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Letter "I" » injury
«Never does the human soul appear so strong as when it foregoes revenge and dares to forgive an injury»
«There is no ghost so difficult to lay as the ghost of an injury»
«Reject your sense of injury and the injury itself disappears.»
«The best revenge is to be unlike him who performed the injury»
Author: Marcus Aurelius
| Keywords:
injury, performed, revenge, revenged, revenges, Revenge of, revenging, unlike
«One who is injured ought not to return the injury, for on no account can it be right to do an injustice; and it is not right to return an injury, or to do evil to any man, however much we have suffered from him.»
Author: Socrates
(Philosopher)
| Keywords:
account, injured, injury, injustice, no-account, return, Right to return, suffered
«ROUNDHEAD, n. A member of the Parliamentarian party in the English civil war --so called from his habit of wearing his hair short, whereas his enemy, the Cavalier, wore his long. There were other points of difference between them, but the fashion in hair was the fundamental cause of quarrel. The Cavaliers were royalists because the king, an indolent fellow, found it more convenient to let his hair grow than to wash his neck. This the Roundheads, who were mostly barbers and soap-boilers, deemed an injury to trade, and the royal neck was therefore the object of their particular indignation. Descendants of the belligerents now wear their hair all alike, but the fires of animosity enkindled in that ancient strife smoulder to this day beneath the snows of British civility.»
Author: Ambrose Bierce
(Editor, Journalist, Writer)
| Keywords:
Ancient of Days, animosities, animosity, barber, barbered, Barbers, belligerent, boiler, British, British and, Cavalier, civil, civilities, civility, civil war, convenient, deemed, descendant, descendants, English Civil War, enkindled, enkindles, fires, indignation, indolent, injury, member, mostly, neck, parliamentarian, quarrel, Roundhead, royal, royalist, smoulder, snows, so-called, soap, soaps, strife, The Civil War, The Descendants, the English, the king, The Object of, to this day, wash, wore
«Recompense injury with justice, and recompense kindness with kindness»
«Never refuse to do a kindness unless the act would work great injury to yourself, and never refuse to take a drink- under any circumstances»
«Men ought either to be indulged or utterly destroyed, for if you merely offend them they take vengeance, but if you injure them greatly they are unable to retaliate, so that the injury done to a man ought to be such that vengeance cannot be feared.»
«They do injury to the good who spares the bad.»
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