90. 
91. 
Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. [August, 1911. 
Take girls from the breasts of their aunts. 
You are fit for me and I for you; the times have made 
us successfu 
Look to high birth even though there be povert 
Accept hospitality from the man who once he wealth, 
and not from the man who has acquired it recently. 
Give the dough to the baker even if he eats half of it. 
If you want peace, say of everything you see: ‘‘Itis 
ood.”’ 
A be eggar, and makes conditions ! 
He killed the dead and then went to the funeral. 
From want of men they called the cock Abu Ali. 
From lack of horses they put saddles on dogs 
I love yon Oh! My bracelet, but not as mere S as my 
wrist 
Better an agreement in the harvest-field than a quarrel 
on the threshing-floor 
Train your dog, and he will bite hrs ~ the same). 
A running stream, and not a dry & riv 
They threw a pailful of leban! over @ Ser, and. he said: 
‘* By my Religion, I like it!’ 
The son of a dog is a pup, and that of a Sor a whelp. 
A one-eyed man is a king waren ab the 
Don’t live near an ignorant divi 
ae dread of a calamity is worse than the calamity — 
f. = 
e 
He who catches a fox is more cunning than s 
If the prayers of dogs were heard the eee would - 
rain bones. e 
Two dogs fight over a bone, whilst a third one carries ib 
off and runs awa < 
A man’s value is the value of what he possesse : 
He who does not place himself above the "ignorant 
places the ignorant above him. 
Time creates and time destroys. a 
The bride is at the dressmaker’s, and the bridegroom is 2 
at the jeweller’s. Why are the people talking! is 
If a thief gets no chance of stealing, he begins to think es 
himself virtuou oe 
The longer the friendalin: the stronger. a 
If the pitcher falls on a stone, woe to the pitcher; ifs = 
stone falls on the pitcher, woe to the pitcher ; what 
ever happens, woe to the pitcher. % 
urse a man for his errors . 
Ask the man of experience, and not the man of learn” . 
ing. 
ee AaB N OC ome oa Be eae ae ae 
! Boiled milk curdled. 
