2105 Latin Proverbs / Page 17
321. Brave men lived before Agamemnon.
322. Brevity is pleasing.
323. Brevity is the soul of wit.
324. Bribes will enter without knocking.
325. Bright enough in the dark, dull in time of day.
326. Bring not a bagpipe to a man in trouble.
327. Build but one nest in one tree.
328. But now I was a rich man, three things have left me bare; dice, wine, and women, these three have made me poor.
329. By a brave endurance of unavoidable evils, we conquer them.
330. By doing nothing men learn to do evil.
331. By fair means or foul.
332. By good means or bad.
333. By good nature and kindness even fierce spirits become tractable.
334. By hook or by crook.
335. By hook or crook.
336. By ignorance we mistake, and by mistakes we learn.
337. By learning you will teach; by teaching you will learn.
338. By much laughter you detect the fool.
339. By perseverance the Greeks reached Troy.
340. By pleasing, while we instruct.