõ֪ʶֻͨѧ
Ӣ˹˹.  S .
 
Proverbs are short sentences drawn from long experience .   
Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish writer   
 ǴӳھлõĶ̾䡣
˹,M.   
 
Science is the systematic classification of experience.  
Grorge Henry Lewis , British writer 
 Ӣ˹. G  .H .  
The tragedy of the world is that those who are imaginative have but slight experience, and those who are experienced have feeble imaginations.  
Alfred North Whitehead, British philosopher and nathematician 
 ıȱ飬оȱ
Ӣѧҡѧһغ.A . N. 
 
The great difficulty in education is to get experience out of ideas. Grorge Santayana, Spain-born American philosopher and poet  
 ֮ڴлþ顣
ѧҡʫɣ,G.  
 
The greatest lesson in life is to know that even fools are right sometimes.  
Winston Churchill. British statesman   
 ɵʱҲǶԵġ
Ӣμ𼪶,W. 
 
To make good use of life.one should have in youth the experience of advanced years ,and in old age the vigor of youth.   
Stanislars I, Polish king   
 ֮飬֮ʹӸá
˹̹˹һ
 
To most men , experience is like the stern light of a ship which il-luminates only the track it has passed.  
Samuel Tylor Coleridge, British poet 
 ڴˣһҴϵβƣֻʻĺ
Ӣʫ˿ս.  S .T .
 
Too much experience is a dangerous thing.   
Oscar Wilde, British dramatist 
 ෴Σա
Ӣ. O.
 
We know nothing of what will  happen in future , but by the analogy of past experience.   
Abraham Lincoln , American president 
 ƾŶԹȥľ֮⣬ǶԽһ֪
ͳֿ. A .  
жƪACTION
A man , like a watch , is to be valued by his manner of going.  
Wlliam Penn, British admiral   
 һˣһʱӣжֵġ
ӢϽW.   
 
Action is the  last resource of those who know not how to dream.   
Oscar Wilde, British dramatis   
 һж
ӢO .  
 
Action is consolatory. It is the enemy of thought and the friend of glittering  illusions.   
Joseph Conrad, British novelist 
 ж˰οģ˼ĵˣûѡӢС˵ҿ. J .
 
Action springs not from thought, but from a readiness for
 responsibility.   
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, German theologian 
 ж˼룬ԸеΡ
¹ѧҰշѶ. D .
 
Behavior is a mirror in which everyone shows his image.   
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German poet and dramatist
 Ϊһ澵ӣÿ˶ԼС
¹ʫˡҸ.J . W .
 
Deeds are fruits, words are but leaves.  
Joseph Rlema Prake, American poet 
 жǹʵԴʲҶ
ʫ˵׿.J  .R. 
 
Do all the good you can ,   
By  all the means you can,  
In all the ways you can,  
In all the places you can ,  
At all the times you can ,  
To all the people you can,  
As long as ever you can.  
John  Weskley, British religious leader   
 ܵһк£
ܵزȡһֶΣ
ܵһзʽ
ܵһеط
ܵһʱ䣬
ܵػݼһˣ
ܵس֮Ժ㡣
ӢڽΤ˹. J
 
Do what you ought, and come what can . 
George Herbert, British poet 
 飬Ҫ
Ӣʫ˺ղG   
 
Every man feels instinctively that all the beautiful sentiments in the world weigh less than a single  lovely action.   
R.Lowell James, American poet and critic 
 ʶõжһежԵø
ʫˡۼղķ˹R  L 
 
Follow your own course, and let people talk.   
Aleghieri Dante, Italian poet 
 ˼ȥ˵ɣԼ·
ʫ˵.A.   
 
He is immortal  6, not because he alone among creatures has an inexhaustible 7voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion 8and sacrifice9 and endurance.  
William Faulkner, American writer 
 ֮಻ΪڶΨԶܷԣΪꡢͬġ;
Ҹ.W .
 
I don't wait for moods. You accomplish nothing if you do that. Your mind must know it has got down to work.   
Pearl Buck, American writer 
 ҴӲȴ١һζȴͽһ޳ɡμǣֻжֲá

 
If you would have a thing well done, you must do it yourself.  
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, American poet 
 Ҫã͵Զ֡
ʫʷ. H . W .
 
Initiative 10is doing the right thing without being told.   
Elbert Hubbard, American writer 
 ָû˸ȥʵ顣ҹE .
 
Never look down to test the ground before taking your step; only he who keeps his eye fixed on the far horizon will find his right road.   
Day Hammarskjold, American writer 
 ֮ǰǧ¿ȥԽµĵ棻ֻעԶƽߵ˲ҵȷĵ·
ҹD .
 
Nothing is more terrible than ignorance in action.   
Desiderius Eramus, Dutch humanist 
 µĪже֪
Ī˹.D.
 
Our deeds determine us, much as we determine our deeds.  
George Eliot, British  Novelist 
 ʲô˱˸ʲô£ͬʲôҲʲôˡ
ӢС˵Ұ.  G .
 
Something attempted, something done.   
Menander, Amcerican Greek dramatist   
 ԣΪ
ϣ÷ϵ
 
Strong reasons make strong actions.  
William Shakespeare, British dramatist
 ǿɲǿж
ӢɯʿW .
 
Take time to deliberate ; but when the time for action arrives ,stop thinking and go in .   
John Albion Andrew, American Ieader against slavery 
 ʱҪæһжʱҪԥͶж
ū˶쵼˰³. J .A .
 
The measure of a man's real character is what he would do if  he knew he would never be found out.   
Thomas bobington Macaulay, British historian 
 һƷʣҪ֪ԶҲᱻ˷ֵЩʲô
Ӣʷѧ, T.  B .
 
The more we do , the more we can do ; the more busy we are, the more leisure we have.   
William Hazlitt, British critic and essayist 
 ԽԽܣԽæԽпա
Ӣۼҡɢļҹ. W .
 
The sum of  behavior is to retain a man's own dignity, without in -truing upon the liberty of  others.   
Francis Bacon, British philosopher 
 ˵Ϊ׼ǣάԼ϶ֲ˵ɡӢѧ.  F .
 
The world can only be grasped by action, not by contemplation, The hand is more important than the eyeThe hand is the cutting edge of the mind.   
Jacob Bronowski, writer of the former soviet Union 
 ֻ¸Ҹжհǰ˺󣬲硣ֱ۾Ҫ˼
ǰҲ˹. J .
 
