30 ordspråk av Charles H. Spurgeon
Charles H. Spurgeon
It is not well to make great changes in old age.
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Luck generally comes to those who look for it, and my notion is that it taps, once in a lifetime, at everybody's door, but if industry does not open it luck goes away.
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Many men owe the grandeur of their lives to the tremendous difficulties
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Must is a hard nut to crack, but it has a sweet kernel.
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No one is so miserable as the poor person who maintains the appearance of wealth.
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Our misery is that we thirst so little for these sublime things, and so much for the mocking trifles of time and space.
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Show me the business man or institution not guided by sentiment and service; by the idea that "he profits most who serves best" and I will show you a man or an outfit that is dead or dying.
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Some temptations come to the industrious, but all temptations attack the idle
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The greatest works are done by the ones. The hundreds do not often do much, the companies never; it is the units, the single individuals, that are the power and the might.
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The Lord gets His best soldiers out of the highlands of affliction.
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There is no fatigue so wearisome as that which comes from lack of work
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When facts were weak, his native cheek brought him serenely through
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When I have found intense pain relieved, a weary brain soothed,and calm refreshing sleep obtained by a cigar, I have felt grateful to God, and have blessed His name
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You cannot slander human nature; it is worse than words can paint it.
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You might not always get what you want, but you always get what you expect.
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