Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

X

For Auld Lang Syne

IT IS a noble and great thing to cover the blemishes and to excuse the failings of a friend; to draw a curtain before his stains, and to display his perfections; to bury his weaknesses in silence, but to proclaim his virtues upon the housetop.

-South.

E'EN as a traveller, meeting with the
shade

Of some o'erhanging tree, awhile reposes,
Then leaves its shelter to pursue his way,
So men meet friends, then part with them
forever.

-Hitopadesa.

A TRUE friendship is as wise as it is

tender.

-Thoreau.

AS ships meet at sea-a moment together, when words of greeting must be spoken, and then away upon the deepso men meet in this world; and I think we should cross no man's path without hailing him, and if he needs, giving him supplies. -H. W. Beecher.

A FRIEND is more necessary than either fire or water.

-Proverbs.

A LONG novitiate of acquaintance should precede the vows of friendship. -Lord Bolingbroke.

A BELOVED friend does not fill one part of the soul, but, penetrating the whole, becomes connected with all feeling. -Channing.

A REVERSE of fortune is a mighty sifter of friendship. So is distance. Go a little way out of town, and see how many people will take the trouble to come to see you. Well, we must be patient and forbearing. It is a question of intensity of need. Friendly relations depend upon vicinity amongst other things, and there are degrees; but the best kind of friendship has a way of bridging time and space for all that.

-Haweis,

A FEMALE friend, amiable, clever, and devoted, is a possession more valuable than parks and palaces; and without such a muse few men can succeed in life, none be contented.

-Lord Beaconsfield.

A A A

A TRUE friend embraces our objects as his own. We feel another mind bent on the same end, enjoying it, ensuring it, reflecting it, and delighting in our devotion to it.

-Channing.

A PRETENDED affection is not easily distinguished from a real one, unless in seasons of distress. For adversity is to friendship what fire is to gold-the only infallible test to discover the genuine from the counterfeit. In all other cases they both have the same common marks. -Cicero.

A LITTLE peaceful home bounds all my wants and wishes;

Add to this my book and friend—and this is happiness supreme.

-Montaigne.

A TRUE friend is more precious to the soul than all which it inherits beneath the

sun.

-Irving.

A FRIEND

Welded into our life is more to us

Than twice five-thousand kinsmen, one in

blood.

-Euripides.

A PRINCIPAL fruit of friendship is the ease and discharge of the fullness and swelling of the heart, which passions of all kinds do cause and induce. No receipt openeth the heart but a true friend, to whom you may impart griefs, joys, fears, hopes, suspicions, counsels, and whatsoever lieth upon the heart to oppress it, in a kind of civil shrift or confession.

-Bacon.

BE true to thy friend. Never speak of his faults to another, to show thy own discrimination; but open them all to him, with candor and true gentleness; forgive all his errors and his sins, be they ever so many; but do not excuse the slightest deviation from rectitude. Never forbear to dissent from a false opinion, or a wrong practice, from mistaken motives of kindness; nor seek thus to have thy own weaknesses sustained; for these things cannot be done without injury to the soul. -Child.

« AnteriorContinuar »