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The head has the most beautiful appearance, as well as the highest station, in a human figure.
Joseph Addison
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Joseph Addison
Age: 47 †
Born: 1672
Born: May 1
Died: 1719
Died: June 17
Editor
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Milston
Wiltshire
Joseph Addisson
Right Hon. Joseph Addison
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More quotes by Joseph Addison
Beauty soon grows familiar to the lover, Fades in his eye, and palls upon the sense.
Joseph Addison
A man whose extraordinary reputation thus lifts him up to the notice and observation of mankind, draws a multitude of eyes upon him, that will narrowly inspect every part of him.
Joseph Addison
It is impossible for authors to discover beauties in one another's works they have eyes only for spots and blemishes.
Joseph Addison
Without constancy there is neither love, friendship, nor virtue in the world.
Joseph Addison
How can it enter into the thoughts of man, that the soul, which is capable of such immense perfections, and of receiving new improvements to all eternity, shall fall away into nothing almost as soon as it is created?
Joseph Addison
My death and life, My bane and antidote, are both before me.
Joseph Addison
Marriage enlarges the scene of our happiness and miseries. A marriage of love is pleasant a marriage of interest, easy and a marriage where both meet, happy. A happy marriage has in it all the pleasures of friendship, all the enjoyments of sense and reason, and, indeed, all the sweets of life.
Joseph Addison
Music, the greatest good that mortals know and all of heaven we have hear below.
Joseph Addison
Fame is a good so wholly foreign to our natures that we have no faculty in the soul adapted to it, nor any organ in the body to relish it an object of desire placed out of the possibility of fruition.
Joseph Addison
Should a writer single out and point his raillery at particular persons, or satirize the miserable, he might be sure of pleasing a great part of his readers, but must be a very ill man if he could please himself.
Joseph Addison
That courage which arises from the sense of our duty, and from the fear of offending Him that made us, acts always in a uniform manner, and according to the dictates of right reason.
Joseph Addison
Irresolution on the schemes of life which offer themselves to our choice, and inconstancy in pursuing them, are the greatest causes of all our unhappiness.
Joseph Addison
Charity is the perfection and ornament of religion.
Joseph Addison
I have but nine-pence in ready money, but I can draw for a thousand pounds.
Joseph Addison
Instability of temper ought to be checked when it disposes men to wander from one scheme to another: since such a fickleness cannot but be attended with fatal consequences.
Joseph Addison
Among those evils which befall us, there are many which have been more painful to us in the prospect than by their actual pressure.
Joseph Addison
Arguments out of a pretty mouth are unanswerable.
Joseph Addison
There is a sort of economy in Providence that one shall excel where another is defective, in order to make men more useful to each other, and mix them in society.
Joseph Addison
The important question is not, what will yield to man a few scattered pleasures, but what will render his life happy on the whole amount.
Joseph Addison
A thousand trills and quivering sounds In airy circles o'er us fly, Till, wafted by a gentle breeze, They faint and languish by degrees, And at a distance die.
Joseph Addison