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Avarice often produces opposite results: there are an infinite number of persons who sacrifice their property to doubtful and distant expectations others mistake great future advantages for small present interests.
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
Great
Results
Infinite
Advantages
Small
Advantage
Distant
Interest
Sacrifice
Produces
Future
Number
Opposite
Hope
Produce
Opposites
Often
Numbers
Interests
Others
Present
Expectations
Doubtful
Persons
Mistake
Property
Avarice
More quotes by Francois de La Rochefoucauld
Our concern for the loss of our friends is not always from a sense of their worth, but rather of our own need of them and that we have lost some who had a good opinion of us.
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Absence cools moderate passions, and inflames violent ones just as the wind blows out candles, but kindles fires.
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Customary use of artifice is the sign of a small mind, and it almost always happens that he who uses it to cover one spot uncovers himself in another.
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Some disguised deceits counterfeit truth so perfectly that not to be taken in by them would be an error of judgment.
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Ideas often flash across our minds more complete than we could make them after much labor.
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Οur own distrust somewhat justifies the deceit of others.
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Opportunity makes us known to others, but more to ourselves.
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In all professions each affects a look and an exterior to appear what he wishes the world to believe that he is. Thus we may say that the whole world is made up of appearances.
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We should often feel ashamed of our best actions if the world could see all the motives which produced them.
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Moderation is caused by the fear of exciting the envy and contempt which those merit who are intoxicated with their good fortune it is a vain display of our strength of mind, and in short the moderation of men at their greatest height is only a desire to appear greater than their fortune.
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In friendship, as in love, we are often more happy from the things we are ignorant of than from those we are acquainted with.
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Whatever good things people say of us, they tell us nothing new.
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There is nothing men are so generous of as advice.
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In all aspects of life, we take on a part and an appearance to seem to be what we wish to be--and thus the world is merely composed of actors.
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Our repentances are generally not so much a concern and remorse for the harm we have done, as a fear of the harm we may have brought upon ourselves.
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Our desires always disappoint us for though we meet with something that gives us satisfaction, yet it never thoroughly answers our expectation. [However disappointment can always be removed if we remember it could have turned out worse.]
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Old men delight in giving good advice as a consolation for the fact that they can no longer set bad examples.
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We do not lack strength so much as the will to use it and very often our imagining that things are impossible is nothing but an excuse of our own contriving, to reconcile ourselves to our own idleness.
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Gallantry of mind consists in saying flattering things in an agreeable manner.
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Nothing ought more to humiliate men who have merited great praise than the care they still take to boast of little things.
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