There is no time like the present.   
Tobias George Smallett, British novelist 
 ʱҴûбڸˡ
ӢС˵˹Ħ.T . G .
 
Their is something that is much more scarce, something rarer than ability. It is the ability to recognize.   
Rbert Half, British writer 
 еĶȲϡö࣬ö࣬ʶ
Ӣҹ.  R . 
 
Treat other people as you hope they will treat you.   
Aesop, Ancient Greek fable writer 
 ϣζԴ㣬ζԴˡ
ϣԢԼ
 
We must beat the iron while it is hot , but we may polish 19it at leisure20.  
John Drydon, British poet 
 ȣҪĥ򲻷ݡ
Ӣʫ˵. J .
 
What we love to do we find time to do .   
John Lancaster Spalading , American educator and writer 
 ϲ£ҵʱȥ
ҡ˹. J  . L .
 
When a man is wrapped up in himself  he makes a pretty little package22.   
John Ruskin, British writer and critic 
 һֻԼ˲ԳɴӢҡ˹. J.   
 
Words and deeds are quite indifferent 23modes of the divine 24energy. Words are also action, and actions are a kind of words.   
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker 
 Ժж˵ķǷͨıʽҲжжҲԡ
˼ҰĬ. R .W. 
 
 澳ƪADVERSITY
Adversity reveals genius; fortune conceals it.
Horace, ancient Roman poet
 ԲŻʡ
ʫ˺˹
 
Almost any situation---good or bad ---is affected by the attitude we bring to .
Lucius Annaus Seneca, Ancient Roman philosopher
 κһִǺǻܵǶԴ̬ȵӰ졣
ѧL A
 
Although the world is full of suffering , it is full also of the overcoming of it .
Hellen Keller, American writer
 Ȼѣǿսʤ
Һס
 
As fruit needs not only sunshine but cold nights and chilling showers to ripen it , so character needs not only joy but trial and difficulty to mellow it .
Hugh Black, American writer
 ˮҪ⣬ҲҪҹˮʹ졣˵ԸұҪ֣ҲҪѡ
ҲH
 
Everything can be taken from a man but one thing; the freedom to choose his attitude in any given set of circumstances.
Leonhard Frand ,German novelist
 ҿ˵κζһУضѡԼ̬ȵɡ
¹С˵ҸL
 
Every tragedy makes heroes of common people.
Normna Stephens , American writer
 ÿ綼ƽͳӢ
˹ٷ˹N
 
 He who allows himself to be insulted, deserves to be.
F.C.Comford, British writer
 ԼԸˣҲá
ӢҿƸF  C
 
  find life an exciting business and most exciting when it is lived for others.
Helen Keller,Ameican writer
 ҷ˼飬Ϊ˻ʱ
Һס
 
I wept when I was born, and every day shows why.
Jack London, American novelist
 һͿʼÿһ춼ҿԭ
С˵ҽܿˡ׶
 
If you want to live your whole life free from pain,
You must become either a god or else a coupes.
Consider other men's troubles, 
That will comfort yours.
Menander, Ancient Athenian playwriter     
 һѿѣ
͵ʬ
˵Ĳң
̹Ȼ
ŵϵ
 
In this world there is always danger for those who are afraid of it.
George Bernad Shaw, British dramastist
 ںΣյˣΣյġ
ӢФG
 
It is not true suffering ennobles the character; happiness  does that sometimes, but suffering, for the most part, makes men petty and vindictive.
William Somerset Maugham, British novelist
 ˵ʹ˸õǲȷеģҸʱһ㣬ѳʹխ
ӢС˵ëķW  S
 
Let us suggest  to the person in crisis that he cease concentrating so upon the dangers involved and the difficulties and concentrate instead upon the opptunity---for there is always opportunity in crisis.
Seebohm Caroline, British physician
 ǽ鴦Σ֮еˣҪѾ˼еطΣպϣ෴ҪڻϡΪΣǴŻᡣ
ӢҽS
 
Light troubles speak; great troubles keep silent.
Lucius Annaeus Seneneca, Ancient Roman Philosopher
 Сѣ£ѣ졣
ѧL  A
 
Mishaps are like knives that either serve us or cut us as we grasp them by the handle or blade.
James Russell Lowell, American poetess and critic
 ѾӣסͿΪǷס֡
ŮʫˡJ  R
 
No one can degrade us except ourselves; that if we are worthy, no influence can defeat us.
B.T.Washington, American educator
 Լ⣬ûܱǡǼǿûʲôӰܹǡ
һʢB T
 
No pain , no palm; no thorns , no throne ; no gall, no glory; no cross, no crown.
William Penn, British admiral
 ûв֣ջûͣɹûĥѣҫûдۣԻ͡
ӢϽW
 
Optimists always picture themselves accomplishing their goals.
Lucius Anaeus Seneca, Ancient Roman  philosopher
 ֹԼʵĿ龰
ѧL  A
 
Perhaps you can't control your job, but you may be able to make other changes in your life.
Alan Loy Mcginnis ,British writer
 㲻֧ԼĹܹʹת䡣
Ӣ˹A L
 
Prosperity doth best discover vice, but adversity doth discover virtue.
Francis Bacon, British Philosopher
 ˳ʱֶϰ澳ʱ͹
Rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation.
John dennedy, American president
 ϣеõ֣ڿбּ͡
ͳJ
 
Sweet are the uses of adversity.
William Shakspeare,British Playwriter
 ྡ
ӢɯʿW
 
The chinese word for crisis is divided into two characters, one meaning danger and the other meaning opportunity.
Burejer, British writer
 ĵġΣΪ֣һζΣգһζŻᡣ
ӢҲ
 
The misfortunes hardest to bear are those which never come.
James Russell Lowell, American Poetess and critic
 ܵĲЩδٵĲҡ
ŮʫˡۼJ R
 
The more you fight something, the more anxious you become ---the more you're involved in a bad pattern, the more difficult it is to escape.
Seebohm Caroline, British Physician
 ԽΪ˽ƴԽüꡪڴ˼·ݵԽҲԽѰʹࡣ
ӢҽS
 
The tragedy of life is not so much what men suffer, but what they miss.
Thomas Carlyle, British essayist and historian
 ı粻ܵٿ࣬Ǵʲô
ӢɢļҡʷѧҿT
 
