This Is a Beta Version. Feel free to play around, but your submissions, comments, settings, ratings, and/or other data may suddenly disappear or return to a previous state. The old version is more stable. Please send your ideas, complaints and other comments to webmaster@aphorismsgalore.com. Thank you.
Work and Recreation
156 aphorisms · 3 comments
Aphorisms in This Category
<< < 61–80 (156) > >> · Submit an Aphorism · Post a Comment
# · Good (one rating) · submitted 1997
You can't build a reputation on what you are going to do.
# · Not So Good (20 ratings) · submitted 1997
Failure to prepare is preparing to fail.
Benjamin Franklin, in Success and Failure and Work and Recreation
# · Not So Good (147 ratings) · submitted 1997
Well done is better than well said.
# · Not So Good (7 ratings) · submitted 1997
By working faithfully eight hours a day, you may eventually get to be boss and work twelve.
Robert Frost, in Success and Failure and Work and Recreation
# · Good (5 ratings) · submitted 1997
The brain is a wonderful organ. It starts working the moment you get up in the morning and does not stop until you get to work.
# · Unrated · submitted 1997
Most problems are either unimportant or impossible to solve.
Victor Galaz, (on why he is so silent during meetings), in Work and Recreation
# · Not So Good (8 ratings) · submitted 1997
Whatever you do will be insignificant, but it is very important that you do it.
# · Unrated · submitted 1997
We will burn that bridge when we come to it.
# · Unrated · submitted 1997
If one has not given everything, one has given nothing.
# · Good (one rating) · submitted 1997
No vacation goes unpunished.
# · Very Good (one rating) · submitted 1997
Committee: A group of the unwilling, picked from the unfit to do the unnecessary.
# · Unrated · submitted 1997
Never mistake motion for action.
# · Unrated · submitted 1997
Manuscript: something submitted in haste and returned at leisure.
# · Bad (one rating) · submitted 1997
I find the great thing in this world is not so much where we stand, as in what direction we are moving — we must sail sometimes with the wind and sometimes against it — but we must sail, and not drift, nor lie at anchor.
# · Very Good (one rating) · submitted 1997
Genius is an infinite capacity for taking pains.
# · Not So Good (4 ratings) · submitted 1997
In labouring to be brief, I become obscure.
# · Unrated · submitted 1997
If food were free, why work?
# · Bad (2 ratings) · submitted 1997
A committee is a thing which takes a week to do what one good man can do in an hour.
# · Not So Good (one rating) · submitted 1997
People who never do any more than they get paid for never get paid for any more than they do.
# · Not So Good (2 ratings) · submitted 1997
I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have.
Thomas Jefferson, in Success and Failure and Work and Recreation
<< < 61–80 (156) > >> · Submit an Aphorism · Post a Comment