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Even private persons in due season, with discretion and temper, may reprove others, whom they observe to commit sin, or follow bad courses, out of charitable design, and with hope to reclaim them.
Isaac Barrow
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Isaac Barrow
Died: 1677
Died: May 4
Historian Of Mathematics
Mathematician
Philosopher
Physicist
Theologian
University Teacher
London
England
Hope
Season
Others
Commit
Reprove
May
Seasons
Reclaim
Persons
Private
Charitable
Even
Sin
Discretion
Follow
Observe
Design
Temper
Courses
Dues
More quotes by Isaac Barrow
It is commonly said that revenge is sweet, but to a calm and considerate mind, patience and forgiveness are sweeter.
Isaac Barrow
Nothing of worth or weight can be achieved with half a mind, with a faint heart, and with a lame endeavor.
Isaac Barrow
As a stick, when once it is dry and stiff you may break it, but you can never bend it into a straighter posture so doth the man become incorrigible who is settled and stiffened into vice.
Isaac Barrow
Wherefore for the public interest and benefit of human society it is requisite that the highest obligations possible should be laid upon the consciences of men.
Isaac Barrow
Nature has concatenated our fortunes and affections together with indissoluble bands of mutual sympathy.
Isaac Barrow
The reading of books, what is it but conversing with the wisest men of all ages and all countries.
Isaac Barrow
Mathematics - the unshaken Foundation of Sciences, and the plentiful Fountain of Advantage to human affairs.
Isaac Barrow
If men are wont to play with swearing anywhere, can we expect they should be serious and strict therein at the bar or in the church.
Isaac Barrow
Incredulity is not wisdom, but the worst kind of folly. It is folly, because it causes ignorance and mistake, with all the consequents of these and it is very bad, as being accompanied with disingenuity, obstinacy, rudeness, uncharitableness, and the like bad dispositions from which credulity itself, the other extreme sort of folly, is exempt.
Isaac Barrow
There do remain dispersed in the soil of human nature divers seeds of goodness, of benignity, of ingenuity, which, being cherished, excited, and quickened by good culture, do, by common experience, thrust out flowers very lovely, and yield fruits very pleasant of virtue and goodness.
Isaac Barrow
It consisteth in one knows not what, and springeth up one can hardly tell how. Its ways are unaccountable and inexplicable, being answerable to the numberless rovings of fancy and windings of language.
Isaac Barrow
That in affairs of very considerable importance men should deal with one another with satisfaction of mind, and mutual confidence, they must receive competent assurances concerning the integrity, fidelity, and constancy each of other.
Isaac Barrow
Virtue is not a mushroom, that springeth up of itself in one night when we are asleep, or regard it not but a delicate plant, that groweth slowly and tenderly, needing much pains to cultivate it, much care to guard it, much time to mature it, in our untoward soil, in this world's unkindly weather.
Isaac Barrow
Smiling always with a never fading serenity of countenance, and flourishing in an immortal youth.
Isaac Barrow
An accomplished mathematician, i.e. a most wretched orator.
Isaac Barrow
Facetiousness is allowable when it is the most proper instrument of exposing things apparently base and vile to due contempt.
Isaac Barrow
Upright simplicity is the deepest wisdom, and perverse craft the merest shallowness.
Isaac Barrow
Slander is a complication, a comprisal and sum of all wickedness.
Isaac Barrow
In defiance of all the tortue, of all the might, of all the malice of the world, the liberal man will ever be rich for God's providence is his estate, God's wisdom and power are his defence, God's love and favor are his reward, and God's word is his security.
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That men should live honestly, quietly, and comfortably together, it is needful that they should live under a sense of God's will, and in awe of the divine power, hoping to please God, and fearing to offend Him, by their behaviour respectively.
Isaac Barrow