The very remembrance of my former misfortune proves a new one to me .
Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish writer
 ڹȥҵļ䣬²ҡ
˹M
 
Tough--minded optimists approach problems with a can-do philosophy and emerge stronger from tragedies.
Lucius Annaeus Seneca, Ancient Roman Philosopher
 ־ǿֹá¡˼⣬ԽܱԽǱֵüǿ
ѧL  A
 
Trouble is only opportunity in work clothes.
H.J.Kaier, American businessman
 ֻǴϹĻ
ʵҵҿH  J
 
We have all sufficient strength to endure the misfortunes of others. La Rochefoucauld, French writer
 Ƕ㹻ܱ˵Ĳҡ
ʲ
 
We shall defend ourselves to the last breath of man and beast.
William II, King of England
 ֻҪһϢд棬ǾҪΪԼս
Ӣʵ
 ƪSADNESS
A certain amount of care or pain or trouble is necessary for every man at all times .A ship without a ballast is unstable and will not go straight.
Arthur Schopenhauer.Geman philosopher
 һǳʹգÿ˶ʱʱġһҴûѹ㲻ȶܳĿĵһֱǰ
¹ѧ屾A
 
A man who fears suffering is already suffering from what he fears.Michel Eyquem Montaigne, French essayist
 ʹѾڳµʹˡ
ɢļM E
 
As empty vessels make the loudest sound, so they that have least wit are the greatest babblers.
Plato , Ancient Greek Philosopher
 ߶ݡ
ϣѧҰͼ
 
Better one suffer, than a nation grieve.
John Drydon, British poet
 һܿ࣬ʹ屯ˡ
Ӣʫ˵J
 
Between grief and nothing I will take grief.
William Faulkner, American writer
 ڱʹ֮䣬Ըѡʹ
ҸW
 
Comparison, more than reality, makes men happy or wretched.
Thomas Fuller, American inventor
 ʹ˸˵Ļ߾ɥģ˵ʵ˵ʱȡ
ҸT
 
For evil news rides fast, while good news baits later.
John Milton, Britsh poet
 ²ţ´ǧ
ӢʫֶJ
 
Grief is itself a medicine.
William Cowper, British poet
 ʹҲһҩ
Ӣʫ˿W
 
Happiness is beneficial for the body , but it is grief that develops the powers of the mind.
Marcel Proust, French writer
 ˵壬ֻб˲
³˹M
 
Have no doubts because of trouble nor be thou discomtited; for the water of life's fountain springeth from a gloom bed.
Sit not sad because that time a fitful aspect weareth; Patience is most bitter , yet most sweet the fruit it bearth.
Sadi , Perisian poet
 ȻҲ㷲
Ӱ֮Ȫ
ҪΪʱ˲öѻȻʹ࣬
ʵҲ
˹ʫ
 
He best can pity who has felt the worse.
John Gay, British dramstist and poet
 ܹ˵ͬġ
Ӣҡʫ˸J
 
He who in adversity would have succor, let him be generous while he rests secure.
Saki, British writer
 ˭澳еõԮӦ˳ʱ˿
Ӣ
 
I  tell you hopeless grief is passionless.
E.B.Browning, British poetess
 Ҹ㣬ûϣıûмġ
ӢŮʫ˲E  B
 
It is not miserable to be blind ; it is miserable to be incapable of
en-during blindness.
John Milton, British poet
 ʧǱҵģʧǱҵġ
ӢʫֶJ
 
Life is made up of sobs , sniffles and smiles with sniffes predomi-nating.
O.Henry, American writer
 ʡ΢Цɵģ֮У֧λ
ŷ
 
No man can be brave who considers pain the greatest evil of life; or temperate , who regards pleasure as the highest good.
Cicero , ancient Roman statsman
 ʹΪĻ˲¸ңѻΪ˲ҽơ
μ
 
One must mourn not the death of men but their birth.
Charles Scondat Montesquieu, French thinker and Philosopher
 ˵Ĳǵĵ
˼ҡѧϵ˹
 
Pure and  complete sorrow is as impossible as pure  and complete joy.
LeoTolstoy ,Russian writer
 ġȫİʹġȫĻһǲܵġ
ѧж˹̩L
 
handicaps a man's pow Sadness diminishes or er of action.
Benedict de Spinoza, Dutch Philosopher
 ˻ٻ߷һж
ѧ˹ŵɯB
 
Sorrow and trouble either soften the heart or harden it.
James Mackintosh, British writer
 ͷղʹʹĺݡ
ӢʲJ
 
Tears are the silent language of grief.
Voltaire, French philosopher
 ġ˵ԡ
ѧҷ̩
 
The fiercest agonies have shorest reign.
William Crllen Bryant, American poet
 ҵʹʱҲ̡
ʫ˲W  C
 
The most glorious moment in your life are not the socalled days of success, but rather those days when out of dejection and despair you feel rise in you a challenge to life, and the promise of future accomplishment.
Gustave Flaubert, French writer
 һУΪԻ͵һ첢ǹ͵Щ죬Ǵӱ̾вսͶδԻ͵εЩӡҸ¥G
 
He pain of the mind is worse than the pain of the body.
Publius Syrus, Syrian Latin writer
 弲㡣
ʿP
 
The secret of being miserable is to have leisure to bother about whether you are happy or not .
George Bernard Shaw, British dramatist
 ʹйԼǷҸ
ӢФɡG
 
To mourn a mischief that is past and gone is the next way to draw new mischief on.
William Shkespeare, British dramatist
 Ϊһȥֻ˽̧µֻ
ӢɯʿW
 
What's the use of worrying ?
It never was worthwhile, 
So, pack up your troubles in your old kit-bag,
And smile, smile, smile.
George Asaf, British poet
 ʲôã
ֵΪ˷ʱ䣬
ѷȥ
΢ЦԶ
Ӣʫ˰G
 ޴ƪFOLLISHNESS 
A fool always finds a bigger fool to admire him.
Boileau Nicolas, French poet and critic
 ɵܻᷢбɵ
ʫˡ˹
 
A fool at forty is a fool indeed.
Edwad Young, British poet
 ˵ʮ޴Ǿ޴ˡ
ӢʫE 
 
A fool knows more in his own house than a wise man in another's.
George Herbert British poet
 Լ֪Ҫȴڱ˼֪Ķࡣ
Ӣʫ˺ղG
 
