| |
| Oh, how cowardly is wickedness always! Statius. | 1 |
| Peace and wickedness are far asunder. Stillingfleet. | 2 |
| The world loves a spice of wickedness. Longfellow. | 3 |
| For never, never wicked man was wise. Pope. | 4 |
| Wickedness may prosper for a while. LEstrange. | 5 |
| No wickedness has any ground of reason. Livy. | 6 |
| The majority is wicked. Bias. | 7 |
| Do not be deceived; happiness and enjoyment do not lie in wicked ways. Dr. Watts. | 8 |
| Wickedness is a kind of voluntary frenzy, and a chosen distraction. Tillotson. | 9 |
| The happiness of the wicked passes away like a torrent. Racine. | 10 |
| I never wonder to see men wicked, but I often wonder to see them not ashamed. Swift. | 11 |
| Few are so wicked as to take delight in crimes unprofitable. Dryden. | 12 |
| What rein can hold licentious wickedness, when down the hill he holds his fierce career? Shakespeare. | 13 |
| The wickedness of the few makes the calamity of the many. Publius Syrus. | 14 |
| Theres a method in mans wickedness; it grows up by degrees. Beaumont and Fletcher. | 15 |
| It is no sin to be tempted; the wickedness lies in being overcome. Balzac. | 16 |
| Cause Ise wicked,I is. Is mighty wicked, anyhow, I cant help it. Harriet Beecher Stowe. | 17 |
| They that plough iniquity and sow wickedness reap the same. Bible. | 18 |
| | Destroy his fib, or sophistryin vain! |
| The creatures at his dirty work again. |
Pope. | 19 |
| Was ever any wicked man free from the stings of a guilty conscience? Tillotson. | 20 |
| |
|
|
| |
| | Are you calld forth from out a world of men, |
| To slay the innocent? |
Shakespeare. | 21 |
| Mental stains cannot be removed by time, nor washed away by any waters. Cicero. | 22 |
| The disposition to do a bad deed is the most terrible punishment of the deed it does. Charles Mildway. | 23 |
| To see and listen to the wicked is already the beginning of wickedness. Confucius. | 24 |
| Wickedness resides in the very hesitation about an act, even though it be not perpetrated. Cicero. | 25 |
| Great God, have pity on the wicked, for thou didst everything for the good, when thou madest them good! Saadi. | 26 |
| We can never be grieved for their miseries who are thoroughly wicked, and have thereby justly called their calamities on themselves. Dryden. | 27 |
| It is a statistical fact that the wicked work harder to reach hell than the righteous do to enter heaven. H. W. Shaw. | 28 |
| Hint at the existence of wickedness in a light, easy, and agreeable manner, so that nobodys fine feelings may be offended. Thackeray. | 29 |
| The sure way to wickedness is always through wickedness. Seneca. | 30 |
| If the wicked flourish, and thou suffer, be not discouraged; they are fatted for destruction, thou are dieted for health. Fuller. | 31 |
| Wickedness is a wonderfully diligent architect of misery, of shame, accompanied with terror, and commotion, and remorse, and endless perturbation. Plutarch. | 32 |
| Doubtless the world is wicked enough; but it will not be improved by the extension of a spirit which self-righteously sees more to reform outside of itself than in itself. J. G. Holland. | 33 |
| Wickedness may well be compared to a bottomless pit, into which it is easier to keep ones self from falling, then, being fallen, to give ones self any stay from falling infinitely. Sir P. Sidney. | 34 |
| There is no man suddenly either excellently good or extremely wicked; but grows so, either as he holds himself up in virtue, or lets himself slide to viciousness. Sir P. Sidney. | 35 |
| God has sometimes converted wickedness into madness; and it is to the credit of human reason that men who are not in some degree mad are never capable of being in the highest degree wicked. Burke. | 36 |
| |