Mille hominum species et rerum discolor usus; / 25 Velle suum cuique est, nec voto vivitur uno—There are a thousand kinds of men, and different hues they give to things; each one follows his own inclination, nor do they all agree in their wishes. Pers.

Mille verisimili non fanno un vero—A thousand probabilities do not make one truth. It. Pr.

Millia frumenti tua triverit area centum, / Non tuus hinc capiet venter plus ac meus—Though your threshing-floor should yield a hundred thousand bushels of corn, will your stomach therefore hold more than mine? Hor.

Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth / Unseen, both when we wake and when we sleep. Milton.

Minatur innocentibus qui parcit nocentibus—He threatens the innocent who spares the guilty. Coke.

Mind and body are intimately related; if the 30 former is joyful, the latter feels free and well; and many an evil flies before cheerfulness. Goethe.

Mind and body—that beauteous couple—exercise much and variously, but at home, at home, indoors, and about things indoors; for God is there too. Landor.

Mind is stronger than matter; mind is the creator and shaper of matter; not brute force, but only persuasion and faith is the king of this world. Carlyle.

Mind is the great lever of all things; human thought is the process by which human ends are ultimately answered. Webster.

Mind is the partial side of men; the heart is everything. Rivarol.