Love knoweth no laws.

It is a world to see.

A bargain is a bargain.

Night hath a thousand eyes.

A new broome sweepeth cleane.

Children and fools speak true.

The night has a thousand eyes.

Children and fooles speake true.

A clear conscience is a sure card.

All fish are not caught with flies

Long quaffing maketh a short lyfe.

A clere conscience is a sure carde.

As lyke as one pease is to another.

Lette me stande to the maine chance.

A comely olde man as busie as a bee.

Marriage is destinie, made in heaven.

Nothing so perilous as procrastination

Fish and guests in three days are stale.

The tongue, the ambassador of the heart.

A merry companion is as good as a wagon.

Many strokes overthrow the tallest oaks.

Water runneth smoothest where it is deepest.

Beauty - a deceitful bait with a deadly hook.

The soft droppes of rain perce the hard marble.

A Rose is sweeter in the budde than full blowne.

All men [are] of one metal, but not in one mold.

The finest edge is made with the blunt whetstone.

The wound that bleedeth inward is most dangerous.

In arguing of the shadow, we forgo the substance.

In misery it is great comfort to have a companion.

It is good walking when one hath his horse in hand.

The true measure of life is not length, but honesty.

It is a blind goose that cometh to the fox's sermon.

If love be a god, why should not lovers be virtuous?

Where the countenance is fair, there need no colors.

He that loseth his honesty hath nothing else to lose.

Where the mind is past hope, the heart is past shame.

I thank you for nothing, because I understand nothing.

Marriages are made in heaven and consummated on Earth.

As love knoweth no lawes, so it regardeth no conditions

The sun shineth upon the dunghill, and is not corrupted.

Instruments sound sweetest when they are touched softest.

If thy wealth waste, they wit will give but small warmth.

Thou shalt come out of a warme Sunne into God's blessing.

The broken bone, once set together, is stronger than ever.

Let the falling out of friends be a renewing of affection.

Where the streame runneth smoothest, the water is deepest.

The fallyng out of faithfull frends is the renuyng of loue.

There can no great smoke arise, but there must be some fire.

The greater the kindred is, the lesse the kindnesse must bee.

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