1614 American Proverbs / Page 34
661. 
Free ships, free goods.
662. 
Fret not for yourself because of evildoers.
663. 
Fret today, regret tomorrow.
664. 
Friendly is as friendly does.
665. 
Friends and mules fail us in hard places.
666. 
Friendship is an empty word if it only works one way.
667. 
From beavers, bees should learn to mend their ways. A bee works; a beaver works and plays.
668. 
From errors of others a wise man corrects his own.
669. 
From little acorns mighty oaks do grow.
670. 
From middle age on, everything of interest is either illegal, immoral or fattening.
671. 
From small beginnings come great things.
672. 
From the cemetery no one is brought back.
673. 
Gambling is the son of avarice and the father of despair.
674. 
Garbage in, garbage out).
675. 
Gather rosebuds while you may.
676. 
Genius is one part inspiration and three parts perspiration.
677. 
Gentlemen prefer blonds -- but marry brunettes.
678. 
Get what you can, and what you get, hold; it's the stone that will turn all your lead into gold.
679. 
Getting things done is largely a matter of getting things started.
680. 
Getting what you go after is called success, but liking it while you are getting it is called happiness.
1614 American Proverbs, Page 34 of 81
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