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It is costly wisdom that is brought by experience.
Roger Ascham
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Roger Ascham
Age: 53 †
Born: 1515
Born: January 1
Died: 1568
Died: December 30
Writer
Kirby Wiske
North Yorkshire
Wisdom
Experience
Costly
Brought
More quotes by Roger Ascham
Learning teacheth more in one year than experience in twenty.
Roger Ascham
To speak as the common people do, to think as wise men do is style.
Roger Ascham
He hazardeth much who depends for his learning on experience. An unhappy master, he that is only made wise by many shipwrecks a miserable merchant, that is neither rich nor wise till he has been bankrupt. By experience we find out a short way by a long wandering.
Roger Ascham
It is good manners, not rank, wealth, or beauty, that constitute the real lay.
Roger Ascham
Twenty to one offend more in writing too much than too little.
Roger Ascham
I remember when I was young, in the north, they went to the grammar school little children: they came from thence great lubbers: always learning, and little profiting: learning without book everything, understanding within the book little or nothing.
Roger Ascham
Aristotle him selfe sayeth, that medicines be no meate to lyue withall.
Roger Ascham
As a hawk flieth not high with one wing, even so a man reacheth not to excellence with one tongue.
Roger Ascham
To be rash is to be bold without shame and without skill.
Roger Ascham
A man, groundly learned already, may take much profit himself in using by epitome to draw other men’s works, for his own memory sake, into short room.
Roger Ascham
A man reacheth not to excellence with one language.
Roger Ascham
To laugh, to lie, to flatter, to face: Four ways in court to win man's grace.
Roger Ascham
It is a pity that, commonly, more care is had--yea, and that among very wise men--to find out rather a cunning man for their horse than a cunning man for their children.
Roger Ascham
In mine opinion, love is fitter than fear, gentleness better than beating, to bring up a child rightly in learning.
Roger Ascham
Marke all Mathematicall heades, which be onely and wholy bent to those sciences, how solitarie they be themselues, how vnfit to liue with others, & how vnapte to serue in the world.
Roger Ascham
In our fathers' time nothing was read but books of feigned chivalry, wherein a man by reading should be led to none other end, but only to manslaughter and bawdry.
Roger Ascham