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Listeners ne'er hear good of themselves.
John Ray
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John Ray
Age: 77 †
Born: 1627
Born: November 29
Died: 1705
Died: January 17
Botanist
Bryologist
Naturalist
Ornithologist
Theologian
Zoologist
Black Notley
Essex
John Wray
Ray
Eavesdropping
Listeners
Hear
Good
More quotes by John Ray
The use of butterflies is to adorn the world and delight the eyes of men, to brighten the countryside, serving like so many golden spangles to decorate the fields.
John Ray
Let him make use of instinct who cannot make use of reason.
John Ray
In a thousand pound of Law there's not an ounce of love.
John Ray
Man does what he can, and God what he will.
John Ray
He that cannot abide a bad market, deserves not a good one
John Ray
They love too much that die for love.
John Ray
The more you rub a cat on the rump, the higher she sets her tail.
John Ray
The tree falls not at the first stroke.
John Ray
My personal credo as a libertarian conservative: I think all attempts to reform your fellow-citizens or tell them how to live their lives are arrogant and tyrannical. THAT'S why I oppose Leftism. I want people to be free to manage their own lives. Reform is just authoritarianism. People are not playthings for anybody's theories or obsessions.
John Ray
Algebra is the metaphysics of arithmetic.
John Ray
He dances well to whom Fortune pipes.
John Ray
Feather by feather the goose is plucked.
John Ray
When friends meet, hearts warm.
John Ray
Children, when they are little, they make parents fools when great, mad.
John Ray
That which is evil is soon learned.
John Ray
ndustry is Fortune's right hand, and Frugality her left.
John Ray
What's good for the goose is good for the gander.
John Ray
The heart is the first part that quickens, and the last that dies.
John Ray
Every man praises his own wares.
John Ray
A multitude of words doth rather obscure than illustrate, they being a burden to the memory, and the first apt to be forgotten, before we come to the last. So that he that uses many words for the explaining of any subject, doth, like the cuttle-fish, hide himself, for the most part, in his own ink.
John Ray