
1.It's much easier to turn a friendship into love, than love into friendship.
2.The worst solitude is to be destitute of
sincere friendship.
3.It's what each of us sows, and how,
that gives to us character and prestige. Seeds of kindness,
goodwill, and human understanding, planted in fertile soil,
spring up into deathless friendships, big deeds of worth,
and a memory that will not soon fade. . . .
4.A real friend is someone
who walks in when the rest of the world walks out.
5.I keep my friends as misers do their treasure,
because, of all the things granted us by wisdom, none is
greater or better than friendship.
6.False friendship, like the ivy, decays
and ruins the walls it embraces; but true friendship
gives new life and animation to the object it supports.
7.A single rose can be my garden...
a single friend, my world.
8.A man's friendships are, like his will,
invalidated by marriage -- but they are also no less
invalidated by the marriage of his friends.
9.Friendship is like money, easier made
than kept.
10.Friendship should be a private
pleasure, not a public boast. I loathe those braggarts who
are forever trying to invest themselves with importance by
calling important people by their first names in or out of print.
Such first-naming for effect makes me cringe.
11.A friendship can weather most things
and thrive in thin soil -- but it needs a little mulch of letters
and phone calls and small silly presents every so often --
just to save it from drying out completely
12.Two persons cannot long be friends
if they cannot forgive each other's little failings.
13.A good friend who points out mistakes
and imperfections and rebukes evil is to be respected as
if he reveals a secret of hidden treasure.
14.The rule of friendship means there should
be mutual sympathy between them, each supplying what
the other lacks and trying to benefit the other, always
using friendly and sincere words.





�-)��O.o���]״)���
Comment