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Our own self-love draws a thick veil between us and our faults.
Lord Chesterfield
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Lord Chesterfield
Thick
Ego
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More quotes by Lord Chesterfield
Good breeding and good nature do incline us rather to help and raise people up to ourselves, than to mortify and depress them, and, in truth, our own private interest concurs in it, as it is making ourselves so many friends, instead of so many enemies.
Lord Chesterfield
People will no more advance their civility to a bear, than their money to a bankrupt.
Lord Chesterfield
The value of moments, when cast up, is immense, if well employed if thrown away, their loss is irrecoverable.
Lord Chesterfield
Be wiser than other people if you can but do not tell them so.
Lord Chesterfield
Since attaining the full use of my reason no one has ever heard me laugh.
Lord Chesterfield
The company of women of fashion will improve your manners, though not your understanding and that complaisance and politeness, which are so useful in men's company, can only be acquired in women's.
Lord Chesterfield
Men have various subjects in which they may excel, or at least would be thought to excel, and though they love to hear justice done to them where they know they excel, yet they are most and best flattered upon those points where they wish to excel and yet are doubtful whether they do or not.
Lord Chesterfield
We are as often duped by diffidence as by confidence.
Lord Chesterfield
I am convinced that a light supper, a good night's sleep, and a fine morning, have sometimes made a hero of the same man, who, by an indigestion, a restless night, and rainy morning, would have proved a coward.
Lord Chesterfield
You must be respectable, if you will be respected.
Lord Chesterfield
A man must have a good share of wit himself to endure a great share in another.
Lord Chesterfield
So much are our minds influenced by the accidents of our bodies, that every man is more the man of the day than a regular and consequential character.
Lord Chesterfield
Cottages have them (falsehood and dissimulation) as well as courts, only with worse manners.
Lord Chesterfield
Our conjectures pass upon us for truths we will know what we do not know, and often, what we cannot know: so mortifying to our pride is the base suspicion of ignorance.
Lord Chesterfield
Young men are as apt to think themselves wise enough, as drunken men are to think themselves sober enough. They look upon spirit to be a much better thing than experience which they call coldness. They are but half mistaken for though spirit without experience is dangerous, experience without spirit is languid and ineffective.
Lord Chesterfield
People hate those who make them feel their own inferiority.
Lord Chesterfield
Idleness is only the refuge of weak minds.
Lord Chesterfield
Choose your pleasures for yourself, and do not let them be imposed upon you.
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
Merit and knowledge will not gain hearts, though they will secure them when gained.
Lord Chesterfield