To have done anything by which you earned 5 money merely is to have been truly idle, or worse. Thoreau.
To have done, is to hang / Quite out of fashion, like a rusty mail, / In monumental mockery. Troil. and Cres., iii. 3.
To have gold is to be in fear, and to want it to be in sorrow. Johnson.
To have heard the voice / Of Godhead in the winds and in the seas, / To have known him in the circling of the suns, / And in the changeful fates and lives of men. Lewis Morris.
To have ideas is to gather flowers; to think is to weave them into garlands. Mme. Swetchine.
To have neither superior, nor inferior, nor 10 equal, united manlike to you; without father, without child, without brother,—man knows no sadder destiny. Carlyle.
To have no assistance from other minds in resolving doubts, in appeasing scruples, in balancing deliberations, is a very wretched destitution. Johnson.
To have no pain, and not be bored, is the utmost happiness possible to man on earth. Schopenhauer.
To have read the greatest works of any great poet, to have beheld or heard the greatest works of any great painter or musician, is a possession added to the best things of life. Swinburne.
To have religion upon authority, and not upon conviction, is like a finger-watch, to be set forwards or backwards, as he pleases that has it in keeping. William Penn.