Going to the opera, like getting drunk, is a sin that carries its own punishment with it.
top ↑
Similar topics in Freebase
-
My plan of instruction is extremely simple and limited. They learn, on week-days, such coarse works as may fit them for servants. I allow of no writing for the poor. My object is not to make fanatics, but to train up the lower classes in habits of industry and piety.
-
Genius without religion is only a lamp on the outer gate of a palace; it may serve to cast a gleam of light on those that are without, while the inhabitant sits in darkness.
-
Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off your goal.
-
It is not so important to know everything as to know the exact value of everything, to appreciate what we learn, and to arrange what we know.
-
The wretch who digs the mine for bread, or ploughs, that others may be fed, feels less fatigued than that decreed to him who cannot think or read.
-
Depart from discretion when it interferes with duty.
-
Idleness among children, as among men, is the root of all evil, and leads to no other evil more certain than ill temper.
-
How goodness heightens beauty!
-
Luxury! more perilous to youth than storms or quicksand, poverty or chains.
-
If faith produce no works, I see That faith is not a living tree. Thus faith and works together grow, No separate life they never can know. They're soul and body, hand and heart, What God hath joined, let no man part.
You can help improve this topic by adding more facts here