Sunday, November 24, 2019

The Frictionary # 815

Here is another page taken from The Frictionary:

7686. History is a great dust heap. (Thomas Carlyle)

7687. One of the lessons of history is that nothing is often a good thing to do and always a clever thing to say. (Will Durant)

7688. It is not enough being alive, you have to prove it. (François Cavanna)

7689. Marriage is a meal where the soup is better than the dessert. (Austin O'Malley)

7690. To read is to frolic in the fields of the possible. (Kim Thúy)

7691. Nothing is final, except certain purchases at department stores. (John Walter)

7692. Life is like a box of chocolates. It lasts a lot less with "large" people. (Élodie Poux)

7693. Psychiatrists call that neurosis. Most people call it love. (John Welter)

7694. Do butterflies run on solar energy? (Réjean Lévesque)

7695. Too often travel, instead of broadening the mind, merely lengthens the conversation. (Elizabeth Drew)

That's all for this edition of The Frictionary. Your comments and suggestions are welcome, but commercial links will be rejected. Subscribe and receive this free weekly blog in your in-box. Have a great week!

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