334 HOW TO MAKE A COUNTRY PLACE 



"Non dormit qui custodit." 

 "Paix et peu." 

 "Pauca sed mea." 

 "Piccola si ma studiosa." 

 "Qui legit regit." 

 "Qui uti scitei bona." 

 "Quieti et musis." 

 "Scripta manet." 

 "Sibi et amicis." 



"Sings the blackened log a tune learned in some forgotten June." 

 "Sleep dwell upon thine eyes." 

 "Sleep that knits up the raveled sleeve of care." 

 "Sleep that shuts up sorrow's eye." 



"Sleep, that which makes the shepherd equal to the king, and 

 the simple to the wise." 



"Soft touches of the night become the touches of sweet harmony. " 

 "Some hae meat and canna eat 

 And some wad eat that want it ; 

 We hae meat and we can eat, 

 And sae the Lord be thankit." 



"Take thou of me smooth pillows, sweetest bed, a chamber deaf 

 to noise, and blind to light." 



"The last of life for which the first was made." 

 "The man that hath no music in himself, and is not moved by 

 concerts of sweet sounds is fit for treason, stratagems, and spoils." 

 "The mantle that covers all human thought." 

 "The ornaments of a house are the friends who visit it." 

 "Through this wide open gate none come too early, none too 

 late." 



"Turn the key deftly in the oiled wards, and seal the hushed 

 casket of the soul." 



"Usted esta en su casa." 

 "Venitas." 



"Warm ye in friendship." 

 "When friends meet hearts warm." 



"When the world is cold to you, go build fires to warm it." . . 

 "Wilt thou have music? Hark! Apollo plays, and twenty caged 

 nightingales do sing." 



"Your presence makes us rich." 



"Youth is but thought and think I will, 

 Youth and I are housemates still." 



Gates and Barriers. 



Barriers as seen, gates and fences in outlines, material and 

 manner of construction are, like chimneys, seemingly limitless. If 

 the old exist where the new should abide, it is the owner's bounden 

 duty to change them; for they must harmonize with the new house. 



