James Howell quotes:

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  • Burn not thy fingers to snuff another man's candle.

  • One hair of a woman can draw more than a hundred pair of oxen.

  • The creditor hath a better memory than the debtor.

  • Respect a man, he will do it the more.

  • The fangs of a bear, and the tusks of a wild boar, do not bite worse and make deeper gashes than a goose-quill sometimes; no, not even the badger himself, who is said to be so tenacious of his bite that he will not give over his hold till he feels his teeth meet and the bones crack.

  • Nature, the handmaid of God Almighty, does nothing but with good advice, if we make research into the true reason of things.

  • A secret is too little for one, enough for two, and too much for three.

  • Apelles used to paint a good housewife on a snail, to import that she home-keeping.

  • Words are the soul's ambassadors, who go / Abroad upon her errands to and fro.

  • Proverbs may not improperly be called the philosophy of the common people.

  • After rain comes fair weather.

  • Owe money at Easter and Lent will seem short to thee.

  • Words and works eat not at one table.

  • Good wine makes good blood, good blood causeth good humors, good humors cause good thoughts, good thoughts bring forth good works, good works carry a man to heaven, ergo, good wine carrieth a man to heaven.

  • This life at best is but an inn, and we the passengers.

  • Respect a man, he will do the more.

  • Distance sometimes endears friendship, and absence sweeteneth it.

  • Choose thy friends like thy books, few but choice.

  • Fly and you will catch the swallow.

  • Feed sparingly and defy the physician.

  • Easter, so longed for, is gone in a day.

  • He that hath the name to be an early riser may sleep till noon.

  • All we can do is be better prepared today than yesterday and better prepared tomorrow than today.

  • We learn by teaching.

  • French wines may be said but to pickle meat in the stomach, but this is the wine that digests, and doth not only breed good blood, but it nutrifieth also, being a glutinous substantial liquor; of this wine, if of any other, may be verified that merry induction: That good wine makes good blood, good blood causeth good humors, good humors cause good thoughts, good thoughts bring forth good works, good works carry a man to heaven, ergo, good wine carrieth a man to heaven.

  • We are saved from nothing if we are not saved from sin. Little sins are pioneers of hell. The backslider begins with what he foolishly considers trifling with little sins. There are no little sins. There was a time when all the evil that has existed in the world was comprehended in one sinful thought of our first parent; and all the now evil is the numerous and horrid progeny of one little sin.

  • Distance sometimes endears friendships, and sweetens it - for separation from those we love shows us, by the loss, their real value and dearness to us.

  • Man's best candle is his understanding.

  • God comes at last when we think he is farthest off.

  • In time of prosperity friends will be plenty; In time of adversity not one in twenty.

  • He that hath money in his purse cannot want a head for his shoulders.

  • Little sins are pioneers of hell.

  • We are saved from nothing if we are not saved from sin.

  • Goose [pen] bee [wax] and calf [parchment] govern the world. [Lat., Anser, apie, vitellus, populus et regna gubernant.]

  • God guard me from my friends, for I shall guard myself from my enemies.

  • Such is the strength of art, rough things to shape.

  • He can hardly be a true friend to another, who is an enemy to himself.

  • Love is the life of friendship.

  • Appeles us'd to paint a good housewife upon a snayl; which intimated that she should be as slow from gadding abroad, and when she went she should carry her house upon her back; that is, she should make all sure at home.

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