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~~ I am not the author of the following written material, and I lay no claim to be the author. ~~
502. Every man is a volume if you know how to read him. --William Ellery Channing
503. Every man is an island (Thomas Wolfe)
504. Every man is as God made him, ay, and often worse.
505. Every man is as Heaven made him, and sometimes a great deal worse.
506. Every man is best known to himself.
507. Every man is born as many men and dies as a single one. --Martin Heidegger
508. Every man is dishonest who lives upon the labor of others, no matter if he occupies a throne. -- Robert Green Ingersoll
509. Every man is guilty of all the good he didn't do. -- Voltaire
510. Every man is his own ancestor, and every man is his own heir. He devises his own future, and he inheritsh is own past.
511. Every man is his own chief enemy.
512. Every man is nearest himself.
513. Every man is rich or poor according to the proportion between his desires and his enjoyments.
514. Every man is the architect of his own fortune. --Sallust
515. Every man is the architect of his own life. He builds it just the way he wants it. However, after he has built what he wants, he sometimes decides that he doesn't like what he has built and looks for someone or something to blame instead of changing himself. Sidney Madwed
516. Every man must eat a peck of dirt before he dies.
517. Every man of action has a strong dose of egotism, pride, hardness, and cunning. But all those things will be forgiven him, indeed, they will be regarded as high qualities, if he can make them the means to achieve great ends. -- Charles de Gaulle
518. Every man over forty is a scoundrel - George Bernard Shaw
519. Every man plays the fool once in his lif marry is playing the fool all one's life, but to marry is to playing the fool all one's life long.
520. Every man plays the fool once in his life, but to marry is playing the fool all one's life long.
521. Every man reaps what he sows, except the amateur gardener.
522. Every man shall bear his own BURDEN.
523. Every man should have a college education in order to show him how little the thing is really worth. Elbert Hubbard
524. Every man should take his own.
525. Every man to his trade.
526. Every man was not born with a silver spoon in his mouth.
527. Every man who is high up loves to think that he has done it all himself; and the wife smiles, and lets it go at that. -- James Matthew Barrie
528. Every man who observes vigilantly and resolves steadfastly grows unconsciously into genius. --Edward G. Bulwer-Lytton
529. Every man who possesses power is impelled to abuse it.
530. Every man wishes to rule the world. Unfortunately, the world rules every man.
531. Every man, either to his terror or consolation, has some sense of religion. --James Harrington
532. Every man's ability may be strengthened or increased by culture. --John Abbott
533. Every man's life ends the same way. It is only the details of how he lived and how he died that distinguish one man from another.
534. Every man's life is a fairy tale, written by God's fingers.
535. Every man's life lies within the present; for the past is spent and done with, and the future is uncertain. Marcus Aurelius
536. Every man's life, liberty, and property are in danger when the Legislature is in session.
537. Every man's memory is his private literature. --Aldous Huxley
538. Every man's task is his life-preserver.
539. Every man's work, whether it be literature or music or pictures or architecture or anything else, is always a portrait of himself. The Way of All Flesh
540. Every miller draws water to his own mill.
541. Every minute you are angry wastes 60 happy seconds.
542. Every misfortune is to be subdued by patience.
543. Every moment of life is a moment of unperceived ecstasy.
544. Every moment of resistance to temptation is a victory.
545. Every morning I get up and look through the Forbes list of the richest people in America. If I'm not there, I go to work.
546. Every mother generally hopes that her daughter will snag a better husband than she managed to do...but she's certain that her boy will never get as great a wife as his father did.
547. Every name of God and each attribute are but shadows of the Reality, limited manifestations of the Limitless, as time is an attribute of Eternity, mind an attribute of Consciousness, flame an attribute of Fire.
548. Every nation sincerely desires peace; and all nations pursue courses which if persisted in, must make peace impossible.
549. Every new opinion, at its starting, is precisely in a minority of one. --Thomas Carlyle
550. Every New Year he resolve not to drink any more, just about the same.
551. Every night and every morn Some to misery are born; Every morn and every night Some are born to sweet delight. It sounds like stories from the land of spirits, If any man obtain that which he merits, Or any merit that which he obtains.
