Enjoy the best quotes of Lady Marguerite Blessington. Explore, save & share top quotes by Lady Marguerite Blessington.
“Borrowed thoughts like borrowed money only show the poverty of the borrower.”
Lady Marguerite Blessington“Borrowed thoughts like borrowed money only show the poverty of the borrower.”
Lady Marguerite Blessington“Borrow a little and if you can't pay it back, it's your problem. Borrow a lot and if you can't pay it back, it's the lenders problem.”
Willi Way“A borrower who doesn't returns is a beggar.”
Amit Kalantri“The borrower is servant to die lender.”
Bible“Who goeth a borrowing Goeth a sorrowing.”
Thomas Tusser“Borrowing from Peter to pay Paul.”
Cicero“How can someone vouch for your credit worthiness when you don't borrow;not borrowing is one of the unhealthiest habit one can develop , borrowing is healthy & rewarding is it when you borrow to invest:leveraging is part of every yearning investors forte”
Ishmael Osolo“I try not to borrow, first you borrow then you beg.”
Ernest Hemingway“Christianity is just simple. Preach as if Jesus Christ is on the first seat listening to you. Work as if Jesus Christ is your immediate supervisor. Give as if you are giving to Christ. Eat and drink as if you are dining with Christ. Walk as if you are taking a stroll with Christ. Dance as if you are dancing with Christ. Think as if Christ is marking your thought. Dress as if you have a meeting with Christ. Clear your heart as if it is the only guest room available for your special guest, Christ. Speak as if you are speaking to Christ. Watch as if you are looking at Christ. Listen as if you have borrowed the ears of Christ. Respect time as if you borrowed from Christ. All else matters less and no problem then exists. Living to gratify mankind and ourselves is a mere hypocrisy in the first order and the underpinning of the woes of mankind.”
Ernest Agyemang Yeboah“A poet ought not to pick nature's pocket. Let him borrow, and so borrow as to repay by the very act of borrowing. Examine nature accurately, but write from recollection, and trust more to the imagination than the memory.”
Samuel Taylor Coleridge