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  1.  
  2. public class SplittingTest {
  3. public static void main(String[] args){
  4. String[][] result;
  5. String text = "\"Have patience with all things, |but chiefly have patience with yourself. |Saint Francis de Sales\"+"
  6. +"\"Once upon a time, I dreamt I was a butterfly.|...Suddenly I awoke...Now, I do not know whether I |was then a man dreaming I was a butterfly, or whether |I am now a butterfly dreaming that I am a man.|Chuang-Tzu\"+"
  7. +"\"A place for everything, and everything in its place. |Samuel Smiles\"+"
  8. +"\"That it will never come again is what makes life so sweet.|Emily Dickinson\"+"
  9. +"\"Impossible is a word only to be found in the dictionary of fools.|Napoleon Bonaparte \"+"
  10. +"\"Do not worry about your difficulties in Mathematics. |I can assure you mine are still greater. |Albert Einstein\"+"
  11. +"\"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, |adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines.|Ralph Waldo Emerson \"+"
  12. +"\"Beauty is not caused, |It is.|Emily Dickinson \"+"
  13. +"\"What though my winged hours of bliss have been,|Like angel visits, few and far between.|Thomas Campbell \"+"
  14. +"\"Always do right. This will gratify some people |and astonish the rest. |Mark Twain\"+"
  15. +"\"There is only one good, knowledge, |and one evil, ignorance. |Socrates\"+"
  16. +"\"Pure mathematics is, in its way, the poetry of logical ideas.|Albert Einstein\"+"
  17. +"\"Grow old along with me!|The best is yet to be.|The last of life, |for which the first was made.|Robert Browning \"+"
  18. +"\"It is not known precisely where angels dwell|--whether in the air, the void, or the planets.|It has not been God's pleasure |that we should be informed of their abode.|Voltaire\"+"
  19. +"\"One life - a little gleam of Time between two Eternities.|Thomas Carlyle \"+"
  20. +"\"We do not count a man's years until he has nothing else to count.|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  21. +"\"Life is either a daring adventure or nothing.|Helen Keller \"+"
  22. +"\"The highest form of pure thought is in mathematics.|Plato\"+"
  23. +"\"If love were what the rose is,|And I were like the leaf,|Our lives would grow together|In sad or singing weather.|A. C. Swinburne\"+"
  24. +"\"Every word was once a poem.|Ralph Waldo Emerson \"+"
  25. +"\"If a million people believe a foolish thing, |it is still a foolish thing.|Anatole France \"+"
  26. +"\"Science is facts; just as houses are made of stones, |so is science made of facts; but a pile of stones |is not a house and a collection of facts is not |necessarily science. |Henri Poincare \"+"
  27. +"\"It is a good morning exercise for a research scientist |to discard a pet hypothesis every day before breakfast. |It keeps him young. |Konrad Lorenz \"+"
  28. +"\"Patience is the companion of wisdom.|Saint Augustine\"+"
  29. +"\"Men are what their mothers made them.|Ralph Waldo Emerson \"+"
  30. +"\"The mathematical sciences particularly exhibit order, |symmetry, and limitation; and these are the greatest |forms of the beautiful.|Aristotle\"+"
  31. +"\"Peace cannot be achieved through violence, |it can only be attained through understanding.|Albert Einstein\"+"
  32. +"\"The unexamined life is not worth living.|Socrates \"+"
  33. +"\"If I were younger, I'd know more.|James Barrie\"+"
  34. +"\"Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow |of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; |thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.|Bible \"+"
  35. +"\"A thing of beauty is a joy for ever:|Its loveliness increases; it will never|Pass into nothingness; but still will keep |A bower quiet for us, and a sleep |Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing. |John Keats \"+"
  36. +"\"Fear is the main source of superstition, |and one of the main sources of cruelty.|Bertrand Russell\"+"
  37. +"\"We should not forget to entertain strangers, |lest we entertain angels unaware.|Bible\"+"
  38. +"\"For words divide and rend|But silence is most noble till the end.|A. C. Swinburne \"+"
  39. +"\"No man really becomes a fool |until he stops asking questions.|Charles Steinmetz \"+"
  40. +"\"To change your life:|-Start immediately|-Do it flamboyantly|-No exceptions|William James \"+"
  41. +"\"The greatest pleasure in life is to do what people |say you cannot do.|Walter Bagehot \"+"
  42. +"\"Rest not! Life is sweeping by: |Go and dare before you die.|Something mighty and sublime, |Leave behind to conquer time.|Goethe \"+"
  43. +"\"Beware of the half truth. |You may have gotten hold of the wrong half.|Anon \"+"
  44. +"\"Let the stoics say what they please, we do not eat |for the good of living, but because the meat is |savory and the appetite is keen.|Ralph Waldo Emerson \"+"
  45. +"\"Happy, happy Christmas, that can win us back to the|delusions of our childhood days, recall to the |old man the pleasures of his youth, and transport|the traveler back to his own fireside and quiet home!|Charles Dickens \"+"
  46. +"\"My delight and thy delight|Walking, like two angels white,|In the gardens of the night.|Robert Bridges\"+"
  47. +"\"Hatred paralyzes life; love releases it.|Hatred confuses life; love harmonizes it. |Hatred darkens life; love illuminates it.|Martin Luther King\"+"
  48. +"\"Fools admire, but men of sense approve.|Alexander Pope \"+"
  49. +"\"Life began with waking up and loving my mother's face.|George Eliot \"+"
  50. +"\"The apprenticeship of difficulty is one which |the greatest of men have had to serve.|Samuel Smiles\"+"
  51. +"\"The Lord is my light and my salvation;|whom shall I fear?|The Lord is the strength of my life;|of whom shall I be afraid?|Bible \"+"
  52. +"\"To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same |as to be right in doing it. |G. K. Chesterton\"+"
  53. +"\"There is no need to go to India or anywhere else to find |peace. You will find that deep place of silence right |in your room, your garden or even your bathtub. |Elisabeth Kubler-Ross\"+"
  54. +"\"I was born not knowing |and have had only a little time |to change that here and there.|Richard Feynman \"+"
