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The end of pleasure is to support the offices of life, to relieve the fatigues of business, to reward a regular action, and to encourage the continuance.
Jeremy Collier
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Jeremy Collier
Age: 76 †
Born: 1650
Born: January 1
Died: 1726
Died: January 1
Literary Critic
Priest
Theatre Critic
Writer
County of Cambridge
Ends
Reward
Life
Encourage
Rewards
Fatigues
Office
Continuance
Support
Relieve
Pleasure
Offices
Business
Fatigue
Action
Regular
More quotes by Jeremy Collier
To believe a business impossible is the way to make it so. How many feasible projects have miscarried through despondency, and been strangled in their birth by a cowardly imagination.
Jeremy Collier
Books support us in our solitude and keep us from being a burden to ourselves.
Jeremy Collier
It were well if there were fewer heroes for I scarcely ever heard of any, excepting Hercules, but did more mischief than good. These overgrown mortals commonly use their will with their right hand and their reason with their left.
Jeremy Collier
Perpetual pushing and assurance put a difficulty out of countenance and make a seeming difficulty gives way.
Jeremy Collier
Truth is the band of union and the basis of human happiness. Without this virtue there is no reliance upon language, no confidence in friendship, no security in promises and oaths.
Jeremy Collier
The abuse of a thing is no argument against the use of it.
Jeremy Collier
Without discretion, people may be overlaid with unreasonable affection, and choked with too much nourishment.
Jeremy Collier
There are few things reason can discover with so much certainty and ease as its own insufficiency.
Jeremy Collier
A man by tumbling his thoughts, and forming them into expressions, gives them a new fermentation, which works them into a finer body.
Jeremy Collier
Modesty was designed by Providence as a guard to virtue, and that it might be always at hand it is wrought into the mechanism of the body. It is likewise proportioned to the occasions of life, and strongest in youth when passion is so too.
Jeremy Collier
He that would be a master must draw from the life as well as copy from originals, and join theory and experience together.
Jeremy Collier
Envy is of all others the most ungratifying and disconsolate passion. There is power for ambition, pleasure for luxury, and pelf even for covetousness but envy gets no reward but vexation.
Jeremy Collier
Self-conceit is a weighty quality, and will sometimes bring down the scale when there is nothing else in it. It magnifies a fault beyond proportion, and swells every omission into an outrage.
Jeremy Collier
Dangerous principles impose upon our understanding, emasculate our spirits, and spoil our temper.
Jeremy Collier
Rhetoric is nothing but reason well dressed and argument put in order.
Jeremy Collier
Vanity is a strong temptation to lying it makes people magnify their merit, over flourish their family, and tell strange stories of their interest and acquaintance.
Jeremy Collier
Learning gives us a fuller conviction of the imperfections of our nature which one would think, might dispose us to modesty.
Jeremy Collier
A man may as well expect to grow stronger by always eating as wiser by always reading.
Jeremy Collier
True courage is the result of reasoning. A brave mind is always impregnable.
Jeremy Collier
Confidence, as opposed, to modesty and distinguished from decent assurance, proceeds from self-opinion, and is occasioned by ignorance and flattery.
Jeremy Collier