Care Quotes




Care admitted as a guest, quickly turns to be master.
Bovee.

Care is no cure, but rather a corrosive for things that are not to be remedied.
Shakespeare.

Cares are often more difficult to throw off than sorrows; the latter die with time; the former grow upon it.
Richter.

They lose the world who buy it, with much care.
Shakespeare.

Our cares are the mothers not only of our charities and virtues, but of our best joys, and most cheering and enduring pleasures.
Simms.

Put off thy cares with thy clothes; so shall thy rest strengthen thy labor, and so thy labor sweeten thy rest.
Quarles.

To carry care to bed, is to sleep with a pack on your back.
Haliburton.

Providence has given us hope and sleep as a compensation for the many cares of life.
Voltaire.

The cares of to-day are seldom those of tomorrow; and when we lie down at night we may safely say to most of our troubles, “ Yes have done your worst, and we shall see you no more.”
Cowper.

Only man clogs his happiness with care, destroying what is, with thoughts of what may be.
Dryden.

Life’s cares are comforts; such by heaven designed; he that hath none must make them, or be wretched; cares are employment’s; and without employ the soul is on the rack; the rack of rest, to souls most adverse; action all their joy.
Young.

This world has cares enough to plague us; but he who meditates on others woe, shall, in the meditation, lose his own.
Cumberland.

We can easily manage, if we will only taken each day, the burden appointed for it. But the load will be too heavy for us if we carry yesterday’s burden over again today, and then add the burden of the morrow to the weight before we are required to bear it.
John Newton.

“Many of our cares,” says Scott, “are but a morbid way of looking at our privileges.” We let our blessings get mouldy, and then call them curses.
H.W. Beecher.

The every day cares and duties, which men call drudgery, are the weights and counterpoises of the clock of time, giving its pendulum a true vibration, and its hands a regular motion; and when they cease to hang upon the wheels, the pendulum no longer swings, the hands no longer movie, and the clock stands still.
Longfellow.

Anxious care rests on a basis of heathen worldly mindedness, and of heathen misunderstanding of the character off God.
A. Maclaren.

He that takes his cares on himself loads himself in vain with an uneasy burden. I will cast my cares on God; he has bidden me; they cannot burden him.
Bp. Hall

Cares keeps his watch in every old man’s eye; and where care lodges sleep will never lie.
Shakespeare.

Men do not avail themselves of the riches of God’s grace. They love to nurse their cares, and seem as uneasy without some fret as an old friar would be without his hair girdle. They are commanded to cast their cares on the Lord; but even when they attempt it, they do not fail to catch them up again, and think, it meritorious to walk burdned.
H.W. Beecher.

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