Man ever tends to reckon his own insight as final, and goes upon it as such. Carlyle.
Man everywhere is the born enemy of lies. Carlyle.
Man findet tausend Gelehrte, bis man auf einen weisen Mann stösst—We may come upon a thousand men of learning before we stumble upon a single wise man. Klinger.
Man for the field and woman for the hearth; / Man for the sword and for the needle she: / Man with the head and woman with the heart: / Man to command and woman to obey; / All else confusion. Tennyson.
Man, forget not death, for death certainly forgets 20 not thee. Turkish Pr.
Man gives up all pretension to the infinite while he feels here that neither with thought nor without it is he equal to the finite. Goethe.
Man had not a hammer to begin, not a syllabled articulation; they had it all to make—and they have made it. Carlyle.
Man has a brief flowering season and a long fading. Uhland.
Man has a silent and solitary literature written by his heart upon the tables of stone in Nature; and next to God's finger, a man's heart writes the most memorable things. Ward Beecher.
Man has a soul as certainly as he has a body; 25 nay, much more certainly; properly it is the course of his unseen spiritual life, which informs and rules his external visible life, rather than receives rule from it, in which spiritual life the true secret of his history lies. Carlyle.