Anger begins with folly, and ends in repentance.
Pythagoras, Ancient Greek mathematician
 ŭ޴ʼԺڸա
ϣѧұϴ˹
 
Being reluctant to think , unwilling to study intensively and under-stand deeply and being complacent  and satisfied at negligible knowledge  all are the cause of poor intelligence, which can be germed as "foolish".
Maxim Gorky, Russian writer 
 ˼Ըк⡢΢֪ʶƶԭƶͨƺǾǡ޴
Ҹ߶M
 
Eery man is a fool sometimes, and none at all times.
George Kelly, American Playwright and actor
 ֻҪһ˻ûֹͣͻɵϡ
¹ѧʩ̩÷C P 
 
Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ingnorance and conscientious stupidity.
Martin Luther King, American leader of non-violent civil right movement
 Ҳûбʵʵڵ֪޴Σյˡ
ǱȨ˶·¡
 
One who loves not  wine, woman and song, remains a fool his whole life long.
Martin Luther, German religious reformer
 ˭ơŮ˺͸裬˭׼ɵϡ
¹ڽ̸ĸ·M
 
Politeness is not always the sign of wisdom, but the want of it always leaves room for the suspicion of folly.
Walter Savage Landor, British writer
 òһǻ۵ı־ǲòʹ˻޴
ӢW S
 
Prejudice is the child of ignorance.
Willam Hazlitt, British writer and critic
 ƫ
ӢҡۼҹW
 
Prejudice is the reason  of fools .
Voltaire, French Philosopher
 ƫǴ˵ۡ
ѧҷ̩
 
Those who foolishly seek power by  riding on the back of the tiger and up inside.
John F,Kennnedy , American Puesident
 Щ޴ϻ׷Ȩˣձϻ̽
ͳJ F
 
The dullard's envy of brilliant men is always assuaged by the suspicion that they will come to a bad end.
Sir Max Beerbohm, British writer
 ˶Դ˵ļʳǲաĲ²Լ
Ӣұ϶ķʿM
 
The jealous are troublesome to others , but a torment to themselves.
William Penn, British admiral
 ߶ԱǷգԼȴĥ
ӢϽ
 
To ber proud of learning, is the greatest ignorance.
Jereny Taylor, American compose
 ѧʶ԰֪
̩J
 
To flee vice is the begnning of virtue, and to have got rid of folly is the beginning of wisdom.
Horatirs, ancient Roman poet
 Զ֮ʼ޴ǻ֮Դ
ʫ˺˹
 
Too much clevernness is folly.
Solon, andcient Athenian statesman
 ִ޴
ŵμ
 
When a stupid man is doing something he is ashamed of ,he always declared that it is his duty.
George Bernard Shaw, British playwrite
 ԼеʱְӢФG
 
When a true genius appears in the world you may know him by his sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him.
Jonathan Swift, British satire writer
 һʱԸһʶдһ
Ӣ˹رJ
 
Where theren is a flatterer there is also a fool.
Joseph Addiston, British writer
 ƨˣɵϡ
ӢҰJ
 
You can fool some of the people all the time ,and all of the people some of the time; but you can't fool all of the people all the time.
Phineas T.Barnum, American programme broker
 һֱŪһЩˣ߿ĳʱŪеˣ㲻һֱŪеˡ
Ŀ˰ķP T
 ƪBUSINESS
A friendship founded on business is better than business founded on friendship.
John Davision Rockefeller,
American businessman
 ϵʤϵ
ʵҵ˷J  D.
 
Advertising may be described as the science of arresting human in-telligence long enough to get money from  it .
Leacock Stephen, Canadian economist
 ɱΪһֳɱǻڴ׬Ǯļɡ
ô󾭼ѧ˹ٷL
 
All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the part of every organism to live beyond its income.
Samuel Butler, British writer
 ĪһҪ֧룬һнĶ
ӢҲ. S.
 
Avarice , the apur of industry.David Hume , Bdritish Philosopher ̰ǹҵ˷ܼӢѧD
 
Business?That's very simple---- it's other people's money.Alexandre Dumas, French novelist
 ̫ˡбǮС˵СA
 
Business underlies everything in our national life, including our spiritual life, Witness the fact that in the Lord's prayer the first petition is for daily  bread, No one can worship God or love his neighbor on an empty stoach.Woodrow  Wilson.  American    President
 ĻɵʵǣϵĵһûܶŶӾϵۻȰھӡͳѷW.
 
Did you ever expect a corporation to have a conscience, when it has no soul to  damned, and no body to be kicked?Edward Thurlow, British Lawyer
 ˾ûԱ䣬ûԱ߷ѵָʲôӢʦɪɼ.E.
 
Economy the poor man's mints; extravagance  the rich man's pitfall.Martin Tupper. American   economist.
 Լ˵ҳ˷Ǹ˵塣ѧ.M
 
For years  I thought what was good for our country was good for General Motors, and vice versa.Charles E. Wilison American president of GN
 ҵʼΪԹ¶ͨ˾Ҳ֮Ȼͨ˾ܲѷC.E.
 
Good times, bad times, there will always be advertising, In good times people want advertising; in bad times  they have to.Bruce Barton  British  economist
 Ƿʱڻʱڣܻڡʱ棻ʱǲò档ӢѧҰͶB.
 
Here's the rule for bargains "Do other men, for they would do you." That's the true precept.Charles Dickens.  British novelist
 һ׷򣺡ƭˣΪҲƭ㡣ľ֮ӢС˵ҵҸ˹C
 
If Enterprise is afoot, wealth accumulates whatever may be happening to Thrift; and if Enterprise is asleep, wealth decays, whatever Thrift may be doing.John  Maynard  keynes British  economist
 ҵڽչ۽ڼ󲻽ڼ󣬲ƸҲ˥䡣ѧҿ˹.J.M.
 
Literature flourishes best when it is half a trade and half an art.Wiliam  Rplph lnge,  Birtish  writer and churchman
 ѧһΪóףһΪʱٵʱڡӢҺʦӢ.   W.R.
 
Men trifle with their business and their politics, but they never trifle with their games.George Burnard Shaw  British dramatist
 εϷȴӲϷӢФ.G.
 
