From which Proverb verse is "Virtue is its own reward take from?"
what is the take time to laught is the music of soul
Civility costs nothing means that politeness and kindness take little from you but give much.
This proverb means that taking proper care of the smaller things in life [ or any other specific area for that matter ] automatically adds up to the big picture with successful outcomes.
The proverb, every tree feels the force of the wind means that all things are subject to life's challenges. Just like wind blowing the trees, we to have to take life one step at a time and take what it hands us and still grow from it.
What is the meaning of Take care of the sense and the sounds will take care of themselves?It's a quote from Lewis Carroll's masterpiece Alice's Adventures In Wonderland. As Martin Gardner stated in The Annotated Alice "(I)t's an ingenious switch on the British proverb ' Take care of the pence and the pounds will take care of themselves'.
The blacksmith
It means that when two or more people are present one of them will inevitably take the lead in any given situation.
It doesn't matter how big, rich or powerful you are. When you get into a compromised position the very least will be inclined to take advantage of you in your compromised position.
Valuable projects take time. All things take time to create. And great things like the city of Rome take a very long time. So we shouldn't expect to accomplish something or achieve success immediately.
# "He who has health has hope; and he who has hope has everything" - Arabian Proverb # "A good laugh and a long sleep are the best cures in the doctor's book" - Irish Proverb # "Fresh air impoverishes the doctor" - Danish Proverb # "An apple a day keeps the doctor away" - Franklin # "A man too busy to take care of his health is like a mechanic too busy to take care of his tool" - Spanish Proverb # "Before healing others, heal yourself" - Gambian # "Better ten times ill than one time dead" - Yiddish Proverb # "Eat well, drink in moderation, and sleep sound, in these three good health abound" - Latin Proverb
No, the quote "Liberty, when it begins to take root, is a plant of rapid growth" is not a proverb. It is a phrase attributed to George Washington describing the quick expansion of freedom when it is established.