| John Bartlett (18201905). Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. 1919. |
| |
| Bidpai. |
| |
| |
| 1 | | We ought to do our neighbour all the good we can. If you do good, good will be done to you; but if you do evil, the same will be measured back to you again. 1 |
| Dabschelim and Pilpay. Chap. i. |
| 2 | | It has been the providence of Nature to give this creature [the cat] nine lives instead of one. 2 |
| The Greedy and Ambitious Cat. Fable iii. |
| 3 | | There is no gathering the rose without being pricked by the thorns. 3 |
| The Two Travellers. Chap. ii. Fable vi. |
| 4 | | Wise men say that there are three sorts of persons who are wholly deprived of judgment,they who are ambitious of preferments in the courts of princes; they who make use of poison to show their skill in curing it; and they who intrust women with their secrets. |
| The Two Travellers. Chap. ii. Fable vi. |
| 5 | | Men are used as they use others. |
| The King who became Just. Fable ix. |
| 6 | | What is bred in the bone will never come out of the flesh. 4 |
| The Two Fishermen. Fable xiv. |
| 7 | | Guilty consciences always make people cowards. 5 |
| The Prince and his Minister. Chap. iii. Fable iii. |
| 8 | | Whoever
prefers the service of princes before his duty to his Creator, will be sure, early or late, to repent in vain. |
| Ibid. |
| 9 | | There are some who bear a grudge even to those that do them good. |
| A Religious Doctor. Fable vi. |
| 10 | | There was once, in a remote part of the East, a man who was altogether void of knowledge and experience, yet presumed to call himself a physician. |
| The Ignorant Physician. Fable viii. |
| 11 | | He that plants thorns must never expect to gather roses. 6 |
| The Ignorant Physician. Fable viii. |
| 12 | | Honest men esteem and value nothing so much in this world as a real friend. Such a one is as it were another self, to whom we impart our most secret thoughts, who partakes of our joy, and comforts us in our affliction; add to this, that his company is an everlasting pleasure to us. |
| Choice of Friends. Chap. iv. |
| 13 | | That possession was the strongest tenure of the law. 7 |
| The Cat and the two Birds. Chap. v. Fable iv. |
|
|