Necessity never makes a good bagain.Benjamin Franklim, American Pesident
 ˻ͳB
 
The best cure for the national economy would beeconomy.Ashoey Cooper, British novelist
 ȹҾõð취ǽԼӢС˵ҿA
 
The trouble with the profit system has always been that is was highly unprofitable to most people.E.B.White, American writer
 ƶȵ׶ʼǾǾͼġһE B
 
There can be no economy where there is no efficiency.Disraeli, British statesman
 ûЧʾûоáӢμҵ˹
 
The consumer isn't a moron; she is your wife. You insult her in-telligence if you  assume that a mere slogan and a few vapid adjectives will persuade her to buy anything.Davik Ogilvy, American advertisement manager
 ߲ɵϣӡΪƾںţɰͰ͵ݴʾʹκζĻôǻۡ澭Ӫ߰¸άD
 
There is no resting  place for an enterprise in a competitive economy.Alfred P.Sloan. American businessman
 ھľУûҵϢĵطʵҵ˹¡A D
 
When you are skinning your customers , you should leave some skin on to grow so that you can skin them again.Nikita Khrushchev, Statsman of the former Soviet Union
 ҪͻƤӦƤ⣬Ƥ´λԼǵƤǰμҺ³N
ƪlaw
Every law has no atom of stregth, as far as no public opinion supports it.Wendell phillips, American leader against slavery
 ûй۵֧֣˿ûġ
ū˶˹W
 
Good order is the foundation of all things.
E.Burke, Btritish statesman
 õһеĻ
ӢμҲE
 
Guilt  always hurries towards its complement , punishment; only there does its satisfaction lie.
Lawence Durrell, British writer
 Գͷಹֻдʹõ
ӢҴ׶L
 
I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it ,
Voltaire, Frech writer
 Ҳͬ˵ĻԸ˵Ȩ
ҷ̩
 
If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers.
Charles Dickens, British novelist
 ûлˣҲͲкõʦ
ӢС˵ҵҸ˹C
 
If we only had some God in the country's laws, instead of beng in such a sweat to get him into the Constitution, it would be better all around.
Mark Twain, American writer
 ǹҵķֻĳ飬龫ǽܷ˵ɾͻá
ˡ
 
In nature there are no rewards or punishments; there are consequences.HoraclAnnexley Vachell,British writer
 ȻûнͺͳͷֻӦ
ӢлH A
 
It is better to fight for justice than to rail at the ill.
Alfreds Tennyson, Bitish writer
 񣬲塣
ӢҶA
 
aws are generally found to be nets of such a texture, as the little creep through, the great break through, and the middle-sized are alone entangled in .      William Shensto, British poet ֣ͨᷢɾһֵɵˣСĿԴĿֻеȵĲŻ׹С
Ӣʫ˹ͨW
 
Law can nerver be enforced unless fear supports it.
Sophocles, Ancient Greek dramatist
 ûп־֧ţЧ
ϣ˹
 
Law is the crystallizaton of the habit and thought of society.
Woodrow Wilson, American president
 ϰ׺˼Ľᾧ
ͳѷW
 
Law is order , and good law is good order.
Aristole, Ancient Greek philosopher
 ɾкõķɲкõ
 ϣѧʿ
 
Laws grind the poor, and rich men rule the law.
Oliver Goldsmith, British writer
 ˱˵ĸѪȴȨ
ӢҸ˹˹O
 
Mankind censure injustice, fearing that they may be the victims of it and not because they shrink from commintting it.
Plato, Ancint Grek philosopher
 ڲΪָ𣬲ΪԸΪΩԼΪΪߡ
ϣѧҰͼ
 
No society can make a perpetual constitution, or even a perpetual law.
Thomas Jefferson, America   president
 ûĸƶһԶõܷһԶõķɡ
ͳѷT
 
One of the most striking and salutary thing in Ameican life is the widespread study of law.
Alexis  de Tocqueville ,French judge
 ĪڶԷɵĹ㷺оˡ
пάA
 
Punishment is justice for the unjust.
Augustine   British writer
 ͷǶš
Ӣ¹˹
 
Really, what we want now, is not laws, against crime, but a law a -gainst  insaity.
Mark Twain,  American writer
 ʵϣҪĲԷķɣԷķɡˡ
 
Singularity is almost invariably a clue. The more featureless and commonplace a crime is , the more difficult is it to bring it  home.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, British writer
 ؼṩһһַԽͨԽǲص㣬ԽԲ
ӢҿϡʿA
 
The administration of the law can never go lax where every individual sees to it that it grows not  lax in his own case, or in cases which fall under his eyes.
Mark Twain, Arerican writer
 ڸԼİлİвִ
ˡ
 
The law cannot make all men equal, but they are all equal before the law.
Frederick Pollck ,British jurist
 ɲʹƽȣڷǰƽȵ
ӢѧҲF
 
The laws of Nature, that is to say the laws of God, plainly made every human being a law unto himself, we must steadfastly refuse to obey those laws, and we must as steadfastly stand by the conventions which ignore them , since the statutes furnish us peace, fairly good government and  stability, and therefore are better for us than the laws of God, which would soon  plunge us into confusion and disorder and anarchy if we should adopt them.
Mark Twain, American  writer
 Ȼ鷨ֻԼÿһķɣǱᶨؾܾءӦüᶨغ鷨ĹƶȣΪƶȸǺƽȽϺõȶ˵ƶȱ鷨ãΪǲ鷨ĻὫԻ״̬
ˡ
 
 
ƪEDUCATION
A teacher affects eternity; he can never  tell where his influence stops.
H.B.Adams, American historian
 ʦӰģ޷ӰжԶ
ʷѧǵ˹H   B
 
And gladly would learn, and gladly teach.
Chaucer , British poet
 ѧϰ˲ʩ̡
Ӣʫ
 
Better be unboun than untaught , for ignorance is the root of misfortune.
Plato ,Ancient Greek phiosopher
 䲻֪ܽΪ֪ǲҵĸԴ
ϣѧҰͼ
 
  Dancing in all its forms cannot be excluded from the curriculum of  all noble education: dancing with the feet, with ideas, with works, and ,need I add that one must also be able to dance with the pen?
Friedrich W.Nietzsche, German philosopher
 инĿγ̱ﶼûиʽ裺ý裬˼裬裬˵ñ衣
¹ѧF  W
 
Education commences at the mother's knee, and  every word spoken within the hearsay of children tends towards the formation of character.
Hosea Ballou British cducator
 ʼĸϥ£ͯһһӰԸγɡ
ӢҰ¬H
 