  55. +"\"Knowledge and timber shouldn't be much used |till they are seasoned.|Oliver Wendell Holmes\"+"
  56. +"\"Be glad of life because it gives you the chance |to love and to work and to play and to look up |at the stars.|Henry VanDyke \"+"
  57. +"\"The greatest discovery of my generation is that a human |being can alter his life by altering his attitudes of mind. |William James\"+"
  58. +"\"It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to |entertain a thought without accepting it.|Aristotle\"+"
  59. +"\"I know of no more encouraging fact than the unquestioned |ability of a man to elevate his life by conscious endeavor. |Henry David Thoreau\"+"
  60. +"\"He who loves goodness harbors angels, |reveres reverence, and lives with God.|Ralph Waldo Emerson \"+"
  61. +"\"Perhaps the most valuable result of all education is the |ability to make yourself do the thing you have to do, |when it ought to be done, whether you like it or not...|Thomas H. Huxley\"+"
  62. +"\"Toil to make yourself remarkable |by some talent or other. |Seneca\"+"
  63. +"\"See I am sending an angel ahead of you |to guard you along the way.|Bible\"+"
  64. +"\"The first of April, some do say,|Is set apart for All Fools' Day.|But why the people call it so,|Nor I, nor they themselves do know.|But on this day are people sent|On purpose for pure merriment.|Anon\"+"
  65. +"\"In every man's heart there is a secret nerve |that answers to the vibrations of beauty.|Christopher Morley \"+"
  66. +"\"I feel my immortality oversweep all pains, all tears, |all time, all fears, - and peal, like the eternal |thunders of the deep, into my ears, this truth, |- thou livest forever!|Byron\"+"
  67. +"\"A fool and his words are soon parted.|William Shenstone \"+"
  68. +"\"A man is not old until his regrets take the place of dreams.|John Barrymore\"+"
  69. +"\"The friendly cow all red and white,|I love with all my heart:|She gives me cream with all her might|To eat with apple-tart.|Robert Louis Stevenson\"+"
  70. +"\"To a toad, what is beauty? A female with two pop-eyes, |a wide mouth, yellow belly and spotted back.|Voltaire \"+"
  71. +"\"The reason angels can fly is because |they take themselves lightly.|G. K. Chesterton \"+"
  72. +"\"When I get a little money, I buy books. |And if there is any left over, I buy food.|Desiderius Erasmus \"+"
  73. +"\"Sir, I admit your general rule, |That every poet is a fool: |But you yourself may serve to show it, |That every fool is not a poet.|Matthew Prior \"+"
  74. +"\"I'll love you, dear, I'll love you|Till China and Africa meet,|And the river jumps over the mountain|And the salmon sing in the street.|W. H. Auden \"+"
  75. +"\"I will honor Christmas in my heart and try to |keep it all the year.|Charles Dickens \"+"
  76. +"\"The longer I live, the more beautiful life becomes.|Frank Lloyd Wright\"+"
  77. +"\"One can say everything best over a meal.|George Eliot \"+"
  78. +"\"Short words are best and the old words |when short are best of all.|Winston Churchill\"+"
  79. +"\"One cannot collect all the beautiful shells on the beach.|Anne Morrow Lindbergh\"+"
  80. +"\"One must ask children and birds how |cherries and strawberries taste.|Goethe\"+"
  81. +"\"Do not be too timid and squeamish about your actions. |All life is an experiment.|Ralph Waldo Emerson \"+"
  82. +"\"Variety's the very spice of life, |That gives it all its flavor.|William Cowper \"+"
  83. +"\"We shall find peace. We shall hear the angels, |we shall see the sky sparkling with diamonds.|Anton Chekhov\"+"
  84. +"\"Life is real! Life is earnest!|And the grave is not its goal;|Dust thou art, to dust returnest,|Was not spoken of the soul.|H. W. Longfellow \"+"
  85. +"\"Life will always be to a large extent |what we ourselves make it. |Samuel Smiles\"+"
  86. +"\"Never lose a chance of saying a kind word.|W. M. Thackeray \"+"
  87. +"\"Mother: the most beautiful word on the lips of mankind.|Kahlil Gibran\"+"
  88. +"\"Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,|Old Times is still a-flying:|And this same flower that smiles today,|Tomorrow will be dying.|Robert Herrick \"+"
  89. +"\"Education is simply the soul of a society as |it passes from one generation to another. |G. K. Chesterton\"+"
  90. +"\"Have courage for the great sorrows of life and patience |for the small ones; and when you have laboriously |accomplished your daily task, go to sleep in peace. |God is awake. |Victor Hugo\"+"
  91. +"\"I believe that a scientist looking at nonscientific |problems is just as dumb as the next guy. |Richard Feynman\"+"
  92. +"\"Education... has produced a vast population able to read |but unable to distinguish what is worth reading. |G. M. Trevelyan\"+"
  93. +"\"How many a man has dated a new era in his life |from the reading of a book.|Henry David Thoreau\"+"
  94. +"\"Man cannot aspire if he looked down; |if he rise, he must look up.|Samuel Smiles\"+"
  95. +"\"The moment a little boy is concerned with which |is a jay and which is a sparrow, he can no longer |see the birds or hear them sing.|Eric Berne\"+"
  96. +"\"Nothing more strongly arouses our disgust than |cannibalism, yet we make the same impression on |Buddhists and vegetarians, for we feed on babies, |though not our own. |Robert Louis Stevenson\"+"
  97. +"\"I believe that mathematical reality lies outside us, |that our function is to discover or observe it, and |that the theorems which we prove, and which we |describe grandiloquently as our 'creations', are |simply the notes of our observations.|G. H. Hardy\"+"
  98. +"\"Life is a spell so exquisite that everything |conspires to break it.|Emily Dickinson \"+"
  99. +"\"The question is this: Is man an ape or an angel? |I am on the side of the angels.|Benjamin Disraeli \"+"
  100. +"\"Life, like a dome of many-colored glass,|Stains the white radiance of eternity.|P. B. Shelley \"+"
  101. +"\"All truths are easy to understand once they are |discovered; the point is to discover them. |Galileo Galilei\"+"
  102. +"\"The greatest pleasure of a dog is that you may |make a fool of yourself with him, and not only |will he not scold you, but he will make a fool |of himself too.|Samuel Butler \"+"
