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Everyone suffers wrongs for which there is no remedy
E. W. Howe
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E. W. Howe
Age: 84 †
Born: 1853
Born: May 3
Died: 1937
Died: October 3
Editor
Journalist
Novelist
Edgar Watson Howe
Suffering
Everyone
Wrongs
Suffers
Remedy
Injury
More quotes by E. W. Howe
When people hear good music, it makes them homesick for something they never had, and never will have.
E. W. Howe
If your faith is opposed to experience, to human learning and investigation, it is not worth the breath used in giving it expression.
E. W. Howe
If there were no schools to take the children away from home part of the time, the insane asylums would be filled with mothers.
E. W. Howe
A man who will not get scared on some occasions, lacks good sense.
E. W. Howe
It is a matter of regret that many low, mean suspicions turn out to be well founded.
E. W. Howe
Good manners do more for a man that good looks.
E. W. Howe
Half the time men think they are talking business, they are wasting time.
E. W. Howe
I try to have no plans the failure of which would greatly annoy me. Half the unhappiness in the world is due to the failure of plans which were never reasonable, and often impossible.
E. W. Howe
If you don't learn to laugh at troubles, you won't have anything to laugh at when you grow old.
E. W. Howe
Put cream and sugar on a fly and it tastes very much like a raspberry.
E. W. Howe
A man should be taller, older, heavier, uglier, and hoarser than his wife.
E. W. Howe
For every quarrel a man and wife have before others, they have a hundred when alone.
E. W. Howe
A woman might as well propose: her husband will claim she did.
E. W. Howe
The greatest thing in the world is for a man to be able to do something well, and say nothing about it.
E. W. Howe
Where the guests at a gathering are well-acquainted, they eat 20 per cent more than they otherwise would.
E. W. Howe
Indignation does no good unless it is backed with a club of sufficient size to awe the opposition.
E. W. Howe
We are not free, it was not intended we should be. A book of rules is placed in our cradle, and we never get rid of it until we reach our graves. Then we are free, and only then.
E. W. Howe
All of the troubles that some people have in life is that which they married into.
E. W. Howe
A theory is no more like a fact than a photograph is like a person.
E. W. Howe
Nearly every man is a coward, if confronted by the proper terror.
E. W. Howe