| Peter Krass - 1997 - 512 trang
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| Caroline Postelle Clotfelter - 1996 - 356 trang
...riseth late, must trot all day, and shall scarce overtake his business at night. How much more [time] than is necessary do we spend in sleep! . . . forgetting...and that there will be sleeping enough in the grave. Let not the sun look down and say, inglorious here he lies. Women and wine, game and deceit, Make the... | |
| Mark Michael Smith - 1997 - 334 trang
...Poor Richard's Almanac were most popular. The Farmers' Register in 1838 quoted Franklin as saying, "If time be of all things the most precious, wasting time must be the greatest prodigality." For good measure, the editor added, "lost time is never found again." A... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1998 - 404 trang
...always bright, as Poor Richard says. But dost thou love Life, then do not squander Time, for that's the Stuff Life is made of, as Poor Richard says. — How...Prodigality, since, as he elsewhere tells us, Lost Time is never found again', and what we call Time-enough, always proves little enough: Let us then... | |
| Richard Deforest Erickson - 1994 - 108 trang
...fosters guilt-stress in many of us. Here, again, is that belief expanded to a fuller degree in Franklin: "If time be of all things the most precious, wasting time must be the greatest prodigality, since lost time is never found again; and what we call time enough always... | |
| Stephan Gramley - 2001 - 348 trang
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