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289
It the best to be with those in time, that we hope to be within eternity.
- Thomas Fuller
102
287
If I speak what is false, I must answer for it; if truth, it will answer for me.
- Thomas Fuller
9
284
If you have knowledge, let others light their candles at it.
- Thomas Fuller
6
283
Two things a man should never be angry at: what he can help, and what he cannot help.
- Thomas Fuller
6
282
He does not believe who does not live according to his belief.
- Thomas Fuller
5
281
Learn to hold thy tongue; five words cost Zacharias forty weeks of silence.
- Thomas Fuller
5
280
It is a shame when the church itself is a cemetery, where the living sleep above the ground, as the dead do beneath.
- Thomas Fuller
4
276
The schoolmaster deserves to be beaten himself who beats nature in a boy for a fault. And I question whether all the whippings in the world can make their parts which are naturally sluggish rise one minute before the hour nature hath appointed.
- Thomas Fuller
2
274
Let thy child's first lesson be obedience, and the second may be what thou wilt.
- Thomas Fuller
2
273
She commandeth her husband, in any equal matter, by constant obeying him.
- Thomas Fuller
2
272
Nature hath appointed the twilight, as a bridge, to pass us out of night into day.
- Thomas Fuller
2
271
He that will not sail till all dangers are over must never put to sea.
- Thomas Fuller
2
269
He that cannot forgive others breaks the bridge over which he must pass himself; for every man has need to be forgiven.
- Thomas Fuller
2
268
First get an absolute conquest over thyself, and then thou wilt easily govern thy wife.
- Thomas Fuller
2
267
As for those parents who will not use the rod upon their children, I pray God He useth not their children as a rod for them.
- Thomas Fuller
2
262
Nature teaches us to love our friends, but religion our enemies.
- Thomas Fuller
1
260
Lord, be pleased to shake my clay cottage before Thou throwest it down.
- Thomas Fuller
1
259
Some men, like a tiled house, are long before they take fire, but once on flame there is no coming near to quench them.
- Thomas Fuller
1
254
It was said of one who preached very well, and lived very ill, "that when he was out of the pulpit it was pity he should ever go into it; and when he was in the pulpit, it was pity he should ever come out of it."
- Thomas Fuller
1
253
Better one's house be too little one day than too big all the year after.
- Thomas Fuller
1
252
As the sword of the best tempered metal is most flexible, so the truly generous are most pliant and courteous in their behavior to their inferiors.
- Thomas Fuller
1
251
He that has no fools, knaves nor beggars in his family was begot by a flash of lightning.
- Thomas Fuller
1
250
If you would have a good wife, marry one who has been a good daughter.
- Thomas Fuller
1
246
That which is bitter to endure may be sweet to remember.
- Thomas Fuller
1
245
If you would pass for more than your value, say little. It is easier to look wise than to talk wisely.
- Thomas Fuller
1
244
You cannot repent too soon, because you do not know how soon it may be too late.
- Thomas Fuller
1
243
All commend patience, but none can endure to suffer.
- Thomas Fuller
1
242
Men are more prone to revenge injuries than to requite kindness.
- Thomas Fuller
1
241
Try to be happy in this very present moment; and put not off being so to a time to come; as though that time should be of another make from this, which is already come, and is ours.
- Thomas Fuller
1
237
He that resolves to deal with none but honest men, must leave off dealing.
- Thomas Fuller
1
236
Disobedient children, if preserved from the gallows, are reserved for the rack, to be tortured by their own posterity. One complaining, that never father had so undutiful a child as he had, yes, said his son, with less grace than truth, my grandfather had.
- Thomas Fuller
1
233
'Tis better that thou be rather something sparing, than very liberal, to even a good servant; for as he grows full, he inclines either to be idle, or to leave thee: and if he should at any time murmur, thou mayest govern him by a seasonable reward.
- Thomas Fuller
1
232
Be the business never so painful, you may have it done for money.
- Thomas Fuller
1
230
The weakest and most timorous are the most revengeful and implacable.