  103. +"\"To be what we are, and to become what we are |capable of becoming is the only end of life. |Robert Louis Stevenson\"+"
  104. +"\"A scientist in his laboratory is not only a technician: |he is also a child placed before natural phenomena |which impress him like a fairy tale. |Marie Curie\"+"
  105. +"\"I show you doubt, to prove that faith exists. |Robert Browning \"+"
  106. +"\"Animals are my friends...and I don't eat my friends.|George Bernard Shaw \"+"
  107. +"\"Life can only be understood backward, |but it must be lived forward.|Soren Kierkegaard \"+"
  108. +"\"Man does not live by words alone, despite the |fact that sometimes he has to eat them. |Adlai Stevenson\"+"
  109. +"\"I find television very educating. |Every time somebody turns on the set, |I go into the other room and read a book. |Grouch Marx\"+"
  110. +"\"Perfect as the wing of a bird may be, it will never |enable the bird to fly if unsupported by the air. |Facts are the air of science. Without them |a man of science can never rise. |Ivan Pavlov\"+"
  111. +"\"They can conquer who believe they can. |Virgil\"+"
  112. +"\"The reason birds can fly and we can't is simply |that they have perfect faith, for faith is |necessary to have wings.|James M. Barrie \"+"
  113. +"\"They dined on mince, and slices of quince,|Which they ate with a runcible spoon;|And hand in hand, on the edge of the sand,|They danced by the light of the moon.|Edward Lear\"+"
  114. +"\"We make a living by what we get, |but we make a life by what we give.|Winston Churchill \"+"
  115. +"\"I like mathematics because it is not human and has |nothing particular to do with this planet or with |the whole accidental universe - because, like |Spinoza's God, it won't love us in return.|Bertrand Russell\"+"
  116. +"\"The true sign of intelligence is not knowledge but imagination.|Albert Einstein\"+"
  117. +"\"Your only obligation in any lifetime is to be true to yourself.|Richard Bach \"+"
  118. +"\"The strongest of all warriors are these two - |Time and Patience.|Leo Tolstoy \"+"
  119. +"\"Older men declare war. |But it is the youth that must fight and die.|Herbert Hoover \"+"
  120. +"\"We hope that, when the insects take over the world, |they will remember with gratitude how we took |them along on all our picnics.|Richard Vaughan \"+"
  121. +"\"A man of my spiritual intensity does not eat corpses.|George Bernard Shaw \"+"
  122. +"\"The golden moments in the stream of life rush past us and |we see nothing but sand; the angels come to visit |us, and we only know them when they are gone.|George Elliot \"+"
  123. +"\"Lost wealth may be replaced by industry, lost knowledge |by study, lost health by temperance or medicine, |but lost time is gone forever. |Samuel Smiles\"+"
  124. +"\"Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. |We have guided missiles and misguided men. |Martin Luther King\"+"
  125. +"\"We could never learn to be brave and patient, |if there were only joy in the world. |Helen Keller\"+"
  126. +"\"An education isn't how much you have committed to memory, |or even how much you know. It's being able to |differentiate between what you do know and what you don't. |Anatole France\"+"
  127. +"\"The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new |landscapes but in having new eyes. |Marcel Proust\"+"
  128. +"\"The whole problem with the world is that fools and |fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but |wiser people so full of doubts. |Bertrand Russell\"+"
  129. +"\"He who never made a mistake never made a discovery. |Samuel Smiles\"+"
  130. +"\"Death is as certain for that which is born, |as birth is for that which is dead. |Grieve not, therefore, for it.|The Gita\"+"
  131. +"\"The reason why so little is done, is generally because |so little is attempted.|Samuel Smiles\"+"
  132. +"\"Life engenders life. |Energy creates energy. |It is by spending oneself |that one becomes rich. |Sarah Benhardt\"+"
  133. +"\"I have always eaten animal flesh with a somewhat |guilty conscience. |Albert Einstein \"+"
  134. +"\"War does not determine who is right - only who is left.|Bertrand Russell \"+"
  135. +"\"Death and sorrow will be the companions of our journey; |hardship our garment; |constancy and valor our only shield.|We must be united, |we must be undaunted, |we must be inflexible.|Winston Churchill \"+"
  136. +"\"The bird of paradise alights only on the hand |that does not grasp.|John Berry \"+"
  137. +"\"What is so rare as a day in June? |Then, if ever, come perfect days.|James Russell Lowell \"+"
  138. +"\"When you're through changing, you're through. |Bruce Barton\"+"
  139. +"\"Yes, we have to divide up our time like that, |between our politics and our equations. But to me |our equations are far more important, for politics |are only a matter of present concern. |A mathematical equation stands forever.|Albert Einstein\"+"
  140. +"\"Hurt no living thing:|Ladybird, nor butterfly,|Nor moth with dusty wing|Christina Rossetti \"+"
  141. +"\"Men are equal; it is not birth but virtue that |makes the difference.|Voltaire\"+"
  142. +"\"If I can stop one heart from breaking|I shall not live in vain;|Emily Dickinson\"+"
  143. +"\"God always takes the simplest way.|Albert Einstein\"+"
  144. +"\"If we value the pursuit of knowledge, we must be free to |follow wherever that search may lead us. The free |mind is not a barking dog, to be tethered on a |ten-foot chain. |Adlai Stevenson\"+"
  145. +"\"You may be disappointed if you fail, |but you are doomed if you don't try.|Beverly Sills\"+"
  146. +"\"Our birth is nothing but our death begun, |as tapers waste the moment they take fire.|Edward Young\"+"
  147. +"\"When I'm working on a problem, I never think about beauty. |I think only how to solve the problem. But when I have |finished, if the solution is not beautiful, I know |it is wrong.|R. Buckminster Fuller\"+"
  148. +"\"It was a book to kill time for those who like it better dead. |Dame Rose Macaulay\"+"
  149. +"\"How doth the little busy bee|Improve each shining hour,|And gather honey all the day|From every opening flower!|Isaac Watts \"+"
