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However greatly we distrust the sincerity of those we converse with, yet still we think they tell more truth to us than to anyone else.
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
Truth
Distrust
Still
Greatly
Think
Sincerity
Thinking
However
Anyone
Tell
Else
Converse
Stills
Converses
More quotes by Francois de La Rochefoucauld
We are all strong enough to bear other men's misfortunes.
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The constancy of sages is nothing but the art of locking up their agitation in their hearts.
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Self-interest makes some people blind, and others sharp-sighted.
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Pride indemnifies itself and loses nothing even when it casts away vanity.
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Flattery is a kind of bad money, to which our vanity gives us currency.
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There are many predicaments in life that one must be a bit crazy to escape from.
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When we exaggerate our friends' tenderness towards us, it is often less from gratitude than from a desire to exhibit our own virtue.
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Too great haste to repay an obligation is a kind of ingratitude.
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It is not always for virtue's sake that women are virtuous.
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Humility is often only feigned submission which people use to render others submissive. It is a subterfuge of pride which lowers itself in order to rise.
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He is a truly virtuous man who wishes always to be open to the observation of honest men.
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Most men expose themselves in battle enough to save their honor, few wish to do so more than sufficiently, or than is necessary to make the design for which they expose themselves succeed.
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Moderation is a fear of falling into that envy and contempt which those who grow giddy with their good fortune quite justly draw upon themselves. It is a vain boasting of the greatness of our mind.
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People's personalities, like buildings, have various facades, some pleasant to view, some not.
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We only confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no big ones.
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Our temper sets a price upon every gift that we receive from fortune.
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The sicknesses of the soul have their ups and downs like those of the body what we take to be a cure is most often merely a respite or change of disease.
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A man often imagines that he acts, when he is acted upon.
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The health of the soul is something we can be no more sure of than that of the body and though a man may seem far from the passions, yet he is in as much danger of falling into them as one in a perfect state of health of having a fit of sickness.
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Gratitude is merely the secret hope of further favors.
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