Maturin Ballou - Pearls of Thought
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- Название:Pearls of Thought
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Clergymen consider this world only as a diligence in which they can travel to another. — Napoleon.
The clergy are as like as peas. — Emerson.
Commander.– The right of commanding is no longer an advantage transmitted by nature like an inheritance; it is the fruit of labors, the price of courage. — Voltaire.
The trident of Neptune is the sceptre of the world. — Antoine Lemierre.
He who rules must humor full as much as he commands. — George Eliot.
Commerce.– She may well be termed the younger sister, for, in all emergencies, she looks to agriculture both for defense and for supply. — Colton.
Commerce defies every wind, outrides every tempest, and invades every zone. — Bancroft.
Common Sense.– If common sense has not the brilliancy of the sun it has the fixity of the stars. — Fernan Caballero.
Communists.– One who has yearnings for equal division of unequal earnings. Idler or bungler, he is willing to fork out his penny and pocket your shilling. — Ebenezer Elliott.
Your leaders wish to level down as far as themselves; but they cannot bear leveling up to themselves. They would all have some people under them; why not then have some people above them. — Johnson.
Communism possesses a language which every people can understand. Its elements are hunger, envy, death. — Heinrich Heine.
Comparison.– All comparisons are odious. — Cervantes.
If we rightly estimate what we call good and evil, we shall find it lies much in comparison. — Locke.
Compassion.– The dew of compassion is a tear. — Byron.
Compensation.– Cloud and rainbow appear together. There is wisdom in the saying of Feltham, that the whole creation is kept in order by discord, and that vicissitude maintains the world. Many evils bring many blessings. Manna drops in the wilderness – corn grows in Canaan. — Willmott.
It is some compensation for great evils that they enforce great lessons. — Bovée.
Complaining.– We do not wisely when we vent complaint and censure. Human nature is more sensible of smart in suffering than of pleasure in rejoicing, and the present endurances easily take up our thoughts. We cry out for a little pain, when we do but smile for a great deal of contentment. — Feltham.
Our condition never satisfies us; the present is always the worst. Though Jupiter should grant his request to each, we should continue to importune him. — Fontaine.
Conceit.– Wind puffs up empty bladders; opinion, fools. — Socrates.
Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? there is more hope of a fool than of him. — Bible.
Nature has sometimes made a fool, but a coxcomb is always of a man's own making. — Addison.
Everything without tells the individual that he is nothing; everything within persuades him that he is everything. — X. Doudan.
Apes look down on men as degenerate specimens of their own race, just as Hollanders regard the German language as a corruption of the Dutch. — Heinrich Heine.
If its colors were but fast colors, self-conceit would be a most comfortable quality. But life is so humbling, mortifying, disappointing to vanity, that a man's great idea of himself gets washed out of him by the time he is forty. — Charles Buxton.
One's self-satisfaction is an untaxed kind of property which it is very unpleasant to find depreciated. — George Eliot.
The pious vanity of man makes him adore his own qualities under the pretense of worshiping those of God. — Bulwer-Lytton.
Confidence.– Confidence imparts a wondrous inspiration to its possessor. It bears him on in security, either to meet no danger, or to find matter of glorious trial. — Milton.
Society is built upon trust, and trust upon confidence of one another's integrity. — South.
Conscience.– Conscience is not law; no, God and reason made the law, and have placed conscience within you to determine. — Sterne.
There are moments when the pale and modest star, kindled by God in simple hearts, which men call conscience, illumines our path with truer light than the flaming comet of genius on its magnificent course. — Mazzini.
No thralls like them that inward bondage have. — Sir P. Sidney.
Some people have no perspective in their conscience. Their moral convictions are the same on all subjects. They are like a reader who speaks every word with equal emphasis. — Beecher.
Conscience enables us not merely to learn the right by experiment and induction, but intuitively and in advance of experiment; so, in addition to the experimental way whereby we learn justice from the facts of human history, we have a transcendental way, and learn it from the facts of human nature, and from immediate consciousness. — Theodore Parker.
A man's own conscience is his sole tribunal; and he should care no more for that phantom "opinion" than he should fear meeting a ghost if he cross the churchyard at dark. — Lytton.
Conscience is a coward, and those faults it has not strength enough to prevent it seldom has justice enough to accuse. — Goldsmith.
To say that we have a clear conscience is to utter a solecism: had we never sinned we should have had no conscience. — Carlyle.
The most miserable pettifogging in the world is that of a man in the court of his own conscience. — Beecher.
Conscience serves us especially to judge of the actions of others. — J. Petit Senn.
It is astonishing how soon the whole conscience begins to unravel if a single stitch drops; one single sin indulged in makes a hole you could put your head through. — Charles Buxton.
A still small voice. — Bible.
Constancy.– A good man it is not mine to see; could I see a man possessed of constancy, that would satisfy me. — Confucius.
Constancy is the chimera of love. — Vauvenargues.
Constancy is the complement of all the other human virtues. — Mazzini.
Contempt.– No sacred fane requires us to submit to contempt. — Goethe.
There is not in human nature a more odious disposition than a proneness to contempt, which is a mixture of pride and ill-nature. Nor is there any which more certainly denotes a bad mind; for in a good and benign temper there can be no room for this sensation. — Fielding.
Contentment.– That happy state of mind, so rarely possessed, in which we can say, "I have enough," is the highest attainment of philosophy. Happiness consists, not in possessing much, but in being content with what we possess. He who wants little always has enough. — Zimmermann.
It is both the curse and blessing of our American life that we are never quite content. We all expect to go somewhere before we die, and have a better time when we get there than we can have at home. The bane of our life is discontent. We say we will work so long, and then we will enjoy ourselves. But we find it just as Thackeray has expressed it. "When I was a boy," he said, "I wanted some taffy – it was a shilling – I hadn't one. When I was a man, I had a shilling, but I didn't want any taffy." — Robert Collyer.
Submission is the only reasoning between a creature and its Maker; and contentment in his will is the best remedy we can apply to misfortunes. — Sir W. Temple.
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