  150. +"\"How doth the little crocodile|Improve his shining tail,|And pour the waters of the Nile|On every golden scale!|Lewis Carroll\"+"
  151. +"\"The great aim of education is not knowledge but action. |Herbert Spencer\"+"
  152. +"\"Oh, London is a man's town, there's power in the air;|And Paris is a woman's town, with flowers in her hair;|And it's sweet to dream in Venice, and it's great to study Rome;|But when it comes to living, there is no place like home.|Henry Van Dyke\"+"
  153. +"\"This is not a novel to be tossed aside lightly. |It should be thrown with great force. |Dorothy Parker\"+"
  154. +"\"I do not want to die... until I have faithfully made |the most of my talent and cultivated the seed |that was placed in me until the last small |twig has grown.|Kathe Kollwitz\"+"
  155. +"\"For God hates utterly |The bray of bragging tongues. |Sophocles\"+"
  156. +"\"Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.|Albert Einstein\"+"
  157. +"\"Thirty days hath September,|April, June, and November,|February has twenty-eight alone,|All the rest have thirty-one;|Excepting leap year,- that's the time|When February's days are twenty-nine.|Anon\"+"
  158. +"\"Man is the only animal that can remain on |friendly terms with the victims he intends |to eat until he eats them.|Samuel Butler\"+"
  159. +"\"When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that |something is possible, he is almost certainly right. |When he states that something is impossible, he is |very probably wrong.|Arthur C. Clarke\"+"
  160. +"\"You see things; and you say, 'Why?' But I dream things |that never were; and I say, 'Why not?' |George Bernard Shaw\"+"
  161. +"\"Our patience will achieve more than our force. |Edmund Burke\"+"
  162. +"\"Daffodils,|That come before the swallow dares, and take|The winds of March with beauty.|William Shakespeare \"+"
  163. +"\"Abortion is advocated only by persons |who have themselves been born.|Ronald Reagan \"+"
  164. +"\"The bitterest tears shed over graves |are for words left unsaid |and deeds left undone.|Harriet Beecher Stowe \"+"
  165. +"\"Human beings have an inalienable right |to invent themselves. |Germaine Greer\"+"
  166. +"\"For he who fights and runs away|May live to fight another day;|But he who is in battle slain|Can never rise and fight again.|Oliver Goldsmith \"+"
  167. +"\"There is no mistake so great |as that of being always right.|Samuel Butler \"+"
  168. +"\"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human |stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.|Albert Einstein\"+"
  169. +"\"The physician can bury his mistakes but the architect |can only advise his client to plant vines.|Frank Lloyd Wright \"+"
  170. +"\"I fear that I have not got much to say about Canada, |not having seen much; |what I got by going to Canada was a cold.|Henry David Thoreau\"+"
  171. +"\"Let us take things as we find them: let us not attempt |to distort them into what they are not. We cannot make |facts. All our wishing cannot change them. We must use them. |Cardinal Newman\"+"
  172. +"\"To accomplish great things, we must dream as well as act. |Anatole France\"+"
  173. +"\"The love of learning, the sequestered nooks, |And all the sweet serenity of books. |H. W. LongFellow\"+"
  174. +"\"The butterfly counts not months but moments, |and has time enough.|Rabindranath Tagore \"+"
  175. +"\"Never think that war, no matter how necessary, |nor how justified, is not a crime.|Ernest Hemingway \"+"
  176. +"\"Anyone who has been to an English public school |will feel comparatively at home in prison.|Evelyn Waugh \"+"
  177. +"\"Never murder a man who is committing suicide.|Woodrow Wilson\"+"
  178. +"\"Archimedes will be remembered when Aeschylus is forgotten, |because languages die and mathematical ideas do not.|'Immortality' may be a silly word, but probably a |mathematician has the best chance of whatever it may mean.|G. H. Hardy\"+"
  179. +"\"There is nothing which at once affects a man so much |and so little as his own death.|Samuel Butler \"+"
  180. +"\"We must not forget that when radium was discovered |no one knew that it would prove useful in hospitals. |Marie Curie\"+"
  181. +"\"Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has seen |and thinking what nobody has thought. |Albert von Szent-Gyorgyi\"+"
  182. +"\"Men are born to succeed, not fail. |Henry David Thoreau\"+"
  183. +"\"An angel; or, if not,|An earthly paragon.|William Shakespeare \"+"
  184. +"\"Patience serves as a protection against wrongs |as clothes do against cold. |Leonardo da Vinci\"+"
  185. +"\"Nothing seems to please a fly so much |as to be taken for a currant; |and if it can be baked in a cake |and palmed off on the unwary, |it dies happy. |Mark Twain \"+"
  186. +"\"Faithless is he that says farewell when the road darkens.|J. R. R. Tolkien\"+"
  187. +"\"Philosophy will clip an angel's wings.|John Keats \"+"
  188. +"\"Children are the living messages we send |to a time we will not see. |John W. Whitehead \"+"
  189. +"\"In order to see birds it is necessary |to become part of the silence.|Robert Lynd\"+"
  190. +"\"We call them dumb animals, and so they are, for |they cannot tell us how they feel, but they do |not suffer less because they have no words. |Anna Sewell\"+"
  191. +"\"I prefer to be a dreamer among the humblest, |with visions to be realized, than lord among |those without dreams and desires. |Kahlil Gibran \"+"
  192. +"\"Where is human nature so weak as in the bookstore?|Henry Ward Beecher\"+"
  193. +"\"All God's angels come to us disguised.|James Russell Lowell \"+"
  194. +"\"If at first, the idea is not absurd, |then there is no hope for it. |Albert Einstein\"+"
  195. +"\"People have now-a-days got a strange opinion that |everything should be taught by lectures. Now, I |cannot see that lectures can do so much as reading |the books from which the lectures are taken.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  196. +"\"The lark at break of day arising|From sullen earth, sings hymns at heaven's gate.|William Shakespeare \"+"
  197. +"\"When one has tasted watermelon |he knows what the angels eat.|Mark Twain \"+"
