Best Seller Books On Man Breasts May Make A Fool Of You
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March 2nd, 2010 at 4:43 pm
Classic poems to read aloud 35 proverbs?
CLASSIC POEMS TO READ ALOUD
FOLKS’ WISE TALK AND INSPIRATION
11
THIRTy-FIVE PROVERBS’
6
The world is a staircase:
some are going up,
some are coming down.
12
The devil is busy
in a high wind.
13
If you are in hiding
don’t light a fire.
(African)
14
To be born
with a silver spoon
in the mouth.
15
To stir up a hornet’s nest.
16
To make one hole
to stop another.
17
A ghost knows
who to frighten.
(Caribbean)
18
Old wounds soon bleed.
19
It takes two
to make a quarrel.
20
Trouble catches a man
and a child’s frock will fit him.
(Caribbean)
21
Adversity makes
strange bedfellows.
22
Many straws
may bind an elephant.
23
You cannot shoe
a running horse.
1
It is a long lane
that has no turning.
7
There are more foolish
buyers than foolish sellers.
2
Distance lends enchantment
to the view.
~
"ft:
3
A donkey says,
this world
is not level ground.
(Caribbean)
8
A bad beginning
makes a good ending.
4
Follow the river
and you’ll find the sea.
9
Diligence is a great teacher.
10
Neither wise men nor fools
work without tools.
5
Don’t curse the alligator
a long mouth till you have
crossed the river.
(Caribbean) ‘,,’ ,-
11
Hope springs eternal
in the human breast:
.
CLASSIC POEMS TO READ ALOUD
24
A hungry man
is an angry man.
30
Give and spend
and God will send.
25
The tongue ever turns
to the aching tooth.
31
Time cures more
than the doctor.
~
. .. ~
26
Faint heart
never won fair lady.
32
A heavy purse
makes a light heart.
27
A good husband
makes a good wife.
33
Fine feathers
make fine birds.
28 .
At wooden-leg people’s
dance, you should dance
like a wooden-leg too.
(Caribbean)
34
There are pictures in poems
and poems in pictures.
(Chinese)
29
Make short the miles
with talk and smiles.
35
Peace in a thatched hut-
that is happiness.
(Chinese)
I am very sorry that its out of order but thats why my ocr scanner did
thanks
i will give best answer to anyone who can tell me what you think are the answers
i dont know answers does not help
thanks
and please respond by 2-12-09 morning
thanks
and i do know some meanings
to lke 2 of them thoughh
thanks
oh and the proverbs come out of the book
Classic poems to read aloud, and the chapter is called 35 proverbs
March 2nd, 2010 at 9:46 pm
here is one that you may like to read "The grand essentials to happiness in this life are something to do something to love, and something to hope for.
"Something to do"
Happiness is a rebound from hard work. One of the follies of man is to assume that he can enjoy mere emotion as well try to eat beauty! Happiness must be tricked. She loves to see men work. She loves sweat, weariness, self-sacrifice. She will not be found in palaces but lurking in cornfields and factories and on over littered desks. she crowns the unconscious head of the busy man.
Doing easily what others find difficult is talent; doing what is impossible for talent is genius.
Life is like playing the violin in public and learning the instrument as one goes on
Happiness is int he teaste, and not in the things themselves we are happy from possession what we like, not from possessing what others like.
He who enjoys doing and enjoys what he has done is happy.
To accomplish great things, we must not only act but also dream, not only plan but also believe.
*The supply of time is a daily miracle. You wake up in the morning your purse if magnificiently filled with 24 hours of the unmanufactured tissue of the universe of life it is yours the most precious of your possessions.
Great minds have purposes, others have wishes.
The darkest hour in any man’s life is when he sits down to plan how to get money without earining it.
He has half the deed done, who has made a beginning.
Doing is the great thing. For if resolutely people do what is right, in time they come to like doing it.
the wise does at once what the fool does at last.
*If we begin with certainties, we shall end in doubts, but if we begin with doubts, and are patient in them, we shall end in certainties.
Man’s happiness does not lie in freedom, but in acceptance of duty.
Why not go on a limb? Isn’t that where the fruit is?
Win as if you were used to it, lose as if you enjoyed it for a change
*Those only are happy who have their minds fixed on some object other than their own happiness, on the happiness of others, on the improvement of mankind, even on some art or pursuit followed not as a means but as itself an ideal end. Aiming thus at something else, they find happiness by the way…ask yourself whether you are happy, and you cease to be so. The only chance is to treat, not happiness, but some end external to it, as the purpose of life.
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