| Charles James Dunphie - 1876 - 390 pages
...rise early, you can make progress in nothing. If you do not set apart your hours of reading, if you suffer yourself, or any one else, to- break in upon them, your days will slip through your hands unprofitable and frivolous, and unenjoyed by yourself." So spake the great Lord Chatham. " The difference,"... | |
| Samuel Austin Allibone - 1876 - 768 pages
...rise early, you can make progress in nothing." If you do not set apart your hours of reading; if you suffer yourself or any one else to break in upon them, your days will slip through your hands unprofitable and frivolous, and unenjoyed by yourself. LORD CHATHAM. Six, or at most seven, hours'... | |
| 1877 - 348 pages
...rise early, you can make progress in nothing. If you do not set apart your hours for reading, if you suffer yourself or any one else to break in upon them, your days will slip through your hands unprofitable and frivolous, and unenjoyed by yourself.' " FACTION : — Faction is the excess and the... | |
| Samuel Austin Allibone - 1880 - 772 pages
...rise early, you can make progress in nothing." If you do not set apart your hours of reading; if you s office on a certain unprofitable and frivolous, and unenjoyed by yourself. LORD CHATHAM. Six, or at most seven, hours'... | |
| Boys - 1880 - 362 pages
...rise early, you can make progress in nothing.' If you do not set apart your hours of reading; if you suffer yourself, or any one else, to break in upon them, your days will slip through your hands unprofitable and frivolous, and unenjoyed by yourself." An eminent moralist was of opinion that early... | |
| 1881 - 300 pages
...rise early, you can make progress in nothing. If you do not set apart your hours of reading, if you suffer yourself or any one else to break in upon them, your days will slip through your hands unprofitable and frivolous, and unenjoyed by yourself.'" MAKING THE BEST OF THINGS. " I HAVE told you,"... | |
| Fortunate men - 1884 - 192 pages
...early, you can never make progress in anything. If you do not set apart your hours of reading, if you suffer yourself or any one else to break in upon them, your days will slip through your hands unprofitable and frivolous, and really unenjoyed by yourself." — LORD CHATHAM. Idleness, its Taxes.... | |
| Arthur Henry Lee Hastling, Walter Addington Willis, Walter Percy Workman - 1898 - 590 pages
...progress in nothing." If you do not set apart your hours of reading ; if you suffer yourself or anyone else to break in upon them, your days will slip through your hands unprofitable and frivolous, and unenjoyed by yourself. — LORD CHATHAM. Behold, Paradise opened in... | |
| Josephus Nelson Larned - 1901 - 520 pages
...If you do not rise early, you never can make any progress worth talking of; and another rule is, if you do not set apart your hours of reading, and never...please, and really unenjoyable to yourself. Be assured, whatever you take from pleasure, amusements, or indolence, for these first few years of your life,... | |
| Tryon Edwards - 1908 - 772 pages
...early, you can never make progress in anything. If you do not set apart your hours of reading, if you hich they call being merry. — In my mind there ш nothing ao ill-bred as audible laughter. unprofitable and frivolous, and really unenjoyed by yourself." — Lord Cliathatn. To be idle and to... | |
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