Truditur dies die, / Novæque pergunt interire lunæ—Day presses on the heels of day, and new moons hasten to their wane. Hor.

True art is like good company; it constrains us in the most charming way to recognise the standard after which and up to which our innermost being is shaped by culture. Goethe.

True art, which requires free and healthy faculties, is opposed to pedantry, which crushes the soul under a burden. Hamerton.

True bravery proposes a just end, measures 40 the dangers, and, if necessary, the affront, with coldness. Francis la None.

True blue will never stain. Pr.

True comeliness, which nothing can impair, / Dwells in the mind; all else is vanity and glare. Thomson.

True coral needs no painter's brush. Pr.

True dignity is never gained by place, and never lost when honours are withdrawn. Massinger.

True ease in writing comes from art, not 45 chance, / As those move easiest who have learned to dance. Pope.

True eloquence consists in saying all that is proper, and nothing more. La Roche.