Grief has its time. [ Johnson ]
Every hour has its end. [ Sir Walter Scott ]
My heart is its own grave! [ Miss L. E. Landon ]
The heart is its own fate. [ Bailey ]
Greatness is its own torment. [ Theodore Parker ]
Character makes its own destiny. [ Mrs. Campbell Praed ]
Conscience is its own counsellor. [ South ]
Extravagance is its own destroyer. [ Zeno ]
Amiability shines by its own light. [ Horace ]
No day is without its innocent hope. [ Ruskin ]
Beauty carries its dower in its face. [ Danish Proverb ]
War has its sweets, Hymen its alarms. [ La Fontaine ]
An old novel has a history of its own. [ Alexander Smith ]
Of its own kind; of a kind of its own.
Goodness is beauty in its best estate. [ Marlowe ]
Heaven gives its favorites early death. [ Byron ]
The grave has a door on its inner side. [ Alexander Maclaren ]
Keep your working power at its maximum. [ W. R. Alger ]
Excess always carries its own retribution. [ Ouida ]
Curiosity is thought on its entering edge. [ Charles H. Parkhurst ]
Beauty loses its relish; the graces never. [ Henry Home ]
The world knows nothing of its greatest men. [ Henry Taylor ]
Grief, like a tree, has tears for its fruit. [ Philemon ]
Every day hath its night, every weal its woe. [ Proverb ]
The evening of life brings with it its lamps. [ Joubert ]
In bringing up a child, think of its old age. [ Joubert ]
Glory follows virtue as if it were its shadow. [ Cicero ]
Its pomp, its pleasures, and its nonsense all. [ Thomson ]
Happiness never lays its fingers on its pulse. [ A. Smith ]
Friendship is love without its flowers or veil. [ Hare ]
True felicity consists of its own consciousness. [ Rivarol ]
War its thousands slays, peace its ten thousands. [ Beilby Porteous ]
Terror has its inspiration, as well as competition. [ Beaconsfield ]
Genius finds its own road and carries its own lamp. [ Willmott ]
Avarice fills its purse at the expense of its belly. [ Haliburton ]
A tree is known better by its fruit than its leaves. [ Proverb ]
The vulgar herd estimate friendship by Its advantages. [ Ovid ]
Every body drags its shadow, and every mind its doubt. [ Victor Hugo ]
The gift derives its value from the rank of the giver. [ Ovid ]
Vice is its own punishment, and sometimes its own cure. [ Proverb ]
Every desire bears its death in its very gratification. [ W. Irving ]
Ennui shortens life, and bereaves the day of its light. [ Emerson ]
Haste trips up its own heels, fetters and stops itself. [ Seneca ]
It is the curse of greatness to be its own destruction. [ Nabb ]
Faith is the soul going out of itself for all its wants. [ Boston ]
Genius always gives its best at first, prudence at last. [ Lavater ]
Adversity borrows its sharpest sting from our impatience. [ Bishop Horne ]
Good-humor is the health of the soul, sadness its poison. [ Stanislaus ]
Eloquence is to the sublime what the whole is to its part. [ La Bruyere ]
Force is all-conquering, but its victories are shortlived. [ Abraham Lincoln ]
Facts are plain spoken; hopes and figures are its aversion. [ Addison ]
Above the cloud with its shadow is the star with its light. [ Victor Hugo ]
There is not a single heart but has its moments of longing. [ Beecher ]
As virtue is its own reward, so vice is its own punishment. [ Proverb ]
Genius only leaves behind it the monuments of its strength. [ Hazlitt ]
Whenever you find Humor, you find Pathos close by its side. [ Whipple ]
Antiquity! I like its ruins better than its reconstructions. [ Joubert ]
Ignorance is a prolonged infancy only deprived of its charm. [ De Boufflers ]
Confidence imparts a wonderful inspiration to its possessor. [ Milton ]
God offers to every mind its choice between truth and repose. [ Emerson ]
Intellect really exists in its products; its kingdom is here. [ Coleridge ]
Wickedness is its own punishment, and many times its own cure. [ Proverb ]
No fountain so small but that heaven may be imaged in its bosom. [ Hawthorne ]
Every nation has its own language as well as its own temperament. [ Voltaire ]
If you wish to remove avarice you must remove its mother, luxury. [ Cicero ]
Brevity is the child of silence, and is a credit to its parentage. [ H. W. Shaw ]
I prefer liberty with all its evil to despotism with all its good. [ W. T. Moore ]
No argument can be drawn from the abuse of a thing against its use. [ Latin ]
By the very constitution of our nature moral evil is its own curse. [ Chalmers ]
Though fame is smoke, its fumes are frankincense to human thoughts. [ Byron ]
The practical effect of a belief is the real test of its soundness. [ Froude ]
Spurn not a seeming error, but dig below its surface for the truth. [ Tupper ]
Praise, like gold and diamonds, owes its value only to its scarcity. [ Dr. Johnson ]
Intelligence is to genius as the whole is in proportion to its part. [ De La Bruyere ]
Ability involves responsibility. Power to its last particle is duty. [ Maclaren ]
Life, that ever needs forgiveness, has for its first duty to forgive. [ Edward Bulwer Lytton ]
Sin is like the bee, with honey in its mouth but a sting in its tail. [ H. Ballou ]
No good book, or good thing of any sort, shows its best face at first. [ Carlyle ]
Love is strong in its passion; affection is powerful in its gentleness. [ Michelet ]
The net of heaven is very wide in its meshes, and yet it misses nothing. [ Lao-Tze ]
Every age has its pleasures, its style of wit, and its peculiar manners. [ Boileau ]
Bounty always receives part of its value from the manner it is bestowed. [ Dr. Johnson ]
Mutual content is like a river, which must have its banks on either side. [ Le Sage ]
Real worth requires no interpreter; Its everyday deeds form its blazonry. [ Chamfort ]
Because its blessings are abused, must gold be censured, cursed, accused? [ Gay ]
Real happiness is cheap enough, yet how dearly we pay for its counterfeit! [ Hosea Ballou ]
If a louse miss its footing on his coat, it will be sure to break its neck. [ Proverb ]
There is but one object greater than the soul, and that one is its Creator. [ St. Augustine ]
Such is the constitution of man that labor may be said to be its own reward. [ Dr. Johnson ]
America is rising with a giant's strength. Its bones are yet but cartilages. [ Fisher Ames ]
When once ambition has passed its natural limits, its progress is boundless. [ Seneca ]
Genius makes its observations in shorthand; talent writes them out at length. [ Bovee ]
Cherish flowers; a flower plucked from its parent stock soon loses its beauty. [ Catullus ]
Reason is the torch of friendship, judgment its guide, tenderness its aliment. [ De Bonald ]
From its peaceful bosom spring none but fond regrets and tender recollections. [ Washington Irving ]
Every base occupation makes one sharp in its practice and dull in every other. [ Sir P. Sidney ]
Whatever beauty may be, it has for its basis order, and for its essence unity. [ Father Andre ]
The building fitted accurately to answer its end will turn out to be admirable. [ Moller ]
To educate the intelligence is to enlarge the horizon of its desires and wants. [ Lowell ]
The enjoyments of this life are not equal to its evils, even if equal in number. [ Pliny ]
Gold is, in its last analysis, the sweat of the poor and the blood of the brave. [ Joseph Napoleon ]