  198. +"\"Make the most of yourself, |for that is all there is of you.|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  199. +"\"The wisest men follow their own direction.|Euripides\"+"
  200. +"\"When I play with my cat, who knows if I am not a |pastime for her more than she is to me?|de Montaigne \"+"
  201. +"\"Depend upon it, sir, when a man knows |he is to be hanged in a fortnight, |it concentrates his mind wonderfully.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  202. +"\"A man does not have to be an angel in order to be saint.|Albert Schweitzer \"+"
  203. +"\"Reality is merely an illusion, |although a very persistent one.|Albert Einstein\"+"
  204. +"\"College isn't the place to go for ideas.|Helen Keller \"+"
  205. +"\"We never miss the music |until the sweet voiced bird has flown.|O. Henry \"+"
  206. +"\"Genius is one per cent inspiration, |ninety-nine per cent perspiration. |Thomas Edison\"+"
  207. +"\"To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive.|Robert Louis Stevenson\"+"
  208. +"\"Exercise!! I never heard that he used any: |he might, for aught I know, walk to the alehouse; |but I believe he was always carried home again.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  209. +"\"You may have tangible wealth untold:|Caskets of jewels and coffers of gold.|Richer than I you can never be|I had a Mother who read to me.|Strickland Gillilan\"+"
  210. +"\"Energy is eternal delight.|William Blake\"+"
  211. +"\"I want to know how God created this world. I am not |interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum |of this or that element. I want to know His thoughts; |the rest are details.|Albert Einstein\"+"
  212. +"\"We think caged birds sing, when indeed they cry. |John Webster \"+"
  213. +"\"I never saw a Purple Cow,|I never hope to see one;|But I can tell you, anyhow,|I'd rather see than be one!|Gelett Burgess\"+"
  214. +"\"Earth has one angel less and heaven one more, |since yesterday.|Nathaniel Hawthorne \"+"
  215. +"\"Use what talent you possess: the woods would be |very silent if no birds sang except those that sang best.|Henry Van Dyke\"+"
  216. +"\"The secret of joy in work is contained in one word |- excellence. To know how to do something well |is to enjoy it.|Pearl S. Buck\"+"
  217. +"\"An expert is a person who has made all the mistakes |that can be made in a very narrow field.|Niels Bohr\"+"
  218. +"\"I hate quotations. Tell me what you know.|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  219. +"\"Success is the ability to go from one failure to |another with no loss of enthusiasm.|Winston Churchill\"+"
  220. +"\"My definition of a free society is a society |where it is safe to be unpopular.|Adlai Stevenson\"+"
  221. +"\"Habit is habit and not to be flung out of the window |by any man, but coaxed downstairs a step at a time.|Mark Twain\"+"
  222. +"\"Mistakes are the portals of discovery. |James Joyce\"+"
  223. +"\"I think we ought always to entertain our opinions |with some measure of doubt. I shouldn't wish people |dogmatically to believe any philosophy, not even mine.|Bertrand Russell\"+"
  224. +"\"Just think of the tragedy of teaching children not to doubt.|Clarence Darrow\"+"
  225. +"\"A friend is one before whom I may think aloud. |Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  226. +"\"A robin red breast in a cage|Puts all heaven in a rage.|William Blake \"+"
  227. +"\"Sir, I have found you an argument; |but I am not obliged to find you an understanding.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  228. +"\"Who ran to help me when I fell,|And would some pretty story tell,|Or kiss the place to make it well?|My mother.|Jane Taylor \"+"
  229. +"\"Hold fast to dreams,|For if dreams die|Life is a broken-winged bird,|That cannot fly.|Langston Hughes \"+"
  230. +"\"Genius might be described as a supreme capacity for |getting its possessors into trouble of all kinds.|Samuel Butler\"+"
  231. +"\"Always listen to experts. |They'll tell you what can't be done and why. |Then do it.|Robert Heinlein\"+"
  232. +"\"Experience is not what happens to a man; |it is what a man does with what happens to him.|Aldous Huxley\"+"
  233. +"\"A feather in the hand is better |than a bird in the air.|George Herbert \"+"
  234. +"\"Sir, a woman's preaching is like a dog's walking |on his hind legs. It is not done well; but you are |surprised to find it done at all.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  235. +"\"It is easy in the world to live after the world's |opinion; it is easy in solitude to live after our |own; but the great man is he who in the midst |of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the |independence of solitude.|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  236. +"\"I am interested in mathematics only as a creative art.|G. H. Hardy\"+"
  237. +"\"If your morals make you dreary, depend on it, |they are wrong.|Robert Louis Stevenson\"+"
  238. +"\"Every man that has ever undertaken to instruct others |can tell what slow advances he has been able to make, |and how much patience it requires to recall vagrant |inattention, to stimulate sluggish indifference, and to |rectify absurd misapprehension.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  239. +"\"Finally, two days ago, I succeeded - not on account |of my hard efforts, but by the grace of the Lord. |Like a sudden flash of lightning, the riddle was solved. |I am unable to say what was the conducting thread |that connected what I previously knew with what made |my success possible.|Gauss\"+"
  240. +"\"If the world should blow itself up, the last |audible voice would be that of an expert |saying it can't be done.|Peter Ustinov\"+"
  241. +"\"No one appreciates the very special genius |of your conversation as a dog does.|Christopher Morley\"+"
  242. +"\"A hero is no braver than an ordinary man, |but he is braver five minutes longer.|Ralph Waldo Emerson \"+"
  243. +"\"We can have facts without thinking |but we cannot have thinking without facts. |John Dewey\"+"
  244. +"\"I saw the angel in the marble and I just chiseled |until I set him free.|Michelangelo \"+"