- Thomas Fuller
1
229
History maketh a young man to be old, without wrinkles or gray hairs, privileging him with the experience of age, without either the infirmities or inconveniences thereof.
- Thomas Fuller
0
228
Ingratitude is the abridgment of all baseness; a fault never found unattended with other viciousness.
- Thomas Fuller
0
225
Deceive not thyself by overexpecting happiness in the married estate. Remember the nightingales which sing only some months in the spring, but commonly are silent when they have hatched their eggs.
- Thomas Fuller
0
224
If thou art a master, be sometimes blind, if a servant, sometimes deaf.
- Thomas Fuller
0
223
Dwell not too long upon sports; for as they refresh a man that is weary, so they weary a man that is refreshed.
- Thomas Fuller
0
222
Spill not the morning (the quintessence of the day!) in recreations, for sleep is a recreation. Add not, therefore, sauce to sauce. Pastime, like wine, is poison in the morning. It is then good husbandry to sow the head, which hath lain fallow all night, with some serious work.
- Thomas Fuller
0
221
Though bachelors be the strongest stakes, married men are the best binders, in the hedge of the commonwealth.
- Thomas Fuller
0
218
Riches are long in getting with much pains, hard in keeping with much care, quick in losing with more sorrow.
- Thomas Fuller
0
215
Haste and rashness are storms and tempests, breaking and wrecking business; but nimbleness is a full fair wind blowing it with speed to the haven.
- Thomas Fuller
0
214
With devotion's visage and pious action we do sugar o'er the devil himself.
- Thomas Fuller
0
212
Those who are surly and imperious to their inferiors are generally humble, flattering, and cringing to their superiors.
- Thomas Fuller
0
206
We shall never have friends if we expect to find them without fault.
- Thomas Fuller
0
204
Prescribe no positive laws to thy will; for thou mayest be forced tomorrow to drink the same water thou despisest today.
- Thomas Fuller
0
203
Most marvelous and enviable is that fecundity of fancy which can adorn whatever it touches, which can invest naked fact and dry reasoning with unlooked for beauty, make flowers bloom even on the brow of the precipice, and turn even the rock itself into moss and lichens. This faculty is most important for the vivid and attractive exhibition of truth to the minds of men.
- Thomas Fuller
0
201
If thou wouldst please the ladies, thou must endeavor to make them pleased with themselves.
- Thomas Fuller
0
198
Often the cockloft is empty in those whom nature hath built many stories high.
- Thomas Fuller
0
196
It is much better to have your gold in the hand than in the heart.
- Thomas Fuller
0
194
Thou oughtest to be nice, even to superstition, in keeping thy promises, and therefore equally cautious in making them.
- Thomas Fuller
0
192
The good wife is none of our dainty dames, who love to appear in a variety of suits every day new; as if a gown, like a stratagem in war, were to be used but once. But our good wife sets up a sail according to the keel of her husband's estate; and, if of high parentage, she doth not so remember what she was by birth, that she forgets what she is by match.
- Thomas Fuller
0
191
Good counsels observed, are chains to grace, which, neglected, prove halters to strange, undutiful children.
- Thomas Fuller
0
189
All the while that thou livest ill, thou hast the trouble, distraction, and inconveniences of life, but not the sweet and true use of it.
- Thomas Fuller
0
188
Contentment consists not in adding more fuel, but in taking away some fire.
- Thomas Fuller
0
184
An index is a necessary implement, without which a large author is but a labyrinth without a clue to direct the readers within.
- Thomas Fuller
0
183
My son is my son till he have got him a wife, But my daughter's my daughter all the days of her life.
- Thomas Fuller
0
182
A little skill in antiquity inclines a man to Popery; but depth in that study brings him about again to our religion.
- Thomas Fuller
0
180
Poetry is music in words: and music is poetry in sound: both excellent sauce, but those have lived and died poor, who made them their meat.
- Thomas Fuller
0
177
Policy consists in serving God in such a manner as not to offend the devil.
- Thomas Fuller
0
176
Many hope the tree may be felled that they may gather chips by the fall.
