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Vitam Impendere Vero (I consecrate my life to truth).
Baron de Montesquieu
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Baron de Montesquieu
Consecrate
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More quotes by Baron de Montesquieu
Study has been for me the sovereign remedy against all the disappointments of life. I have never known any trouble that an hour's reading would not dissipate.
Baron de Montesquieu
Great commanders write their actions with simplicity because they receive more glory from facts than from words.
Baron de Montesquieu
The false notion of miracles comes of our vanity, which makes us believe we are important enough for the Supreme Being to upset nature on our behalf.
Baron de Montesquieu
The life of man is but a succession of vain hopes and groundless fears.
Baron de Montesquieu
Men in excess of happiness or misery are equally inclined to severity. Witness conquerors and monks! It is mediocrity alone, and a mixture of prosperous and adverse fortune that inspire us with lenity and pity.
Baron de Montesquieu
There should be weeping at a man's birth, not at his death.
Baron de Montesquieu
The less men think, the more they talk.
Baron de Montesquieu
When a government lasts a long while, it deteriorates by insensible degrees. Republics end through luxury, monarchies through poverty.
Baron de Montesquieu
Society is the union of men and not the men themselves.
Baron de Montesquieu
When the [law making] and [law enforcement] powers are united in the same person... there can be no liberty.
Baron de Montesquieu
Success in the majority of circumstances depends on knowing how long it takes to succeed.
Baron de Montesquieu
Republics come to an end by luxurious habits monarchies by poverty.
Baron de Montesquieu
The state is the association of men, and not men themselves the citizen may perish, and the man remain.
Baron de Montesquieu
Political liberty is to be found only in moderate governments.
Baron de Montesquieu
We must have constantly present in our minds the difference between independence and liberty. Liberty is a right of doing whatever the laws permit, and if a citizen could do what they forbid he would no longer be possessed of liberty.
Baron de Montesquieu
In bodies moved, the motion is received, increased, diminished, or lost, according to the relations of the quantity of matter and velocity each diversity is uniformity, each change is constancy.
Baron de Montesquieu
When a government is arrived to that degree of corruption as to be incapable of reforming itself, it would not lose much by being new moulded.
Baron de Montesquieu
Love of the republic in a democracy, is a love of the democracy love of the democracy is that of equality. Love of the democracy is likewise that of frugality.
Baron de Montesquieu
It is clear that in a monarchy, where he who commands the exceution of the laws generally thinks himself above them, there is lessneed of virtue than in a popular government, where the person entrusted with the execution of the laws is sensible of his being subject to their direction.
Baron de Montesquieu
Every man who has power is impelled to abuse it.
Baron de Montesquieu