Bion, 3.
The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers (c. 200 A.D.), Book 4: The Academy
“He left an estate of eleaven thousand pounds per annum. Sir John Danvers, who knew him, told me that he had heard one say to him, reflecting on his great scraping of wealth, that his sonnes would spend his Estate faster than he gott it; he replyed, They cannot take more delight in the spending of it than I did in the getting of it.”
"Sir Edward Coke"
Brief Lives
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John Aubrey 20
English writer and antiquarian 1626–1697Related quotes
Section 19 (p. 59)
Venus Plus X (1960)
Source: The Bourgeois: Catholicism vs. Capitalism in Eighteenth-Century France (1927), p. 25
A Good Start: A Book for Young Men and Women, (1898)
Life Without Principle (1863)
Context: I wish to suggest that a man may be very industrious, and yet not spend his time well. There is no more fatal blunderer than he who consumes the greater part of his life getting his living. All great enterprises are self-supporting. The poet, for instance, must sustain his body by his poetry, as a steam planing-mill feeds its boilers with the shavings it makes. You must get your living by loving.
La condition humaine [Man's Fate] (1933)
Life of Pelopidas
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
Chap. IX
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African (1789)
Riyadh-as-Saliheen by Imam Al-Nawawi, volume 4, hadith number 560
Sunni Hadith