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The man that thinks he loves his mistress for her own sake is mightily mistaken.
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
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Francois de La Rochefoucauld
Age: 66 †
Born: 1613
Born: September 15
Died: 1680
Died: March 17
Memoirist
Military Personnel
Writer
Paris
France
François VI
Duc de La Rochefoucauld
Prince de Marcillac
François
Duc de La Rochefoucauld
Men
Thinking
Mightily
Mistress
Mistaken
Thinks
Loves
Sake
More quotes by Francois de La Rochefoucauld
The reason that lovers never weary each other is because they are always talking about themselves.
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One honor won is a surety for more.
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The intellect is always fooled by the heart.
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Some good qualities are like the senses: Those who are entirely deprived of them can have no notion of them.
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Few know how to be old.
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Constancy in love is a perpetual inconstancy which fixes our hearts successively to all the qualities of the person loved--sometimes admiring one and sometimes another above all the rest--so that this constancy roves as far as it can, and is no better than inconstancy, confined within the compass of one person.
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If we took as much pains to be what we ought, as we do to deceive others by disguising what we are we might appear as we are, without being at the trouble of any disguise.
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Nothing is more contagious than example, and no man does any exceeding good or exceeding ill but it spawns new deeds of the same kind. The good we imitate through emulation, the ill through the malignity of our nature, which shame keeps locked up, but example sets free.
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Hope and fear are inseparable. There is no hope without fear, nor any fear without hope.
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What we take for virtue is often but an assemblage of various ambitions and activities that chance, or our own astuteness, have arranged in a certain manner and it is not always out of courage or purity that men are brave, and women chaste.
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Conceit causes more conversation than wit.
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We like to read others but we do not like to be read.
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Man only blames himself in order that he may be praised.
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True bravery is shown by performing without witness what one might be capable of doing before all the world.
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The passions often engender their contraries.
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Ridicule dishonours more than dishonour.
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
Some people displease with merit, and others' very faults and defects are pleasing.
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
The breeding we give young people is ordinarily but an additional self-love, by which we make them have a better opinion of themselves.
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The passions are the only orators that always persuade: they are, as it were, a natural art, the rules of which are infallible and the simplest man with passion is more persuasive than the most eloquent without it.
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It is a mistake to imagine, that the violent passions only, such as ambition and love, can triumph over the rest. Idleness, languid as it is, often masters them all she influences all our designs and actions, and insensibly consumes and destroys both passions and virtues.
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