2105 Latin Proverbs / Page 68
1341. Pedigree and ancestry and what we ourselves have not achieved, I scarcely recognize as our own.
1342. Perhaps you will soon find another, and a fairer, lover.
1343. Plague seize the hindmost.
1344. Pleasure and pain succeed each other.
1345. Pleasure is often the introduction to pain.
1346. Pleasure is the bait of evil.
1347. Pleasure often comes from pain.
1348. Ponder long before you act.
1349. Pondering over many things by night.
1350. Poor though in the midst of wealth.
1351. Possessions dwindle: I mourn their loss. But I mourn the loss of time much more, for anyone can save his purse, but none can win back lost time.
1352. Possessions dwindle: I mourn their loss. But I mourn the loss of time much more, for anyone can save his purse, but none can win back lost time.
1353. Potter envies potter, and smith smith.
1354. Poverty is death in another form.
1355. Poverty is no disgrace, but it's a great inconvenience.
1356. Poverty makes a man mean.
1357. Poverty shows us who are our friends and who our enemies.
1358. Poverty trieth friends.
1359. Power acquired by guilt was never used for a good purpose.
1360. Power is strengthened by union.