If you hate your enemies, you will contract such a vicious habit of mind, as by degrees will break out upon those who are your friends, or those who are indifferent to you.—Plutarch.

Hatred is the vice of narrow souls; they feed it with all their littlenesses, and make it the pretext of base tyrannies.—Balzac.

It is the nature of the human disposition to hate him whom you have injured.—Tacitus.

Life is too short to spare an hour of it in the indulgence of this evil passion.—Lamartine.

The hatred we bear our enemies injures their happiness less than our own.—J. Petit-Senn.

The hatred of persons related to each other is the most violent.—Tacitus.

When our hatred is too keen it places us beneath those we hate.—La Rochefoucauld.

Health.—The only way for a rich man to be healthy is, by exercise and abstinence, to live as if he was poor.—Sir W. Temple.

There is this difference between those two temporal blessings, health and money: Money is the most envied, but the least enjoyed; health is the most enjoyed, but the least envied: and this superiority of the latter is still more obvious when we reflect that the poorest man would not part with health for money, but that the richest would gladly part with all their money for health.—Colton.

Refuse to be ill. Never tell people you are ill; never own it to yourself. Illness is one of those things which a man should resist on principle at the onset.—Lytton.