4817 Proverbs about Ther / Page 23
441.
Every one can navigate in fine weather.442.
Every one likes justice in another's house, none in his own.443.
Every one thinks himself without sin because he has not those of others.444.
Every ten years one man has need of another.445.
Feather by feather the goose is plucked.446.
From snow whether cooked or pounded you will get nothing but water.447.
Good riding at two anchors men have told, For it one break, the other yet may hold.448.
He hauls at a long rope who expects another's death.449.
He is master of another man's life who is indifferent to his own.450.
He is wise who learns at another's cost.451.
He measures others with his own yard.452.
He that by the plough would thrive, Himself must either hold or drive.453.
He that has a head of glass must not throw stones at another.454.
He that keeps another man's dog shall have nothing left him but the line.455.
He that seeks, finds, and sometimes what he would rather not.456.
He who builds a house in the market-place, builds either too high or too low.457.
He who builds on another's ground loses his stone and mortar.458.
He who buys by the pennyworth keeps his own house and other men's too.459.
He who buys what he cannot pay for, sells what he would rather not.460.
He who gives bread to others' dogs is often barked at by his own.Quotes related to Ther by Power Quotations