Educaton does not mean teaching people  to kow what they do not know ; it means teachng them to behave as they do not behave.
John Ruskin, British art critic
 ʹ֪δ֪ڰδжС
Ӣۼ԰˹J
 
Education is a progressive discovery of our ignorance.
Durant, American historian
 һ𲽷Լ֪Ĺ̡
ʷѧҶ
 
Education is a admirable thing, but it is well to remember from time to time that nothing  worth knowing can be taught.
Oscar Wilde, British dramatist
 ĽĶҪʱؼסֵ֪ģûһܹ̻ġ
ӢO
 
Education has for its object the formation of character.
Herbert Spencer, British philosopher
 ˵ƷΪĿꡣ
Ӣѧ˹H
 
Education has produced  a vast population able to read but unable to
distinguish  what is worth  reading.
George Macaulay Trevelyan British historian
 һˣǻ飬ǲʲôֵöӢʷѧάG  M
 
Education is not the filling of a pail but the lighting of a fire.
William Butler Yeats, lrish poet
 עһͰˮҵȼһѻ
ʫҶ֥B W
 
Education is the chief defence of nations.
Edmund Bruke, British statesman
 ǹҵҪ
ӢμҲ

 
Education is the transmission of civilization.
Will Drant, American historian and essayist
 
ʷѧҡɢļҶءW
 
Education makes a people easy to lead, but difficult to drive ; easy to govern but imposible to slave.
Brougham, British statesman
 ʹһ쵼ʹ׹ȴūۡ
ӢμҲķ
 
Every person has two education, one  which he receives from others,  and one , more important, which he gives himself.
Edward Gibbon, British historian
 ÿ˶ֽһԱˣһָҪԼ
ӢʷѧҼE
 
Example is always more efficacious than precept.
Samuel Johnson, British writer and critic
 ʤԽ̡
ӢҡԼѷS
 
For a cultivated man to be ignorant of foreign languages is a great inconveniece.
Anton P.Chekhrv, Russian dramatist
 һܹˣǼġ
˷A P
 
Genius without educaton is like silver in the mine.
Benjamin Franklin, American president
 δܽţ֮
ͳB
 
How much more profitable for the independent mind, after the mere rudiments of education , to range through a  library at random, taking down books as the mother wit suggests!
John Henry, British Cardinal Newman
 ܵĻ֮󣬶Ը˼˵ͼȡһݸ˵츳ԣǶĺô
ӢŦJ
 
I have long since abandoned the notion that higher education is essential to  either success or happiness. Hot houses of learning do not always grow anything edible.
Robert Moses, American state govenment officer
 ֹߵȽͨɹҸı֮·֪ʶġҡɹʳõʳ
ԱĦR
 
Let early education be a sort of a musement; you will then be bette able to find out the natural bent.
Plato, ancient Greek Philosophe
 ڽӦһ֣Ÿ׷һİá
ϣѧҰͼ
 
Men of privilege without power are waste material , Men of enlighten-ment without influence are the poorest kind of rubbish.
H.V.Dyke , American writer and ducator
 ȨȨǷܹûӰһĲֵ
ҡҴH V
 
Only a nation of educated people could remain free.
Thomas Jefferson, American president
 ֻܹɵĹҲܱɡ
ͳѷT
 
Only the educated are free.
Epictetus, Ancient Greek philosopher
 ֻܹ˲ɵġ
ϣѧҰȿ̩
 
Plato is dear to me , but dearer still is truth.
Aristotle, Ancient Greek philosopher
 ᰮʦ
ϣѧʿ
 
The purpose of education is to replace an empty mind with an open one ,.
Malcolm Forbes, American educator
 Ŀܹɽ˼ͷȥȡһꡣ
Ҹ˹M
 
The education of a man never completed until he dies.
Robert Edwad Lee , American educator
 һ˵Ľֹ
ңR E
 
The primary purpose of education is not to teach you to earn your bread, but to make every mouthful sweeter
J.Agell, Amercian psychologist
 ҪĿģǽʹÿһ
ѧҰJ
 
The object of educator is to prepare the young to educate themselves throughout their lives.
R.Hutchins,American educator
 Ŀ˱ҽ
ҹ˹R
 
The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet.
Aristtle, Ancient Greek Philosopher
 ĸǿģʵġ
ϣѧʿ
 
The university imparts information, but it imparts it imaginatively.
Alfred North Whitehead, British philosopher and mathematician
 ѧṩϢǸṩϢ
ӢѧҡѧһغA N
 
We should put aside and postpone all other reforms; that we  have but one task-----the istruction of the people, the diffusion of education, the ecourgement of science----on that day a great step will have then been taken in our rgenerion.
Leon Gambetta, French educator
 Ӧðһиĸȷ¡ֻһ񣬾ǽռ֪ʶѧһ쵽֮ʱ˰֮ա
ʱشL
 
What is in a  name ?That which we call a rose by any other name would smell and sweet.
William Shakespeare, British dramatist
 ʲôϵõ廨ƣ㡣
ӢɯʿW
 
What sculpture is to a block of marble , education is to the soul.
Joseph Adison, British writer
 ֮飬֮ڴʯ
ӢҰJ
 
You can lead a man up to the university, but you can't make him think.
Finley Peter Dunne, America humorous wrter
 ԰һѧȴ޷ʹ˼
Ĭҵ˶F P
 ĻƪCULTURE
A great poem is a fountain forever overflowing with the waters of wisdom and delight   P.B.Shelley, British poet
 ΰʫƪԶǻۺͻ֮ˮȪӢʫѩP B
 
A novel is a mirror walking along a main road.Stendhcl,French writer
 һС˵һڴߵľӡ
˾
 
A picture is  a poem without words .Horace, ancient Roman poet
 һһûֵʫ衣
ʫ˺˹
 
A poet is a man who puts up a ladder to a star and climbs it while playing a violin. E.de Goncourt, French writer
 ʫˣͨǵӡһһ١
ҹŶE
 
A poet is born, not made. L.A.Florus, Ancient Roman poet
 ʫ˿֣ǿ
ʫ˸³L A
 
Any one who conducts an argument by appealing to authourity is not using his intelligence; he is just using his memory. Da Vinci, Italian painter
 һݵ۵ˣԼĲǣԼļ
Ҵ
 
