Injurious men brook no injuries. [ Proverb ]
Injuries slighted become none at all. [ Proverb ]
Injuries do not use to be written on ice. [ Proverb ]
The noblest remedy of injuries is oblivion. [ Proverb ]
Remembering of old injuries invites new ones. [ Proverb ]
We are more mindful of injuries than benefits. [ Proverb ]
The best remedy for injuries is to forget them. [ Latin Proverb ]
Women forgive injuries, but never forget slights. [ Thomas C. Haliburton ]
He invites future injuries who rewards past ones. [ Proverb ]
Contempt is usually worse borne than real injuries. [ Proverb ]
Light injuries are made none by not regarding them. [ Proverb ]
He is above his enemies that despises their injuries. [ Proverb ]
It costs us more to revenge injuries than to bear them. [ Proverb ]
To wilful men. The injuries that they themselves procure
Must be their school-masters. [ William Shakespeare ]
Unexpected kindnesses or injuries make great impression. [ Proverb ]
Memory records services with a pencil, injuries with a graver. [ De Segur ]
Men are more prone to revenge injuries, than to requite kindnesses. [ Proverb ]
Expect injuries; for men are weak, and thou thyself doest such too often. [ Jean Paul ]
Death is a certain remedy for the injuries of fortune and vexations of life. [ Proverb ]
A readiness to resent injuries is a virtue only in those who are slow to injure. [ Sheridan ]
Let us be quick to repent of injuries while repentance may not be a barren anguish. [ Dr. Johnson ]
Injuries from friends fret and gall more, and the memory of them is not so easily obliterated. [ Arbuthnot ]
Revenge is an act of passion; vengeance, of justice: injuries are revenged; crimes are avenged. [ Dr. Johnson ]
Great souls forgive not injuries till time has put their enemies within their power, that they may show forgiveness is their own. [ John Dryden ]
With the world, do not resort to injuries, but only to irony and gayety: injury revolts, while irony makes one reflect, and gayety disarms. [ Voltaire ]
Wisdom is the only thing which can relieve us from the sway of the passions and the fear of danger, and which can teach us to bear the injuries of fortune itself with moderation, and which shows us all the ways which lead to tranquillity and peace. [ Cicero ]