- Thomas Fuller
0
175
Let friendship creep gently to a height; if it rushes to it, it may soon run itself out of breath.
- Thomas Fuller
0
174
Memory depends very much on the perspicuity, regularity, and order of our thoughts. Many complain of the want of memory, when the defect is in their judgment; and others, by grasping at all, retain nothing.
- Thomas Fuller
0
173
Our eyes, when gazing on sinful objects, are out of their calling, and out of God's keeping.
- Thomas Fuller
0
170
Generosity, wrong placed, becometh a vice; a princely mind will undo a private family.
- Thomas Fuller
0
164
Praise not people to their faces, to the end that they may pay thee in the same coin. This is so thin a cobweb, that it may with little difficulty be seen through; 'tis rarely strong enough to catch flies of any considerable magnitude.
- Thomas Fuller
0
162
Make not a bosom friend of a melancholy soul: he'll be sure to aggravate thy adversity, and lessen thy prosperity. He goes always heavy loaded; and thou must bear half. He's never in a good humor; and may easily get into a bad one, and fall out with thee.
- Thomas Fuller
0
161
Memory is the treasure house of the mind wherein the monuments thereof are kept and preserved.
- Thomas Fuller
0
158
To smell a turf of fresh earth is wholesome for the body; no less are thoughts of mortality cordial to the soul.
- Thomas Fuller
0
157
One that will not plead that cause wherein his tongue must be confuted by his conscience.
- Thomas Fuller
0
155
The frost is God's plough which he drives through every inch of ground in the world, opening each clod, and pulverizing the whole.
- Thomas Fuller
0
154
Get the facts, or the facts will get you. And when you get em, get em right, or they will get you wrong.
- Thomas Fuller
0
151
It is good to make a jest, but not to make a trade of jesting.
- Thomas Fuller
0
150
He lives long that lives well; and time misspent is not lived, but lost. God is better than his promise if he takes from him a long lease, and gives him a free hold of a better value.
- Thomas Fuller
0
147
There are heads sometimes so little, that there is no room for wit, sometimes so long that there is no wit for so much room.
- Thomas Fuller
0
142
There is a great difference between painting a face and not washing it.
- Thomas Fuller
0
133
We ought to see far enough into a hypocrite to see even his sincerity.
- Thomas Fuller
0
132
Thou mayst as well expect to grow stronger by always eating as wiser by always reading. Too much overcharges nature, and turns more into disease than nourishment. 'Tis thought and digestion which make books serviceable, and give health and vigor to the mind.
- Thomas Fuller
0
129
Marshall thy notions into a handsome method. One will carry twice more weight packed up in bundles, than when it lies flapping and hanging about his shoulders.
- Thomas Fuller
0
128
Judge of thine improvement, not by what thou speakest or writest, but by the firmness of thy mind, and the government of thy passions and affections.
- Thomas Fuller
0
126
Jars concealed are half reconciled; but if generally known, it is a double task to stop the breach at home and men's mouths abroad.
- Thomas Fuller
0
125
Thou must content thyself to see the world imperfect as it is. Thou wilt never have any quiet if thou vexest thyself because thou canst not bring mankind to that exact notion of things and rule of life which thou hast formed in thy own mind.
- Thomas Fuller
0
121
Many favors which God gives us ravel out for want of hemming through our unthankfulness; for though prayer purchases blessings, giving praise keeps the quiet possession of them.
- Thomas Fuller
0
120
Reward a good servant well, and rather get quit of a bad one than disquiet thyself with him.
- Thomas Fuller
0
119
Heat of passion makes our souls to chap, and the devil creeps in at the crannies.
- Thomas Fuller
0
117
All the molestations of marriage are abundantly recompensed with the other comforts which God bestoweth on them who make a wise choice of a wife.
- Thomas Fuller
0
115
No man can be happy without a friend, nor be sure of his friend till he is unhappy.
- Thomas Fuller
0
113
Command thy servant advisably with few plain words, fully, freely, and positively, with a grave countenance, and settled carriage: These will procure obedience, gain respect, and maintain authority.