  245. +"\"What is written without effort |is in general read without pleasure.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  246. +"\"Energy and persistence conquer all things.|Benjamin Franklin\"+"
  247. +"\"If a dog jumps in your lap, it is because he is |fond of you; but if a cat does the same thing, |it is because your lap is warmer.|Alfred North Whitehead\"+"
  248. +"\"Every blade of grass has an angel |that bends over it and whispers, 'grow! grow!'|The Talmud \"+"
  249. +"\"Alas, Madam! How few books are there of which one |can ever possibly arrive at the last page. |Samuel Johnson\"+"
  250. +"\"The man, who has seen the rising moon break out of |the clouds at midnight, has been present like |an archangel at the creation of light |and of the world.|Ralph Waldo Emerson \"+"
  251. +"\"I remember once going to see him (the great Indian |mathematician Ramanujan) when he was lying ill at |Putney. I had ridden in taxi cab number 1729 and |remarked that the number seemed to me rather a dull |one, and that I hoped it was not an unfavorable omen. |'No,' he replied, 'it is a very interesting number; |it is the smallest number expressible as the sum |of two cubes in two different ways.'|G. H. Hardy\"+"
  252. +"\"Life is good for only two things, |discovering mathematics and teaching mathematics|Poisson\"+"
  253. +"\"Beauty is truth, truth beauty,-that is all|Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.|John Keats \"+"
  254. +"\"All I have seen teaches me to trust the Creator |for all I have not seen.|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  255. +"\"In great mathematics there is a very high degree of |unexpectedness, combined with inevitability and economy.|G. H. Hardy\"+"
  256. +"\"Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.|Aldous Huxley\"+"
  257. +"\"The human mind treats a new idea the same |way the body treats a strange protein;|it rejects it. |P. B. Medawar\"+"
  258. +"\"The bluebird carries the sky on its back.|Henry David Thoreau\"+"
  259. +"\"Perhaps the most surprising thing about mathematics |is that it is so surprising. The rules which we |make up at the beginning seem ordinary and inevitable, |but it is impossible to foresee their consequences. |These have only been found out by long study, |extending over many centuries.|E. C. Titchmarsh\"+"
  260. +"\"What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, |the master calls a butterfly.|Richard Bach \"+"
  261. +"\"Two things are bad for the heart |... running up stairs and running down people.|Bernard M. Baruch\"+"
  262. +"\"A fly, Sir, may sting a stately horse and make |him wince; but one is but an insect, and |the other is a horse still.|Samuel Johnson \"+"
  263. +"\"Reductio ad absurdum, which Euclid loved so much, is |one of a mathematician's finest weapons. It is a |far finer gambit than any chess play: a chess player |may offer the sacrifice of a pawn or even a piece, |but a mathematician offers the game.|G. H. Hardy\"+"
  264. +"\"No matter how much cats fight, |there always seem to be plenty of kittens.|Abraham Lincoln \"+"
  265. +"\"A truth that's told with bad intent|Beats all the lies you can invent.|William Blake \"+"
  266. +"\"All our progress is an unfolding, like a vegetable bud. |You have first an instinct, then an opinion, |then a knowledge as the plant has root, bud, |and fruit. Trust the instinct to the end, |though you can render no reason.|Robert Louis Stevenson\"+"
  267. +"\"What is defeat? Nothing but education; |nothing but the first step to something better.|Wendell Philips\"+"
  268. +"\"Any fool can criticize, condemn, and complain |- and most fools do.|Dale Carnegie\"+"
  269. +"\"Education is what survives when what has been learned |has been forgotten.|B. F. Skinner\"+"
  270. +"\"Whoever is careless with the truth in small matters |cannot be trusted with important matters. |Albert Einstein \"+"
  271. +"\"Do what you feel in your heart to be right |- for you'll be criticized anyway. You'll be |damned if you do, and damned if you don't.|Eleanor Roosevelt\"+"
  272. +"\"I read in the proof sheets of Hardy on Ramanujan: |'As someone said, each of the positive integers |was one of his personal friends.' My reaction was, |'I wonder who said that; I wish I had.' |In the next proof-sheets I read (what now stands), |'It was Littlewood who said...'|J. E. Littlewood\"+"
  273. +"\"Dreams come true. Without that possibility, |nature would not incite us to have them.|John Updike\"+"
  274. +"\"Education's purpose is to replace |an empty mind with an open one.|Malcolm Forbes\"+"
  275. +"\"There was a pause - just long enough |for an angel to pass, flying slowly.|Ronald Firbank \"+"
  276. +"\"Paradise Lost is one of the books which the reader |admires and puts down, and forgets to take up again. |None ever wished it longer than it is.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  277. +"\"When I was one and twenty|I heard a wise man say,|Give crowns and pounds and guineas|But not your heart away.|A. E. Housman\"+"
  278. +"\"...it is more important to have beauty in one's equations |than to have them fit experiment. |P. A. M. Dirac\"+"
  279. +"\"The most exciting phrase to hear in science, |the one that heralds new discoveries, is not |'Eureka!' (I found it!) but 'That's funny ...'|Isaac Asimov\"+"
  280. +"\"To have doubted one's own first principles |is the mark of a civilized man.|Oliver Wendell Holmes\"+"
  281. +"\"Beware when the great God lets loose |a thinker on this planet.|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  282. +"\"There is no scorn more profound, or on the whole more |justifiable, than that of the men who make for the |men who explain. Exposition, criticism, appreciation, |is work for second-rate minds.|G. H. Hardy\"+"
  283. +"\"The simple step of a courageous individual is not |to take part in the lie. One word of truth |outweighs the world.|Alexander Solzhenitsyn \"+"
  284. +"\"The more original a discovery, |the more obvious it seems afterwards.|Arthur Koestler\"+"
  285. +"\"Education is the best provision for old age.|Aristotle\"+"
  286. +"\"Mathematics is the tool specially suited for dealing |with abstract concepts of any kind and there is no |limit to its power in this field.|P. A. M. Dirac\"+"
