No Man is richer for having his Estate all in Money, Plate, etc. lying by him, but on the contrary, he is for that reason the poorer.
‐‐ Dudley North
No man is sane who does not know how to be insane on proper occasions.
‐‐ Henry Ward Beecher
No man is so foolish but he may sometimes give another good counsel, and no man so wise that he may not easily err if he takes no other counsel than his own. He that is taught only by himself has a fool for a master.
‐‐ Hunter S. Thompson
No man is so great as mankind.
‐‐ Theodore Parker
No man is so much a fool as not to have wit enough sometimes to be a knave; nor any so cunning a knave as not to have the weakness sometimes to play the fool.
‐‐ George Savile
No man is so old as to believe he cannot live one more year.
‐‐ Sean O'Casey
No man is so perfect, so necessary to his friends, as to give them no cause to miss him less.
‐‐ Jean de la Bruyere
No man is the wiser for his learning; it may administer matter to work in, or objects to work upon; but wit and wisdom are born with a man.
‐‐ John Selden
No man is to be credited for his mere authority's sake, unless he can show Scripture for the maintenance of his opinion.
‐‐ John Wycliffe
No man is truly educated unless he knows where he came from, why he is here, and where he can expect to go in the next life.
‐‐ Ezra Taft Benson
No man is useless while he has a friend.
‐‐ Robert Louis Stevenson
No man is wise enough by himself.
‐‐ Plautus
No man is worth his salt who is not ready at all times to risk his well-being, to risk his body, to risk his life, in a great cause.
‐‐ Theodore Roosevelt
No man knows till he has suffered from the night how sweet and dear to his heart and eye the morning can be.
‐‐ Bram Stoker
No man likes to have his intelligence or good faith questioned, especially if he has doubts about it himself.
‐‐ Henry Adams
No man lives without jostling and being jostled; in all ways he has to elbow himself through the world, giving and receiving offence.
‐‐ Thomas Carlyle
No man loves the bearer of bad tidings.
‐‐ Sophocles
No man made great by death offers more hope to lowly pride than does Abraham Lincoln; for while living he was himself so simple as often to be dubbed a fool.
‐‐ Thomas Vernor Smith
No man may make another free.
‐‐ Zora Neale Hurston
No man means all he says, and yet very few say all they mean, for words are slippery and thought is viscous.
‐‐ Henry Adams
No man need go blindly to destruction, for God has given him guidance and power of seeing whither he goes.
‐‐ Sabine Baring-Gould
No man not inspired can make a good speech without preparation.
‐‐ Daniel Webster
No man or woman can be strong, gentle, pure, and good, without the world being better for it and without someone being helped and comforted by the very existence of that goodness.
‐‐ Phillips Brooks
No man or woman is an island. To exist just for yourself is meaningless. You can achieve the most satisfaction when you feel related to some greater purpose in life, something greater than yourself.
‐‐ Denis Waitley
No man or woman of the humblest sort can really be strong, gentle and good, without the world being better for it, without somebody being helped and comforted by the very existence of that goodness.
‐‐ Alan Alda
No man or woman who tries to pursue an ideal in his or her won way is without enemies.
‐‐ Daisy Bates
No man pleases by silence; many I please by speaking briefly.
‐‐ Ausonius
No man really knows about other human beings. The best he can do is to suppose that they are like himself.
‐‐ John Steinbeck
No man ruleth safely but he that is willingly ruled.
‐‐ Thomas a Kempis
No man's brain is so dull, and no man's eye so blind, that they cannot catch food for dreams.
‐‐ Donald G. Mitchell
No man's credit is as good as his money.
‐‐ John Dewey
No man's knowledge here can go beyond his experience.
‐‐ John Locke
No man shall be more exacting of me or my conduct than I am of myself.
‐‐ Karl G. Maeser
No man shall have the right to fix the boundary to the march of a Nation.
‐‐ Charles Stewart Parnell
No man should advocate a course in private that he's ashamed to admit in public.
‐‐ George McGovern
No man should be in public office who can't make more money in private life.
‐‐ Thomas Dewey
No man should be on Facebook. It's an invasion of everyone's privacy. I really cannot stand it.
‐‐ Christina Hendricks
No man should bring children into the world who is unwilling to persevere to the end in their nature and education.
‐‐ Plato
No man should escape our universities without knowing how little he knows.
‐‐ J. Robert Oppenheimer
No man should ever lose sleep over public affairs.
‐‐ Harold MacMillan
No man should have a political office because he wants a job.
‐‐ Franklin Knight Lane
No man should have cowboys boots in his wardrobe. That's fair enough, isn't it? Unless you're a cowboy, of course.
‐‐ Paul Weller
No man should have proprietary rights over land who does not use that land wisely and lovingly.
‐‐ Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
No man should marry until he has studied anatomy and dissected at least one woman.
‐‐ Honore de Balzac
No man should think himself a zero, and think he can do nothing about the state of the world.
‐‐ Bernard Baruch
No man speaketh, or should speak, of his prince, that which he hath not weighed whether it will consist with that veneration which should be preserved inviolate to him.
‐‐ Isaac Barrow
No man succeeds without a good woman behind him. Wife or mother, if it is both, he is twice blessed indeed.
‐‐ Godfrey Winn
No man surely has so short a memory as the American.
‐‐ Rebecca Harding Davis
No man thinks there is much ado about nothing when the ado is about himself.
‐‐ Anthony Trollope