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An Horse may snapper on four feet. All things wytes that well not fares. All things thrive but thrice. Absence is a shro. Auld sin, new shame. A man cannot thrive except his wife let him. A bairn must creep ere he gang. As long as ye bear the tod, ye man bear up his tail. All overs are ill but over the water. A man may wooe where he will, but wed where is his weard. A mean pot plaid never even.
Efter long mint, never dint. Every man slams the fat sows Arse. Experience may teach a fool. Every man wats best where his own shoe binds him. Efter word comes weard. Foul water slokens fire. Fools are fain of flitting. Falshood made never a fair Hinder-end. Far fowls have fair feathers. Follie is a bonny Dog. Fair heights makes fools fain. Freedome is a fair thing. For a tint thing care not.
The only example of the termination -WARDLY given by this lexicographer is from Donne, where it means TOWARDS the west. Milton does not employ either of these terminations, nor were they known to the Anglo-Saxons, who, however, had adjectives of direction in -AN or -EN, -ern and -weard, the last always meaning the point TOWARDS which motion in supposed, the others that FROM which it proceeds.
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