| a |
2479 |
| b |
1006 |
| c |
1189 |
| d |
1202 |
| e |
1283 |
| f |
902 |
| g |
1339 |
| h |
1396 |
| I |
210 |
| j |
2843 |
| k |
386 |
| l |
1005 |
| m |
1678 |
| n |
377 |
| o |
407 |
| p |
1313 |
| q |
70 |
| r |
1674 |
| s |
1716 |
| t |
1185 |
| u |
575 |
| v |
188 |
| w |
1462 |
| x |
7 |
| y |
29 |
| z |
40 |
|
|
|
Other links at w |
| 1. |
William Blake
|
|
|
quote: The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom.
|
| 2. |
William G. Carleton
|
|
|
quote: The machine can free man or enslave him; it can make of this world something resembling a paradise or a purgatory. Men have it within their power to achieve a security hitherto dreamed of only by the philosophers, or they may go the way of the dinosaurs,
|
| 3. |
William Somerset Maugham
|
|
|
quote: It is not true that suffering ennobles the character; happiness does that sometimes, but suffering for the most part, makes men petty and vindictive.
|
| 4. |
William Mitford
|
|
|
quote: Men fear death, as if unquestionably the greatest evil, And yet no man knows that it may not be the greatest good.
|
| 5. |
Western Union
|
|
|
quote: This ‘telephone’ has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us.
|
|
|