777 Japanese Proverbs / Page 34
661. To draw water into one's own rice field.
662. To endure what is unendurable is true endurance.
663. To gamble as the dice fall.
664. To go in the right ear and out the left.
665. To kick with sore toe only hurts foot.
666. To know and to act are one and the same.
667. To leap into a pool embracing a stone.
668. To lend your hatchet and get your forest cut down.
669. To make the tea cloudy.
670. To one who does not wander there is not enlightenment.
671. To receive a favor is to sell one's liberty.
672. To teach is also to learn.
673. To teach is to learn.
674. To tell tales out of school.
675. To the partial eyes of a lover, pockmarks seem like dimples.
676. To the starving man the beauty of Fujiyama has no meaning.
677. To wait for luck is the same as waiting for death.
678. To wear two pairs of straw sandals at once.
679. Tomorrow is a new day.
680. Tomorrow's battle is won during today's practice.