Three joined in one. [ Motto ]
Experience joined with commonsense.
To mortals is a providence. [ Green ]
Pride joined with many virtues chokes them all. [ Proverb ]
How well he fell asleep!
Like some proud river, widening toward the sea;
Calmly and grandly, silently and deep,
Life joined eternity. [ S. T. Coleridge ]
When Greeks joined Greeks, then was the tug of war! [ Nathaniel Lee ]
Passion joined with power., produces thunder and ruin. [ Proverb ]
What, therefore, God hath joined together let not man put asunder. [ Bible ]
The words of a friend joined with true affection, give life to the heart. [ Chilo ]
Experience teaches that a strong memory is generally joined to a weak judgment. [ Montaigne ]
Law and equity are two things which God hath joined, but which man hath put asunder. [ Colton ]
Rivers flow with sweet waters; but, having joined the ocean, they become undrinkable. [ Hitopadesa ]
There is no heat of affection but is joined with some idleness of brain, says the Spaniard. [ English Proverb, collected by George Herbert ]
When malice is joined to envy, there is given forth poisonous and feculent matter, as ink from the cuttle-fish. [ Plutarch ]
A cheerful temper, joined with innocence, will make beauty attractive, knowledge delightful, and wit good-natured. [ Joseph Addison ]
We prefer a person with vivacity and high spirits, though bordering upon insolence, to the timid and pusillanimous; we are fonder of wit joined to malice than of dullness without it. [ Hazlitt ]
Frugality is good if liberality be joined with it. The first is leaving off superfluous expenses; the last is bestowing them to the benefit of others that need. The first without the last begets covetousness; the last without the first begets prodigality. [ William Penn ]
The grave is a sacred workshop of nature! a chamber for the figure of the body; death and life dwell here together as man and wife. They are one body, they are in union; God has joined them together, and what God hath joined together let no man put asunder. [ Hippel ]
Emulation is grief arising from seeing one's self exceeded or excelled by his concurrent, together with hope to equal or exceed him in time to come, by his own ability. But envy is the same grief joined with pleasure conceived in the imagination of some ill-fortune that may befall him. [ Thomas Hobbes ]