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In civil jurisprudence it too often happens that there is so much law, that there is no room for justice, and that the claimant expires of wrong in the midst of right, as mariners die of thirst in the midst of water.
Charles Caleb Colton
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Charles Caleb Colton
Died: 1832
Died: January 1
Priest
Writer
Charles Colton
Law
Jurisprudence
Dies
Mariners
Wrong
Thirst
Water
Midst
Often
Civil
Happens
Room
Right
Rooms
Much
Justice
Expires
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Marriage is a feast where the grace is sometimes better than the dinner.
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Power will intoxicate the best hearts, as wine the strongest heads. No man is wise enough, nor good enough to be trusted with unlimited power.
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He that has never known adversity is but half acquainted with others, or with himself.
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Much may be done in those little shreds and patches of time which every day produces, and which most men throw away.
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We injure mysteries, which are matters of faith, by any attempt at explanation in order to make them matters of reason. Could they be explained, they would cease to be mysteries and it has been well said that a thing is not necessarily against reason because it happens to be above it.
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Great men, like comets, are eccentric in their courses, and formed to do extensive good by modes unintelligible to vulgar minds.
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Time,- that black and narrow isthmus between two eternities.
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A man's profundity may keep him from opening on a first interview, and his caution on a second but I should suspect his emptiness, if he carried on his reserve to a third.
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The most zealous converters are always the most rancorous when they fail of producing conversion.
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Never join with your friend when he abuses his horse or his wife, unless the one is about to be sold, the other to be buried.
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Great minds had rather deserve contemporaneous applause without obtaining it, than obtain without deserving it. If it follow them it is well, but they will not deviate to follow it.
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We injure mysteries, which are matters of faith by any attempt at explanation in order to make them matters of reason.
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Speaking generally, no man appears great to his contemporaries, for the same reason that no man is great to his servants--both know too much of him.
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Repartee is perfect when it effects its purpose with a double edge. It is the highest order of wit, as it indicates the coolest yet quickest exercise of genius, at a moment when the passions are roused.
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Temperate men drink the most, because they drink the longest.
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He that will often put eternity and the world before him, and who will dare to look steadfastly at both of them, will find that the more often he contemplates them, the former will grow greater, and the latter less.
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Reply to wit with gravity, and to gravity with wit.
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Fame is an undertaker that pays but little attention to the living, but bedizens the dead, furnishes out their funerals, and follows them to the grave
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Perfection doesn't exist... only good attempts.
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It is much easier to ruin a man of principle than a man of none, for he may be ruined through his scruples. Knavery is supple and can bend but honesty is firm and upright, and yields not.
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