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The permanency of most friendships depends upon the continuity of good fortune.
Lord Chesterfield
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Lord Chesterfield
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More quotes by Lord Chesterfield
Few fathers care much for their sons, or at least, most of them care more for their money. Of those who really love their sons, few know how to do it.
Lord Chesterfield
The New Year is the season in which custom seems more particularly to authorize civil and harmless lies, under the name of compliments. People reciprocally profess wishes which they seldom form and concern which they seldom feel.
Lord Chesterfield
A gentleman has ease without familiarity, is respectful without meanness genteel without affectation, insinuating without seeming art.
Lord Chesterfield
The heart never grows better by age I fear rather worse, always harder. A young liar will be an old one, and a young knave will only be a greater knave as he grows older.
Lord Chesterfield
People hate who makes you feel one's inferiority.
Lord Chesterfield
An honest man may really love a pretty girl, but only an idiot marries her merely because she is pretty.
Lord Chesterfield
Most arts require long study and application, but the most useful art of all, that of pleasing, requires only the desire.
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
Real friendship is a slow grower.
Lord Chesterfield
People will no more advance their civility to a bear, than their money to a bankrupt.
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
The talent of insinuation is more useful than that of persuasion, as everybody is open to insinuation, but scarce any to persuasion.
Lord Chesterfield
People hate those who make them feel their own inferiority.
Lord Chesterfield
Those whom you can make like themselves better will, I promise you, like you very well.
Lord Chesterfield
How often should a woman be pregnant? Continually, or hardly ever? Or must there be a certain number of pregnancy anniversaries established by fashion? What do you, at the age of forty-three, have to say on the subject? Is it a fact that the laws of nature, or of the country, or of propriety, have ordained this time of life for sterility?
Lord Chesterfield
I sometimes give myself admirable advice, but I am incapable of taking it.
Lord Chesterfield
Good-breeding carries along with it a dignity that is respected by the most petulant. Ill-breeding invites and authorizes the familiarity of the most timid.
Lord Chesterfield
I really think next to the consciousness of doing a good action, that of doing a civil one is the most pleasing and the epithet which I should covet the most next to that of Aristides, would be that of well-bred.
Lord Chesterfield
Merit and knowledge will not gain hearts, though they will secure them when gained.
Lord Chesterfield
To know a little of anything gives neither satisfaction nor credit, but often brings disgrace or ridicule.
Lord Chesterfield