777 Japanese Proverbs / Page 35
681. Too many accomplishments makes no accomplishments.
682. Too many boatmen will run the boat up to the top of the mountains.
683. Too many hands will row the boat up a mountain.
684. Too much is worse than too little.
685. Too much politeness is impertinent.
686. Transactions in Hell also depend upon money.
687. Trash accumulates in stagnant water.
688. True patience consists in bearing what is unbearable.
689. Truth often comes out of a joke.
690. Truthful words are seldom pleasant.
691. Two lovers in the rain have no need of an umbrella.
692. Under a powerful general there are no feeble soldiers.
693. Unhappiness can be a bridge to happiness.
694. Unless you enter the tiger's den you cannot take the cubs.
695. Unspoken words are the flowers of silence.
696. Victims of the same disease have a lot to talk about.
697. Virtue carries an empty purse.
698. Virtue is not knowing but doing.
699. Vision with action is a daydream; action without vision is a nightmare.
700. Vision without action is a daydream. Action with without vision is a nightmare.