Art is a lie that tells the truth. Picasso, Spanish painter
 ǽʾĻԡ
ұϼ
 
Art is long, and time is fleeting. Longfellow, American poet
 ģʱ˲Ϣŵġ
ʫʷ
 
Art is much less important than life ,but what a poor life without it !Robert  Motherwell, American painter
 ԶûҪûǶôζѽ
ΤR
 
Art is not a handicraft, it is the transmission of feeling theorist has experienced. Len Tolstoy, Russian writer
 գҵ鵽ĸĴݡ
ж˹̩L
 
Art is the mold of feeling as language is the mold of thought. Susanne Langer, American philosopher
 ǸģƷ˼ģƷѧS
 
Art is the object of feeling , and the subject of nature. S.K.langer, American philosopher and educator
 еĿ͹۱֡ҲǱԵ۷ӳ
ѧҡS K
 
Art is the right hand of nature. The latter only gave us being, but the former made us men .Friedrich Schiller, German poet
 Ȼ֡ȻֻǴڣǵࡣ
¹ʫϯF
 
Art is the  stored honey of the human soul, gathered on wings of misery and travel. Theocore Dreser, American novelist
 ûȣֻᣬԴ
ҸM
 
Good painting is like good cooking; it ca n be tasted, but not explained. Maurice de vlaminck , French painter
 򵥵˵ΰѧǰḻԡ
ʫӵE
 
Great literature is simply language charged with meaning to the utmost possible degree Ezra Poud, American poet
 ĬȷؽΪԳֿܣԢ˼Ц
ʫӵE
 
Humor has been well defined as thinking in fun while feeling in earnest. Mark Twain, American novelist
 дֻΪ
ҽܿˡ׶
 
I write for no other purpose than to add to the beauty that now belongs to me .Jack London, American writer
 Ҫȥͷȥо
V
 
In music one must think with the heart and  feel with the brains.Victor Hugo, French writer
 
Jazz tickles your muscles, symphonies stretch your soul.PaulWhiteman, American conductor
 ʿʹļⷢչꡣ
ָӼһP
 
iterature is a kind of intellectual light which, like  the light of the sun , may  sometimes enable us to  see what we do not  like.Samuse Johnson, British writer and critic
 ѧһ֮⣬һʱʹǿǲϲĶ
ӢҡԼѷS
 
Love and scandale the best sweeteners of tea.HenryFielding, British writer
 Ʒʱѻ⡣
ӢҷƶH
 
Music has charms to soothe a savage breast , to soften rocks or bend a knotted oak.
William Congreve. British dramatist
 ŸοҰػʯʹǧ
ӢҿW
 
Music is the only language in which you cannot  say a mean or sarcastic thing.
John Erskine, American educator
 ΨһüﱰɵĻ̵ԡ
Ҷ˹J
 
Painting is silent poetry , and poetry is a apeaking picture.
Simonides, ancient Greek writer
 ֮ʫʫ֮
ϣ˹
 
Rules and modesty destroy genius and art.
William Hazlitt, British essayist
 ǫѷٵź
ӢɢļҹW
 
Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover ev-erybody's face their own.
Jonathan Swift, British writer
 һ澵ӣۿͨпÿһ˵ȴԼ
Ӣ˹J
 
Some people pretend to despise the things they cannot have.
Aesop, ancient Greek fable writer
 Բѵ˵ᡣ
ϣԢ
 
Speech is a mirror of the soul; as a man speaks, so is he.
Ephraem Syrus, American writer
 ľӣһֻҪ˵˵Ļľӡ
˹E
 
S     unshine can burn you, food can poison you, words can condemn you, pictures can insult you ; music cannot  punish ---- only bless.
Arthur Schnabel, Austrian pianist
 ˿㣬ʳƷܶ㣬㣬ͼ㡪ֲᴦֻף㡣
µټʩɱA
 
The art of giving presents is to give something which others cannot buy for themselves.
Alan Alexander Milne, British humorist
 ͱ˲ܸԼĶ
ӢĬ׶A A
 
The decline of literature indicates the decline of a nation ; the two keep in their downwad tendency.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe German poet
 ѧ˥һ˥䡣·ʱͷġ
¹ʫ˸J W
 
The lanscope belongs to the man who looks at it .
Ralph Waldo Emerson, American thinker
 羰ڿ羰ˡ
˼ҰĬR W
 
The love of beauty is an essential part of all healthy human nature.
John Ruskin, American writer and critic
 ǽԵҪɲ֡
ҡ˹J
 
The poet's voice  need not merely be the record of man , it can be one of the props , the pillars to help him endure and  prevail.
William Fulkner, American writer
 ʫ˵Ӧֻļ¼Ӧʹ沢õʤ֧Ͷ
ҸɡW
 
The value of culture is its effect on character . It  avails nothing unless it  ennobles and strengthens that ,Its use is for life, Its aim is not beauty but goodness.
Somerset Maugham, British noverlist and  dramatist
 ĻļֵƷԵӰ졣ĻʹƷԱΪСĻĿ겻ơ
ӢС˵ҺϷëķS
 
There are painters  who transform the sun to a yellow spot, but  there are others who with the help of their art  and their intelligence, transform a yellow spot into the sun.
Picasso, Spanish painter
   ЩҰ̫һưߣЩҽǵļɺǻ۰ѻư߻̫
ұϼ
 
When a dog bites a man that is not news , but when a man bites a dog that is news.
Charls A.Dana, American journalist
 ҧ˲ţҧš
ߴC A
 
When one loves one's art no service seems too hard.
O.Henry, American novelist
 һȰʲôҲѡ
С˵ŷ
 
Words have a magical power. They can bring either the greatest happiness or deepest  despair; can transfer  knowledge from teacher to students words enable the orator to sway his audience and dictate its decisions .Words are capable of arousing  the strongest emotions and prompting all man's actions , Do not ridicule the use of words in psychotherapy.
Sigmund Freud, German Psychiatrist
 ԴǾв˼ܴҸҲܴʧ֪ܰʶӽʦѧԴʹ˵ڣǿдԴܼǿҵУٽ˵һжҪЦԴƵеĵ;
¹ѧҸS
 
ƪLAST WORDS
A dying man can do nothing easy .
Benjamin Frankiln ,USA president һյʲôɡ
ͳ֡
 