- Thomas Fuller
0
112
Learning hath gained most by those books by which the printers have lost.
- Thomas Fuller
0
110
In conversation use some, but not too much ceremony; it teaches others to be courteous, too. Demeanors are commonly paid back in their own coin.
- Thomas Fuller
0
108
Make no vows to perform this or that; it shows no great strength, and makes thee ride behind thyself.
- Thomas Fuller
0
105
A drinker has a hole under his nose that all his money runs into.
- Thomas Fuller
0
104
When our Savior drove the sheep and oxen out of the temple, He did not drive them into His own pasture; nor sweep the coin into His own pockets, when He overturned the table of the money-changers.
- Thomas Fuller
0
103
A good schoolmaster minces his precepts for children to swallow, hanging clogs on the nimbleness of his own soul, that his scholars may go along with him.
- Thomas Fuller
0
102
We are born crying, live complaining, and die disappointed.
- Thomas Fuller
0
100
The Pyramids themselves, doting with age, have forgotten the names of their founders.
- Thomas Fuller
0
99
An ounce of cheerfulness is worth a pound of sadness to serve God with.
- Thomas Fuller
0
98
Many come to bring their clothes to church rather than themselves.
- Thomas Fuller
0
95
Reasons are the pillars of the fabric of a sermon, but similitudes are the windows which give the best light. The faithful minister avoids such stories as may suggest bad thoughts to the auditors, and will not use a light comparison to make thereof a grave application, for fear lest his poison go further than his antidote.
- Thomas Fuller
0
94
Many have been the wise speeches of fools, though not so many as the foolish speeches of wise men.
- Thomas Fuller
0
93
Place not thy amendment only in increasing thy devotion, but in bettering thy life. It is the damning hypocrisy of this age that it slights all good morality, and spends its zeal in matters of ceremony, and a form of godliness without the power of it.
- Thomas Fuller
0
90
He that falls into sin is a man, that grieves at it is a saint, that boasteth of it is a devil; yet some glory in that shame, counting the stains of sin the best complexion of their souls.
- Thomas Fuller
0
86
Make not thy friends too cheap to thee, nor thyself to thy friend.
- Thomas Fuller
0
85
A willful falsehood told is a cripple, not able to stand by itself without another to support it. It is easy to tell a lie, but hard to tell only one lie.
- Thomas Fuller
0
83
There is a Spanish proverb, that one who would grow rich must buy of those who go to be executed, as not caring how cheap they sell; and sell to those who go to be married, as not caring how dear they buy.
- Thomas Fuller
0
80
The blush is nature's alarm at the approach of sin, and her testimony to the dignity of virtue.
- Thomas Fuller
0
79
Though "the words of the wise be as nails fastened by the masters of assemblies," yet their examples are the hammer to drive them in to take the deeper hold. A father that whipped his son for swearing, and swore himself whilst he whipped him, did more harm by his example than good by his correction.
- Thomas Fuller
0
73
No man who is fit to live need fear to die. To us here, death is the most terrible thing we know. But when we have tasted its reality it will mean to us birth, deliverance, a new creation of ourselves. It will be what health is to the sick man; what home is to the exile; what the loved one given back is to the bereaved. As we draw near to it a solemn gladness should fill our hearts. It is God's great morning lighting up the sky. Our fears are the terror of children in the night. The night with its terrors, its darkness, its feverish dreams, is passing away; and when we awake it will be into the sunlight of God.
- Thomas Fuller
0
72
Leave not off praying to God: for either praying will make thee leave off sinning; or continuing in sin will make thee desist from praying.
- Thomas Fuller
0
70
Let him who expects one class of society to prosper in the highest degree, while the other is in distress, try whether one side of his face can smile while the other is pinched.
- Thomas Fuller
0
68
When thou makest presents, let them be of such things as will last long; to the end they may be in some sort immortal, and may frequently refresh the memory of the receiver.
