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6560c07
|
You shall never want rope enough.
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|
François Rabelais |
|
86d2da7
|
I drink no more than a sponge.
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|
François Rabelais |
|
77c0310
|
Appetite comes with eating, says Angeston. But the thirst goes away with drinking.
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|
François Rabelais |
|
fd0c492
|
Thought the moon was made of green cheese.
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|
|
François Rabelais |
|
8e86d0f
|
He always looked a given horse in the mouth.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
fab0e92
|
By robbing Peter he paid Paul, ... and hoped to catch larks if ever the heavens should fall.
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|
|
François Rabelais |
|
e4cb6e6
|
He did not care a button for it.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
5f64201
|
How well I feathered my nest.
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|
|
François Rabelais |
|
59e9365
|
He laid him squat as a flounder.
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|
François Rabelais |
|
57c5a82
|
So much is a man worth as he esteems himself.
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|
|
François Rabelais |
|
9463596
|
Send them home as merry as crickets.
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|
|
François Rabelais |
|
4ab2ae2
|
A good crier of green sauce.
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|
|
François Rabelais |
|
de994c4
|
Corn is the sinews of war.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
862bac8
|
Subject to a kind of disease, which at that time they called lack of money.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
2baa982
|
This flea which I have in mine ear.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
2c2edbc
|
You have there hit the nail on the head.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
e90d05f
|
Above the pitch, out of tune, and off the hinges.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
925c2e9
|
I'll go his halves.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
5ef97fd
|
Do not believe what I tell you here any more than if it were some tale of a tub.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
1c2240b
|
Which was performed to a T.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
23fd3d2
|
He that has patience may compass anything.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
6770bdb
|
We will take the good-will for the deed.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
8995e6d
|
You are Christians of the best edition, all picked and culled.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
a077d66
|
Let us fly and save our bacon.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
fef7eb4
|
Needs must when the Devil drives.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
2d8bd20
|
Scampering as if the Devil drove them.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
af24d07
|
He freshly and cheerfully asked him how a man should kill time.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
6c43759
|
Whose cockloft is unfurnished.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
0f3152c
|
Come, pluck up a good heart; speak the truth and shame the devil.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
c8a6e09
|
Plain as the nose in a man's face.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
2120608
|
Like hearts of oak.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
d5f8703
|
Nothing is so dear and precious as time.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
a91f3df
|
And thereby hangs a tale.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
bcc102f
|
It is meat, drink, and cloth to us.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
dedef5e
|
And so on to the end of the chapter.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
98c22b7
|
What is got over the Devil's back is spent under the belly.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
bd281b4
|
What cannot be cured must be endured.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
b1795f2
|
Thought I to myself, we shall never come off scot-free.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
b305fdc
|
It is enough to fright you out of your seven senses.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
db81af5
|
Necessity has no law.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
2f1f06a
|
Panurge had no sooner heard this, but he was upon the high-rope.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
44909ed
|
We saw a knot of others, about a baker's dozen.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
6fc69a1
|
Others made a virtue of necessity.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |
|
2d8c427
|
Spare your breath to cool your porridge.
|
|
|
François Rabelais |