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Steven R. Cope Appalachian Heritage, Volume 32, Number 4, Fall 2004, p. 70 (Article) Published by The University of North Carolina Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aph.2004.0022 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/431047/summary Access provided at 19 Feb 2020 17:43 GMT from JHU Libraries PROVERBS Steven R. Cope #845 A grave man could use some flowers. #851 Better a tent in a holler than a townhouse on a thoroughfare. #852 To the earth, every crumb has value. #853 With the old tobacco barn empty, fall is not the thing it was, and the barn hardly the thing it is. #856 A sunrise from one hill may be a sunset from another, a fact which says nothing about the intelligence of either hill. #857 The stupid things one has done will outnumber one's appendages. #877 Reticence is not a failing; even crickets bless while in hiding. #878 A sweat bee can move a king. #887 Things die daily, but life goes on and on. #892 For one who holds all life sacred, keeping one's lawn mowed is a dilemma. #900 Park in the shade. #909 If you don't do it in this life you won't do it in the next. #925 What
Appalachian Review – University of North Carolina Press
Published: Jan 8, 2014
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