| 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 s |
| 1. |
Soame Jenyns
|
|
|
quote: The butcher knocks down the stately ox with no more compassion than the blacksmith hammers a horse-shoe, and plunges his knife into the throat of an innocent lamb with as little reluctance as the tailor sticks his needle into the collar of a coat.
|
| 2. |
Sir James Matthew Barrie
|
|
|
quote: The life of every man is a diary in which he means to write one story, and writes another, and his humblest hour is when he compares the volume as it is with what he vowed to make it.
|
| 3. |
Sir Alfred Zimmern
|
|
|
quote: All true educators since the time of Socrates and Plato have agreed that the primary object of education is the attainment of inner harmony, or, to put it into more up-to-date language, the integration of the personality. Without such an integration learn
|
| 4. |
Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen
|
|
|
quote: I always think of what my wife says, If the answer is Labor, it must have been a very foolish question.
|
| 5. |
Sydney J. Harris
|
|
|
quote: Regret for the things we did can be tempered by time; it is regret for the things we did not do that is inconsolable.
|
|
|