777 Japanese Proverbs / Page 19
361. In the eyes of a lover a pock-marked face is one with pretty dimples.
362. In trying to straighten the horns you kill the ox.
363. Indifference is a generous kind of intolerance.
364. Inquire seven times then doubt a person.
365. Instead of worrying, a strong man wears a smile.
366. Into the house where joy lives, happiness will gladly come.
367. Invalids live the longest.
368. It belongs neither to the sea nor to the mountain.
369. It is a beggar's pride that he is not a thief.
370. It is a blessing in disguise.
371. It is better to be ignorant than mistaken.
372. It is better to be the head of a chicken than the rear of an ox.
373. It is better to go home and make your net than to gaze longingly at the fish in the deep pool.
374. It is better to write down something once than read it ten times.
375. It is easy to die -- the difficulty lies in living.
376. It is foolish to deal with a fool.
377. It is no use cutting a stick when the fight is over.
378. It is one life, whether we spend it in laughing or in weeping.
379. It is precisely the uncertainty of this world that makes life worth living.
380. It is the same life whether we spend it crying or laughing.