  287. +"\"Peace if possible, but truth at any rate.|Martin Luther \"+"
  288. +"\"A man should keep his little brain attic stocked |with all the furniture that he is likely to need, |and the rest he can put away in the lumber |room of his library, where he can get it |if he wants it.|Sir Arthur Conan Doyle \"+"
  289. +"\"Criticism is prejudice made plausible.|H. L. Mencken\"+"
  290. +"\"...he seemed to approach the grave as an hyperbolic curve |approaches a line, less directly as he got nearer, till it |was doubtful if he would ever reach it at all.|Thomas Hardy\"+"
  291. +"\"Better a bald head than none at all.|Austin O'Malley \"+"
  292. +"\"A friend is a gift you give yourself.|Robert Louis Stevenson\"+"
  293. +"\"Those who dream by day are cognizant of many things |which escape those who dream only by night.|Edgar Allan Poe\"+"
  294. +"\"I learned very early the difference between knowing |the name of something and knowing something.|Richard Feynman\"+"
  295. +"\"Children are all foreigners.|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  296. +"\"Our truest life is when we are in dreams awake.|Henry David Thoreau \"+"
  297. +"\"Mother is the name for God |in the lips and hearts of little children.|W. M. Thackeray \"+"
  298. +"\"Ye shall know the truth, |and the truth shall make you mad.|Aldous Huxley \"+"
  299. +"\"Only the educated are free.|Epictetus\"+"
  300. +"\"One of the lessons of history is that nothing is often |a good thing to do and always a clever thing to say.|Will Durant\"+"
  301. +"\"Conceit is God's gift to little men.|Bruce Barton\"+"
  302. +"\"Change lays not her hand upon truth.|A. C. Swinburne \"+"
  303. +"\"All truth, in the long run, is only common sense clarified.|Thomas Henry Huxley\"+"
  304. +"\"We need men who can dream of things that never were.|John F. Kennedy\"+"
  305. +"\"...most people are so frightened of the name of mathematics |that they are ready, quite unaffectedly, to exaggerate their |own mathematical stupidity.|G. H. Hardy\"+"
  306. +"\"Guard well within yourself that treasure, kindness. |Know how to give without hesitation,|how to lose without regret, |how to acquire without meanness.|George Sand\"+"
  307. +"\"What is the first business of one who practises philosophy? |To get rid of self-conceit. For it is impossible for |anyone to begin to learn that which |he thinks he already knows.|Epictetus\"+"
  308. +"\"This above all; to thine own self be true.|William Shakespeare\"+"
  309. +"\"Why, sir, if you are to have but one book with you |upon a journey, let it be a book of science. |When you have read through a book of entertainment, |you know it, and it can do no more for you; |but a book of science is inexhaustible.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  310. +"\"God in His wisdom made the fly|And then forgot to tell us why.|Ogden Nash \"+"
  311. +"\"The mathematician's patterns, like the painter's or |the poet's must be beautiful; the ideas, like the |colours or the words must fit together in a |harmonious way. Beauty is the first test: there |is no permanent place in this world |for ugly mathematics.|G. H. Hardy\"+"
  312. +"\"The heart has reasons of which reason has no knowledge.|Blaise Pascal\"+"
  313. +"\"Do not go where the path may lead, go instead |where there is no path and leave a trail.|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  314. +"\"One of the advantages of being disorderly |is that one is constantly making exciting discoveries.|A. A. Milne\"+"
  315. +"\"Finish each day and be done with it. |You have done what you could.|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  316. +"\"Keep true to the dreams of thy youth.|Friedrich von Schiller\"+"
  317. +"\"I like the dreams of the future better |than the history of the past.|Thomas Jefferson \"+"
  318. +"\"Truth is as impossible to be soiled |by any outward touch |as the sunbeam.|John Milton \"+"
  319. +"\"Compassion is the basis of all morality.|Arthur Schopenhauer\"+"
  320. +"\"Woe to him who teaches men faster |than they can learn.|Will Durant\"+"
  321. +"\"Men are not prisoners of fate, |but only prisoners of their own minds.|Franklin D. Roosevelt\"+"
  322. +"\"In the field of observation, |chance favors only the prepared mind.|Louis Pasteur\"+"
  323. +"\"Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth.|Henry David Thoreau \"+"
  324. +"\"When you have eliminated the impossible, |whatever remains, however improbable, |must be the truth.|Sir Arthur Conan Doyle \"+"
  325. +"\"Character is like a tree and reputation like its shadow. |The shadow is what we think of it; |the tree is the real thing.|Abraham Lincoln\"+"
  326. +"\"The self is not something ready-made, |but something in continuous formation |through choice of action.|John Dewey\"+"
  327. +"\"Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed |is more important than any one thing.|Abraham Lincoln\"+"
  328. +"\"Seize the moment of excited curiosity on any subject |to solve your doubts; for if you let it pass, the desire |may never return, and you may remain in ignorance.|William Wirtt\"+"
  329. +"\"Courage is the price that Life exacts for granting peace.|Amelia Earhart\"+"
  330. +"\"The highest compact we can make with our fellow is - |'Let there be truth between us two forevermore.'|Ralph Waldo Emerson \"+"
  331. +"\"To be conscious that you are ignorant |is a great step to knowledge.|Benjamin Disraeli \"+"
  332. +"\"That best portion of a good man's life, |His little, nameless, unremembered acts of kindness and of love.|William Wordsworth\"+"
  333. +"\"The love we have in our youth is superficial |compared to the love that an old man has |for his old wife.|Will Durant\"+"
  334. +"\"Mathematics may be defined as the subject in which |we never know what we are talking about, |nor whether what we are saying is true.|Bertrand Russell \"+"
  335. +"\"The greatest of faults, I should say, |is to be conscious of none.|Thomas Carlyle\"+"
  336. +"\"The future belongs to those who believe in |the beauty of their dreams.|Eleanor Roosevelt \"+"
  337. +"\"How much easier it is to be critical |than to be correct.|Benjamin Disraeli\"+"
