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I sometimes give myself admirable advice, but I am incapable of taking it.
Lord Chesterfield
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Lord Chesterfield
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More quotes by Lord Chesterfield
Dispatch is the soul of business.
Lord Chesterfield
Knowledge may give weight, but accomplishments give luster, and many more people see than weigh.
Lord Chesterfield
People hate who makes you feel one's inferiority.
Lord Chesterfield
Pocket all your knowledge with your watch, and never pull it out in company unless desired.
Lord Chesterfield
A man's fortune is frequently decided by his first address. If pleasing, others at once conclude he has merit but if ungraceful, they decide against him.
Lord Chesterfield
Should you be unfortunate enough to have vices, you may, to a certain degree, even dignify them by a strict observance of decorumat least they will lose something of their natural turpitude.
Lord Chesterfield
I always put these pert jackanapeses out of countenance by looking extremely grave when they expect that I should laugh at their pleasantries and by saying Well, and so?--as if they had not done, and that the sting were still to come. This disconcerts them, as they have no resources in themselves, and have but one set of jokes to live upon.
Lord Chesterfield
Many new years you may see, but happy ones you cannot see without deserving them. These virtue, honor, and knowledge alone can merit, alone can produce.
Lord Chesterfield
Pleasure is a necessary reciprocal. No one feels, who does not at the same time give it. To be pleased, one must please. What pleases you in others, will in general please them in you.
Lord Chesterfield
A man of sense may be in haste, but can never be in a hurry.
Lord Chesterfield
To me it appears strange that the men against whom I should be enabled to bring an action for laying a little dirt at my door, may with impunity drive by it half-a-dozen calves, with their tails lopped close to their bodies and their hinder parts covered with blood.
Lord Chesterfield
Let them show me a cottage where there are not the same vices of which they accuse the courts.
Lord Chesterfield
Nothing is more dissimilar than natural and acquired politeness. The first consists in a willing abnegation of self the second in a compelled recollection of others.
Lord Chesterfield
If you will please people, you must please them in their own way and as you cannot make them what they should be, you must take them as they are.
Lord Chesterfield
There is hardly anybody good for everything, and there is scarcely anybody who is absolutely good for nothing.
Lord Chesterfield
Take rather than give the tone to the company you are in. If you have parts you will show them more or less upon every subject and if you have not, you had better talk sillily upon a subject of other people's than of your own choosing.
Lord Chesterfield
Women's beauty, like men's wit, is generally fatal to the owners.
Lord Chesterfield
Statesmen and beauties are very rarely sensible of the gradations of their decay.
Lord Chesterfield
If we do not plant knowledge when young, it will give us no shade when we are old.
Lord Chesterfield
Nothing sharpens the arrow of sarcasm so keenly as the courtesy that polishes it no reproach is like that we clothe with a smile and present with a bow.
Lord Chesterfield