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Criticism is as often a trade as a science, requiring, as it does, more health than wit, more labour than capacity, more practice than genius.
Jean de la Bruyere
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Jean de la Bruyere
Age: 50 †
Born: 1645
Born: August 16
Died: 1696
Died: May 10
Aphorist
Essayist
French Moralist
Lawyer
Philosopher
Translator
Writer
Paris
France
Jean de La Bruyere
Often
Labour
Science
Accounts
Doe
Criticism
Trade
Capacity
Genius
Health
Requiring
Practice
Wit
More quotes by Jean de la Bruyere
Extremes are vicious, and proceed from men compensation is just, and proceeds from God.
Jean de la Bruyere
An assembly of the states, a court of justice, shows nothing so serious and grave as a table of gamesters playing very high a melancholy solicitude clouds their looks envy and rancor agitate their minds while the meeting lasts, without regard to friendship, alliances, birth or distinctions.
Jean de la Bruyere
A pious man is one who would be an atheist if the king were.
Jean de la Bruyere
The first day one is a guest, the second a burden, and the third a pest.
Jean de la Bruyere
The fool only is troublesome. A plan of sense perceives when he is agreeable or tiresome he disappears the very minute before he would have been thought to have stayed too long.
Jean de la Bruyere
When we are young we lay up for old age when we are old we save for death.
Jean de la Bruyere
There is no employment in the world so laborious as that of making to one's self a great name life ends before one has scarcely made the first rough draught of his work.
Jean de la Bruyere
There are certain people who so ardently and passionately desire a thing, that from dread of losing it they leave nothing undone to make them lose it.
Jean de la Bruyere
Two persons cannot long be friends if they cannot forgive each other's little failings.
Jean de la Bruyere
Love receives its death-wound from aversion, and forgetfulness buries it.
Jean de la Bruyere
It seems to me that the spirit of politeness is a certain attention in causing that, by our words and by our manners, others may be content with us and with themselves.
Jean de la Bruyere
We are valued in this world at the rate we desire to be valued.
Jean de la Bruyere
Men regret their life has been ill-spent, but this does not always induce them to make a better use of the time they have yet to live.
Jean de la Bruyere
People reveal their character even in the simplest things they do. Fools do not enter a room, nor leave it, nor sit down, nor rise, nor are they silent, nor do they stand up, like people of sense and understanding.
Jean de la Bruyere
Caprice in women often infringes upon the rules of decency.
Jean de la Bruyere
One mark of a second-rate mind is to be always telling stories.
Jean de la Bruyere
Misers are neither relations, nor friends, nor citizens, nor Christians, nor perhaps even human beings.
Jean de la Bruyere
It's motive alone which gives character to the actions of men.
Jean de la Bruyere
A man can deceive a woman by his sham attachment to her provided he does not have a real attachment elsewhere.
Jean de la Bruyere
We should laugh before being happy, for fear of dying without having laughed.
Jean de la Bruyere