  338. +"\"Great works are performed, not by strength, |but by perseverance...|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  339. +"\"No pessimist ever discovered the secret of the stars |or sailed an uncharted land, |or opened a new doorway for the human spirit.|Helen Keller \"+"
  340. +"\"I will prepare and some day my chance will come.|Abraham Lincoln\"+"
  341. +"\"If I have ever made any valuable discoveries, it has |been owing more to patient attention, |than to any other talent.|Isaac Newton\"+"
  342. +"\"There is no harm in doubt and scepticism, |for it is through these that new discoveries are made.|Richard Feynman\"+"
  343. +"\"We have less reason to be surprised or offended |when we find others differ from us in opinion, |because we very often differ from ourselves.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  344. +"\"To avoid criticism do nothing, |say nothing, |be nothing.|Elbert Hubbard\"+"
  345. +"\"One doesn't discover new lands without consenting |to lose sight of the shore for a very long time.|Andre Gide\"+"
  346. +"\"The probability that we may fail in the struggle |ought not to deter us from the support of a cause |we believe to be just.|Abraham Lincoln\"+"
  347. +"\"Grown-ups never understand anything for themselves, |and it is tiresome for children to be always |and forever explaining things to them.|Antoine de Saint-Exupery\"+"
  348. +"\"Keep your fears to yourself, |but share your courage with others.|Robert Louis Stevenson\"+"
  349. +"\"Tired mothers find that spanking takes less time |than reasoning and penetrates sooner |to the seat of the memory. |Will Durant\"+"
  350. +"\"Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, |I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on him personally.|Abraham Lincoln\"+"
  351. +"\"Pay no attention to what the critics say... |Remember, a statue has never been set up in honour of a critic! |Jean Sibelius\"+"
  352. +"\"A man used to vicissitudes is not easily dejected.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  353. +"\"I wanted you to see what real courage is, |instead of getting the idea that courage is a |man with a gun in his hand. It's when you know |you're licked before you begin but you begin anyway |and you see it through no matter what.|Harper Lee\"+"
  354. +"\"You cannot run away from a weakness; |you must sometimes fight it out or perish. |And if that be so, why not now, and where you stand?|Robert Louis Stevenson\"+"
  355. +"\"You may deceive all the people part of the time, |and part of the people all the time, |but not all the people all the time.|Abraham Lincoln\"+"
  356. +"\"I do not know what I may appear to the world; |but to myself I seem to have been only like a| boy playing on the seashore, and diverting |myself in now and then finding a smoother |pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, |whilst the great ocean of truth lay|all undiscovered before me.|Isaac Newton\"+"
  357. +"\"Mathematics, rightly viewed, posses not only truth, |but supreme beauty - a beauty cold and austere, |like that of sculpture.|Bertrand Russell\"+"
  358. +"\"People ask for criticism, but they only want praise.|W. Somerset Maugham\"+"
  359. +"\"In mathematics you don't understand things. |You just get used to them.|Johann von Neumann\"+"
  360. +"\"Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics |that it can never be fully learned. |Izaak Walton\"+"
  361. +"\"You cannot escape the responsibility of tomorrow |by evading it today.|Abraham Lincoln\"+"
  362. +"\"Far better it is to dare mighty things, |to win glorious triumphs even though checkered |by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who |neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the |gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat.|Theodore Roosevelt\"+"
  363. +"\"I was always looking outside myself for strength |and confidence, but it comes from within. |It is there all the time.|Anna Freud\"+"
  364. +"\"The true civilization is where every man gives |to every other every right that he claims for himself.|Robert Ingersoll\"+"
  365. +"\"Science without religion is lame, |religion without science is blind.|Albert Einstein\"+"
  366. +"\"In science one tries to tell people, in such a way as |to be understood by everyone, something that |no one ever knew before. But in poetry, |it's the exact opposite.|P. A. M. Dirac\"+"
  367. +"\"Young men should prove theorems, old men should write books. |G. H. Hardy\"+"
  368. +"\"Love and you shall be loved. All love is mathematically just, |as much as the two sides of an algebraic equation.|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  369. +"\"Whatever you are, be a good one.|Abraham Lincoln\"+"
  370. +"\"Have you ever been at sea in a dense fog, when it |seemed as if a tangible white darkness shut you in |and the great ship, tense and anxious, groped her |way toward the shore with plummet and sounding-line, |and you waited with beating heart for something |to happen? I was like that ship before my education began...|Helen Keller\"+"
  371. +"\"There is a time in every man's education when he |arrives at the conviction that envy is ignorance; |that imitation is suicide; that he must take himself |for better for worse as his portion . . .|Ralph Waldo Emerson\"+"
  372. +"\"Few things are impossible to diligence and skill.|Samuel Johnson\"+"
  373. +"\"If knowledge can create problems, it is not through |ignorance that we can solve them.|Isaac Asimov\"+"
  374. +"\"Prejudices, it is well known, are most difficult to |eradicate from the heart whose soil has never been |loosened or fertilized by education; |they grow there, firm as weeds among rocks.|Charlotte Bronte\"+"
  375. +"\"A dead thing can go with the stream, |but only a living thing can go against it.|G. K. Chesterton\"+"
  376. +"\"As for everything else, so for a mathematical theory: |beauty can be perceived but not explained.|Arthur Cayley\"";
  377. System.out.println("\"\\\"+\"");
  378. int x = 0;
  379. while(true){
  380. result = text.split("\"\\\"+\"");
  381. }
  382.  
  383.  
  384. }
  385. }
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