Aphorisms from Austin O’Malley’s Keystones of Thought, 1914:
- Revenge is often like biting a dog because the dog bit you.
- Education is only a ladder to gather fruit from the tree of knowledge, not the fruit itself.
- Humility is the sister of humor.
- Think what you have to say, and then don’t say it.
- Men that believe only what they understand can write their creed on a postage-stamp.
- A fallen lighthouse is more dangerous than a reef.
- The best blood will at some time get into a fool or a mosquito.
- Comedy smiles from a neutral intellect; humor laughs from a favoring intellect.
- An essential quality of beauty is aloofness.
- The picturesque is the romantic seen.
- The worst miser is the learned man that will not write.
- To laugh at yourself is real life, never acting.
- Put your purse in your head and you will not be robbed.
- A critic at best is only a football coach.
- A gentleman seldom meets rude persons.
- It is yesterday that makes to-morrow so sad.
“A little learning striving to explain a great subject is like an attempt to light up a cathedral with a single taper, which does no more than to show for an instant one foolish face.”