- Thomas Fuller
0
65
Take heed of jesting; many have been ruined by it. It is hard to jest, and not sometimes jeer too, which often sinks deeper than we intended or expected.
- Thomas Fuller
0
62
Harmless mirth is the best cordial against the consumption of the spirit; wherefore jesting is not unlawful, if it trespasseth not in quantity, quality, or season.
- Thomas Fuller
0
61
Conceit not so high an opinion of any one as to be bashful and impotent in their presence.
- Thomas Fuller
0
60
Venture not to the utmost bounds of even lawful pleasures; the limits of good and evil join.
- Thomas Fuller
0
56
The best way to be rid of bad thoughts in my prayers is not to receive them out of my prayers.
- Thomas Fuller
0
55
There is mention of a sword turning every way: parallel whereto is the Word of God in a wounded conscience. Man's heart is full of windings, turnings, and doublings, to shift and shun the stroke thereof, if possible: but this sword meets them wheresoever they move; it fetches and finds them out; it haunts and hunts them, forbidding them, during their agony, any entrance into the paradise of one comfortable thought.
- Thomas Fuller
0
54
If the wicked flourish and thou suffer, be not discouraged; they are fatted for destruction, thou art dieted for health.
- Thomas Fuller
0
53
Curiosity is a kernel of the forbidden fruit which still sticketh in the throat of a natural man, sometimes to the danger of his choking.
- Thomas Fuller
0
52
He that's cheated twice by the same man is an accomplice with the cheater.
- Thomas Fuller
0
48
It is the glory of the true religion that it inculcates and inspires a spirit of benevolence. It is a religion of charity, which none other ever was. Christ went about doing good; he set the example to his disciples, and they abounded in it.
- Thomas Fuller
0
47
Never contend with one that is foolish, proud, positive, testy, or with a superior, or a clown, in matter of argument.
- Thomas Fuller
0
45
The real difference between men is energy. A strong will, a settled purpose, an invincible determination, can accomplish almost anything; and in this lies the distinction between great men and little men.
- Thomas Fuller
0
44
Scoff not at the natural defects of any which are not in their power to amend. It is cruel to beat a cripple with his own crutches!
- Thomas Fuller
0
43
Great is the difference betwixt a man's being frightened at, and humbled for his sins.
- Thomas Fuller
0
39
Tombs are the clothes of the dead; a grave is but a plain suit; a rich monument is an embroidered one.
- Thomas Fuller
0
35
They that marry ancient people, merely in expectation to bury them, hang themselves in hope that one will come and cut the halter.
- Thomas Fuller
0
34
The affections, like conscience, are rather to be led than driven. Those who many where they do not love, will be likely to love where they do not marry.
- Thomas Fuller
0
32
There is nothing that so much gratifies an ill tongue as when it finds an angry heart.
- Thomas Fuller
0
28
Ethics make one's soul mannerly and wise, but logic is the armory of reason, furnished with all offensive and defensive weapons.
- Thomas Fuller
0
26
The greatest man living may stand in need of the meanest, as much as the meanest does of him.
- Thomas Fuller
0
25
Remember. O my soul, the fig tree was charged, not with bearing noxious fruit, but no fruit.
- Thomas Fuller
0
16
Anger is one of the sinews of the soul. He who wants it hath a maimed mind.
- Thomas Fuller
0
13
Hold not conference, debate, or reasoning with any lust; 'tis but a preparatory for thy admission of it. The way is at the very first flatly to deny it.
- Thomas Fuller
0
8
Deceive not thyself by over-expecting happiness in the married state. Look not therein for contentment greater than God will give, or a creature in this world can receive, namely, to be free from all inconveniences. Marriage is not like the hill of Olympus, wholly clear, without clouds.
- Thomas Fuller
0
6
If thou desirest ease, in the first place take care of the ease of thy mind; for that will make all other sufferings easy. But nothing can support a man whose mind is wounded.
- Thomas Fuller
0
2
If the master takes no account of his servants, they will make small account of him, and care not what they spend, who are never brought to an audit.
- Thomas Fuller
0