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Passions often produce their contraries: avarice sometimes leads to prodigality, and prodigality to avarice we are often obstinate through weakness and daring through timidity.
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
Contrary
Prodigality
Weakness
Contraries
Produce
Obstinate
Passion
Timidity
Often
Avarice
Sometimes
Daring
Passions
Leads
More quotes by Francois de La Rochefoucauld
A man for whom accident discovers sense, is not a rational being. A man only is so who understands, who distinguishes, who tests it.
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There is a form of eminence which does not depend on fate it is an air which sets us apart and seems to prtend great things it is the value which we unconsciously attach to ourselves it is the quality which wins us deference of others more than birth, position, or ability, it gives us ascendance.
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We take less pains to be happy, than to appear so.
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There is only one kind of love, but there are a thousand imitations.
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To know how to hide one's ability is great skill.
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The greatest of all gifts is the power to estimate things at their true worth
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Moderation is like sobriety: you would like to have some more, but are afraid of making yourself ill.
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In the human heart one generation of passions follows another from the ashes of one springs the spark of the next.
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We should gain more by letting the world see what we are than by trying to seem what we are not.
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The contempt of riches in philosophers was only a hidden desire to avenge their merit upon the injustice of fortune, by despising the very goods of which fortune had deprived them it was a secret to guard themselves against the degradation of poverty, it was a back way by which to arrive at that distinction which they could not gain by riches.
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Our greediness so often troubles us, making us run after so many things at the same time, that while we too eagerly look after the least we miss the greatest.
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Avarice misapprehends itself almost always. There is no passion which more often will miss its aim, nor upon which the present has so much influence to the prejudice of the future.
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
The most subtle of our acts is to simulate blindness for snares that we know are set for us.
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A certain harmony should be kept between actions and ideas if we want to fully develop the effects they can produce.
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
We get so much in the habit of wearing disguises before others that we finally appear disguised before ourselves.
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
Our self-love can less bear to have our tastes than our opinions condemned.
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
Nothing is so capable of diminishing self-love as the observation that we disapprove at one time what we approve at another.
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
Beautiful coquettes are quacks of love.
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Nothing should lessen our satisfaction with ourselves as much as when we notice that we disapprove of something at one time that we approve of at another time.
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
It is not in the power of even the most crafty dissimulation to conceal love long, where it really is, nor to counterfeit it long where it is not.
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