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| 'Tis pride, rank pride, and haughtiness of soul; I think the Romans call it stoicism | | Joseph Addison | |
| 'Tis said that persons living on annuities are longer lived than others | | Lord Byron | |
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| 'Tis sweet to hear the watch dogs' honest bark - Bay deep-mouthed welcome as we draw near home; 'Tis sweet to know there is an eye will mark - Our coming and look brighter when we come | | Lord Byron | |
| 'Tis sweet to know there is an eye will mark our coming, and look brighter when we come. | | Walter Scott | |
| 'Tis the good reader that makes the good book; a good head cannot read amiss: in every book he finds passages which seem confidences or asides hidden from all else and unmistakeably meant for his ear. | | Ralph Waldo Emerson | |
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| 'Tis the perception of the beautiful, A fine extension of the faculties, Platonic, universal, wonderful, Drawn from the stars, and filtered through the skies, Without which life would be extremely dull | | Lord Byron | |
| 'Tis the sharpness of our mind that gives the edge to our pains and pleasures. | | Michel de Montaigne | |
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| 'Tis very certain that each man carries in his eye the exact indication of his rank in the immense scale of men, and we are always learning to read it. A complete man should need no auxiliaries to his personal presence. | | George Eliot | |
| 'Tis very certain the desire of life prolongs it. | | Lord Byron | |
| 'Tis well an old age is out, And time to begin a new. | | John Dryden | |
| 'Tis with our judgment as our watches, none go just alike, yet each believes his own | | Alexander Pope | |
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| 'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves / Did gyre and gimble in the wabe; / All mimsy were the borogoves, / And the mome raths outgrabe. | | Lewis Carroll | |
| 'Twas on a Holy Thursday, their innocent faces clean, / The children walking two and two, in red and blue and green. | | William Blake | |
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| 'What is the robbing of a bank compared to the FOUNDING of a bank?' | | Bertolt Brecht | |