552. Every noble acquisition is attended with its risks; he who fears to encounter the one must not expect to obtain the other. --Metastasio
553. Every noble work is at first impossible. --Thomas Carlyle
554. Every now and then we discover in the seething mass of humanity round us a person who does not seem to need anybody else, and the contrast with ourselves is stinging.- Ernest Dimnet
555. Every numerous assembly is a mob; everything there depends on instantaneous turns. --Cardinal de Retz
556. Every obnoxious act is a cry for help.--ZIG ZIGLAR (1926- )
557. Every one can find FAULT; few can do better.
558. Every one can keep house better than her mother till she trieth.
559. Every one is kin to the rich man.
560. Every one is the architect of his own fortune.
561. Every one is the son of his own works.
562. Every one to his taste, as the old woman said when she kissed her cow. H.
563. Every one's faults are not written in their foreheads.
564. Every other sin hath some pleasure annexed to it, or will admit of an excuse: envy alone wants both.
565. Every parting gives a foretaste of death;. . .--Schopenhauer, Parerga and Paralipomena
566. Every parting is a form of death, as every reunion is a type of heaven.
567. Every path has its puddle. English Proverb
568. Every path hath a puddle.
569. Every patient is a doctor after his cure.
570. Every PEDLAR praises his needles.
571. Every person in the world is either a missionary or a mission field.
572. Every person that you meet knows something you don't; learn from them.
573. Every person who has mastered a profession is a skeptic concerning it.
574. Every person, all the events of your life are there because you have drawn them there. What you choose to do with them is up to you. -- Richard Bach, from Illusions
575. Every person, no matter how horrible, is a child of God and is therefore loved.
576. Every phase of evolution commences by being in a state of unstable force and proceeds through organization to equilibrium. Equilibrium having been achieved, no further development is possible without once more over setting the stability and passing through a phase of contending forces.
577. Every portrait that is painted with feeling is a portrait of the artist, not of the sitter.
578. Every problem can be solved, except maybe how to refold a road map.
579. Every problem has in it the seeds of its own solution. If you don't have any problems, you don't get any seeds.
580. Every production of genius must be the production of enthusiasm.
581. Every program has at least one bug and can be shortened by at least one instruction -- from which, by induction, one can deduce that every program can be reduced to one instruction which doesn't work.
582. Every program is a part of some other program, and rarely fits.
583. Every quarrel begins in nothing and ends in a struggle for supremacy. --Elbert Hubbard
584. Every real religion, that is, one that has been created by learned people for a definite aim, consists of two parts. One part teaches what is to be done. This part becomes common knowledge and in the course of time is distorted and departs from the original. The other part teaches how to do what the first part teaches. This part is preserved in secret in special schools and with its help it is always possible to rectify what has been distorted in the first part or to restore what has been forgotten.
585. Every real thought on every real subject knocks the wind out of somebody or other.
586. Every revolution was first a thought in one man's mind.
587. Every revolutionary ideain science, politics, art, or whateverevokes three stages of reaction in a hearer: --It is completely impossibledon't waste my time. --It is possible, but it is not worth doing. --I said it was a good idea all along.
588. Every sale has five basic obstacles: no need, no money, no hurry, no desire, no trust.
589. Every science begins as philosophy and ends as art.
590. Every season hath its pleasures; Spring may boast her flowery prime, Yet the vineyard's ruby treasures Brighten Autumn's sob'rer time.
591. Every separate thought takes shape and becomes visible in colour and form.
592. Every shoe fits not every foot.
593. Every silver lining has a cloud around it.
594. Every sin brings its punishment with it.
595. Every sin is the result of a collaboration. --Stephen Crane
596. Every so often, we pass laws repealing human nature. --Howard Lindsay
597. Every society honors its live conformists and its dead troublemakers. Mignon McLaughlin
598. Every solution breeds new problems.
599. Every soul is subject to the trial of Transmigration... An individual does not know that he is called for assessment before entering this World as well as after leaving it. He does not know how many transformations and esoteric trial she has to pass through...and that souls revolve like a stone shot from a sling.
600. Every sphere of energy needs to receive the stimulus of an influx of energy at higher pressure, and to have an output into a sphere of lower pressure.