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Common sense isn't.

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Quote of the moment
By associating with the cat one only risks becoming richer.
~Colette ~

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Quote of the moment
I can look sharp as well as another, and let me alone to keep the cobwebs out of my eyes.
~ Cervantes, Don Quixote. Part ii. Chap. xxxiii. ~

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The gifts of a bad man bring no good with them.
~ Euripides, Medea. 618. ~

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Quote of the moment
For other things mild Heav'n a time ordains, And disapproves that care, though wise in show, That with superfluous burden loads the day, And when God sends a cheerful hour, refrains.
~ John Milton, Sonnet xxi. To Cyriac Skinner. ~

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Quote of the moment
All Sisyphus' silent joy is contained therein. His fate belongs to him. His rock is his thing. Likewise, the absurd man, when he contemplates his torment, silences all the idols.
~ The Myth of Sisyphus, Albert Camus (1913 - 1960) ~

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By sports like these are all their cares beguil'd; The sports of children satisfy the child.
~ Oliver Goldsmith, The Traveller. Line 153. ~

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Quote of the moment
Kennedy benefited, too, from the fact that the country perceived him to be, like Roosevelt, a patrician. To be sure, Kennedy did not boast a seventeenth-century lineage or descend from the landed gentry. Yet in other respects they were similar. Both had gone to prestigious prep schools; both were Harvard men; both had sailed the New England coast; each had a sense of noblesse oblige. Like Roosevelt, Kennedy was a man of inherited wealth who could, to a degree, view business from the outside. In comparing Kennedy to Roosevelt, a columnist for the New Republic observed: “Each had an upper-class education, found a life of public service more attractive than money-grabbing, and each had a respect for the decencies. At heart, too, each had a kind of patrician reticence, an impervious private dignity.”
~ William E. Leuchtenburg (b. 1922), U.S. historian, educator. In the Shadow of FDR: From Harry Truman to Ronald Reagan (rev. edition), Cornell University Press (1989). ~
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Common sense isn't.

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