Plato.
* Cf. Rom. XII, 19; 1 Thess. V, 15.
414.
In all that belongs to man you cannot find a greater wonder than memory. What a treasury of all things! What a record! What a journal of all! As if provident Nature, because she would have man circumspect, had furnished him with an account-book, to carry always with him. Yet it neither burthens nor takes up room.
Feltham.
415.
He who will not freely and sadly confess that he is much a fool is all a fool.
Fuller.
416.
The man with hoary head is not revered as aged by the gods, but only he who has true knowledge; he, though young, is old.