Nothing is more despicable than a professional talker who uses his words as a quack uses his remedies.
More quotes from Francois Fenelon
Nothing is more despicable than a professional talker who uses his words as a quack uses his remedies.
{mb_by_description:plain}
Genuine good taste consists in saying much in few words, in choosing among our thoughts, in having order and arrangement in what we say, and in speaking with composure.
{mb_by_description:plain}
Little opportunities should be improved.
{mb_by_description:plain}
All wars are civil wars, because all men are brothers.
{mb_by_description:plain}
Exactness and neatness in moderation is a virtue, but carried to extremes narrows the mind.
{mb_by_description:plain}
A good historian is timeless; although he is a patriot, he will never flatter his country in any respect.
{mb_by_description:plain}
Do not make best friends with a melancholy sad soul. They always are heavily loaded, and you must bear half.
{mb_by_description:plain}
There is a set of religious, or rather moral, writings which teach that virtue is the certain road to happiness, and vice to misery in this world. A very wholesome and comfortable doctrine, and to which we have but one objection, namely, that it is not true.
{mb_by_description:plain}
Children are excellent observers, and will often perceive your slightest defects. In general, those who govern children, forgive nothing in them, but everything in themselves.
{mb_by_description:plain}
Had we not faults of our own, we should take less pleasure in complaining of others.
{mb_by_description:plain}
All earthly delights are sweeter in expectation than in enjoyment; but all spiritual pleasures more in fruition than in expectation.
{mb_by_description:plain}
If we were faultless we should not be so much annoyed by the defects of those with whom we associate.
{mb_by_description:plain}