| Author |
Quotes |
| Alexander Pope | Worth makes the man, and want of it the fellow, The rest is all but leather and prunello. |
| Augustus Caesar | Nothing common can seem worthy of you. |
| Benjamin Franklin | He has paid dear, very dear, for his whistle. |
| Alexander Pope | Worth makes the man, and want of it the fellow; The rest is all but leather and prunello. |
| David Letterman | Sometimes something worth doing is worth overdoing. |
| Edmund Waller | All human things Of dearest value hang on slender strings. |
| Franz Joseph Haydn | In native worth and honour clad. |
| Frederic R Marvin | An ounce of enterprise is worth a pound of privilege. |
| Frederic R Marvin | My glass is not large, but I drink from my glass. |
| Frederick W Robertson | Only so far as a man believes strongly, mightily, can he act cheerfully, or do anything that is worth doing. |
| Gaelic Proverb | If it is worth taking, it is worth asking for. |
| Gypsy Rose Lee | Anything worth doing well is worth doing slowly. |
| Harriet Lerner | Anger is a signal, and one worth listening to. |
| Henry Fielding | Worth begets in base minds, envy; in great souls, emulation. |
| John D Rockefeller | I believe in the supreme worth of the individual and in his right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. |
| Liu Binyan | One suggestion with a spark of truth is worth a hundred repetitions of sound platitudes. |
| Robert Green Ingersoll | The destroyer of weeds, thistles, and thorns is a benefactor whether he soweth grain or not. |
| Senegalese Proverb | An intelligent enemy is worth more than a stupid friend. |
| Will Rogers | It's not what you pay a man, but what he costs you that counts. |
| William Alexander | A pilot's part in calms cannot be spy'd, In dangerous times true worth is only tri'd. |
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