A King should die standing. Louis XVIII, king of France.  Ӧվ
·ʮ
All my possessions are for a moment of time. Elizabeth I. Queen of England  ҵһжΪǻԻ͵һ̡
ӢŮɯһ
Beautiful, In reply to her husband who had asked how she felt. Elizabeth Barrett Browning. American female writer  ̫ˡɷоôʱشɷ
ŮҲE  
Die? I should say not, dear fellow. No Barry more would allow such a conventional thing to happen to him. John Barry more, American actor, J.  ˵װĻơġഫͳ鷢ϡ
ԱġJ  
Don't let it end like this . Tell them I said something. Pancho villa, Mexican revolutionary. 
 Ҫҵͽˣ˵Щ
īάP  
Don't let poor Nelly (his mistress, Nell Gwynne )starve. Charles ll, King of England  Ҫÿ鸾š
Ӣ
Friends applaud, the comedy is finished. Ludwig van Beethoven, German composer Friends applaud, the comedy is finished. Ludwig van Beethoven, German composer  ǹˣϲˡ
¹ұ.L.  
Get my swan costume ready. Anna Pavlova, Russian ballerina  ҵװ׼á
Ů赸Ұͷŵ.A.  
Go on , get out ----- last words are for fools who haven't said enough. Karl Marx , German revolutionary  ɣΪЩû˵׼ġ
¹˼.K.  
God bless God damn. James Thurber, American humorist  ϵۻᱣϵ
Ĭ². J.  
God will pardon me , that's his line of work. Heinrich Heine, German poet  ϵۻԭҵģְҵ
¹ʫ˺H.  
Good night my darlings, I'll see you tomorrow. Noel Cowad, American writer  װǣټ
I am a Queen, but I have not the power to move my arms. Louise, Queen of Prussian  ŮûȨŲҵĸ첲
³ʿŮ·˿
I am about to --or I am going to --die:either expression is correct. Dominique Bouhours, French grammarian.  ҽҼ--ȥֱ﷽ʽȷ
﷨ѧҲ˹D.  
I am curious to see what happens in the next world to one who dies un--shriven. Pietro Perugino, Italian painter  Ҽе֪ûڵȥڱһô
·ŵ.P.  
I am dying .I have't drunk champagne for a long time. Anton Palovich Chekhov, American writer  ҪˣѾܳʱûкˡ
п˺A P  
I am not the least afraid to die. Charles Darwin, British naturaist  µľ
ӢѧҴG.  
I am ready to die for my Lord, that in my blood the Church may obtain liberty and peace. Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury.  ׼ΪҵҵѪҺÿԻȡƽ
ز״̰ؿT.  
I die hard but am not afraid to go . George Washington, father of the United States  ʹҲ
ʢG.  
I feel here that this time they have succeeded. Leo Trotsky, Russian writer  Ҵ˿̾ãһΣǳɹˡ
ж˹̩L.  
"I have a terrific headache." He died of a cerebral hemorrhage. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, American president  ͷʹѡѪ
ͳ˹F.D.  
I have offended God and mankind because my work did not reach the quality it should have. Leonardo Da Vinci, Italian artist  ѾðϵۺܿܿΪҵĹûдﵽӦеˮƽ
ҴL  
I have tried so hard to do the right. Grover Cleveland, American president  ҷ˺ܴľȥ¡
ͳG  
I love you, arah, For all eternity, I love you. Spoken to his wife. James K,Polk, American pesident  Ұ㣬Ϊе㣬Ұ㡣˵
ͳJ K  
I must go in , the fog is rising. Emily Dickinson, American poet  ұ߽ȥ
ʫ˵ҸE  
I see black light. Victor Hugo, French writer  ҿ˺ɫĵơ
V  
I'd hate to die twice. It's so boring. Rchard Feynman, American physicist  ȥ,ᡣ
ѧҷѶR  
Is everybody happy? I want everybody to be happy. I know I'm happy. Ethel Barrymore, American actress  Ҷ?ԸҶ,֪,Ǹ˵. ŮԱġ.E.  
It is very beautiful over there. Thomas Alva Edison, American inventor  羰Ǳ߶.
Ұ.T.A.  
Let us cross over the river  and sit in the hade of the trees.
American general Thoman Stonewall Jackson 
 Ƕɹ,.
ܿѷ.T.S. 
 
Lord help my poor soul.
American writer Edgar Allan Poe 
 ϵ۾Ⱦҿ.
Ұס.E. 
 
Now I have finished with all earthly business, and high time too. Yes, yes, my dear child , 
now comes death
Franz Lehar Composer of the former empire of Austria-Hungary 
 ʱˣҵĳԵѾǵģǵģװĺӣˡ
ٵ۹
Now I shall go to sleep. Good night. 
George Byron, American writer Ҫ˯ˣ
ҲʣG
Oh, do not cry--- be good children and we will all meet in heaven.
Andrew Jackson, American president ŶҪޣҪԺӣǶüġ
ͳܿѷA
Oh, I am not going to die , am I ? He will not separate us , we have been so happy.
Charlotte Bronta, American writer ŶҲʹǷ룬ǶôҸ
ҲC 
Put out the light.
Theodore Roosevelt, American president ѵƹص
ͳ˹
Sister, you're trying to keep me alive as an old curiosity but I'm done, I'm finished, I'm going to die.
George Bernard Shaw, British playwright 㣬ϹŶˣѾˣҪˡ
ӢФG 
The earth is suffocating Swear to make them cut me open, so that I won't be buried alive.
Frederic Chopin, Polish composer ϢһǰпҾͲᱻ
ФF 
The future is just old age and illness and pain I must have peace and health. This is the only way.
James Whale, American director δѸߡʹ࡭һҪӵƽ뽡Ψһ·
ӰJ 
That was the best ice-cresm soda I ever tasted.
Lou Costello, American comedian Ʒõıˮ
ϲԱ˹L 
This time it will be a long one.
Georges Clemenceau, French premier Σʱܳ
G 
To my friends: My work is done. Why wait?
Gorge Eastman, American ivetor ҵѣҵʹѾɣΪʲôҪأ
ҿ˹Ga 
I don' t want to go home in the dark.
O.Henry (William Sidney Porter), American writer 򿪵ƣҲڻؼҡ
ŷ
Why do you weep? Did you think I was immortal?
Louis XIV, King of France ΪʲôΪ
·ʮ
Woe is me. Me thinks I'm turning into a god.
Vespasian, Roman emperor ἴѡ룬ҽתΪ
ʵ˹


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