However far a man goes, he must start from his own door. Pr.

However varied the forms of destiny, the same element are always present. Schopenhauer.

Howsoever thou actest, let heaven be moved 10 with thy purpose; let the aim of thy deeds traverse the axis of the earth. Schiller.

Huc propius me, / Dum doceo insanire omnes, vos ordine adite—Come near me all in order, and I will convince you that you are mad, every one. Hor.

Huic maxime putamus malo fuisse nimiam opinionem ingenii atque virtutis—This I think to have been the chief cause of his misfortune, an overweening estimate of his own genius and valour. Nep., of Themistocles.

Huic versatile ingenium sic pariter ad omnia fuit, ut natum ad id unum diceres, quodcunque ageret—This man's genius was so versatile, so equal to every pursuit, that you would pronounce him to have been born for whatever thing he was engaged on. Livy, on the elder Cato.

Human action is a seed of circumstances (Verhängnissen) scattered in the dark land of the future and hopefully left to the powers that rule human destiny. Schiller.

Human beliefs, like all other natural growths, 15 elude the barriers of system. George Eliot.

Human brutes, like other beasts, find snares and poison in the provisions of life, and are allured by their appetites to their destruction. Swift.

Human courage should rise to the height of human calamity. Gen. Lee.