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The heart never grows better by age I fear rather worse always harder.
Lord Chesterfield
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Lord Chesterfield
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More quotes by Lord Chesterfield
No man can possibly improve in any company for which he has not respect enough to be under some degree of restraint.
Lord Chesterfield
When a man is once in fashion, all he does is right.
Lord Chesterfield
Be wiser than other people if you can but do not tell them so.
Lord Chesterfield
Women especially as to be talked to as below men, and above children.
Lord Chesterfield
Let them show me a cottage where there are not the same vices of which they accuse the courts.
Lord Chesterfield
A man of sense may be in haste, but can never be in a hurry.
Lord Chesterfield
Few people do business well, who do nothing else.
Lord Chesterfield
Politicians neither love nor hate. Interest, not sentiment, directs them.
Lord Chesterfield
Pleasure is the rock which most young people split upon they launch out with crowded sails in quest of it, but without a compassto direct their course, or reason sufficient to steer the vessel for want of which, pain and shame, instead of pleasure, are the returns of their voyage.
Lord Chesterfield
Letters should be easy and natural, and convey to the persons to whom we send them just what we should say to the persons if we were with them.
Lord Chesterfield
Women who are either indisputably beautiful, or indisputably ugly, are best flattered upon the score of their understandings but those who are in a state of mediocrity are best flattered upon their beauty, or at least their graces for every woman who is not absolutely ugly thinks herself handsome.
Lord Chesterfield
The herd of mankind can hardly be said to think their notions are almost all adoptive and, in general, I believe it is better that it should be so as such common prejudices contribute more to order and quiet, than their own separate reasonings would do, uncultivated and unimproved as they are.
Lord Chesterfield
If we do not plant knowledge when young, it will give us no shade when we are old.
Lord Chesterfield
Pocket all your knowledge with your watch, and never pull it out in company unless desired.
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
Ridicule is the best test of truth.
Lord Chesterfield
For my own part, I would rather be in company with a dead man than with an absent one for if the dead man gives me no pleasure, at least he shows me no contempt whereas the absent one, silently indeed, but very plainly, tells me that he does not think me worth his attention.
Lord Chesterfield
Very ugly or very beautiful women should be flattered on their understanding, and mediocre ones on their beauty.
Lord Chesterfield
Whatever poets may write, or fools believe, of rural innocence and truth, and of the perfidy of courts, this is most undoubtedly true,--that shepherds and ministers are both men their natures and passions the same, the modes of them only different.
Lord Chesterfield
Swift speedy time, feathered with flying hours, Dissolves the beauty of the fairest brow.
Lord Chesterfield