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I should rejoice if my pleasures were as pleasing to God as they are to myself.
Margaret of Valois
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Margaret of Valois
Age: 61 †
Born: 1553
Born: May 14
Died: 1615
Died: March 27
Queen Of Navarre
Salonnière
Writer
St. Germain-en-Laye
Marguerite de Valois
Marguerite d'Angoulême
Marguerite of Valois
Marguerite of Navarre
Queen Margot
Pleasing
Pleasures
Rejoice
Pleasure
More quotes by Margaret of Valois
We shall all be perfectly virtuous when there is no longer any flesh on our bones.
Margaret of Valois
Women suffer more from disappointment than men, because they have more of faith and are naturally more credulous.
Margaret of Valois
It is only the educated who can produce or appreciate high art.
Margaret of Valois
There is no greater fool than the man who thinks himself wise no one is wiser than he who suspects he is a fool.
Margaret of Valois
There are women so hard to please that it would seem as if nothing less than an angel would suit them and hence it comes that they often encounter devils.
Margaret of Valois
Delicacy is the genuine tint of virtue.
Margaret of Valois
Servitude is inherent we are all slaves to duty or to force.
Margaret of Valois
A woman of honor should never suspect another of things she would not do herself.
Margaret of Valois
God has put into the heart of man love and the boldness to sue, and into the heart of woman fear and the courage to refuse.
Margaret of Valois
Gold adulterates one thing only,--the human heart.
Margaret of Valois
The woman who does not choose to love should cut the matter short at once, by holding out no hopes to her suitor.
Margaret of Valois
There are few husbands whom the wife cannot win in the long run, by patience and love.
Margaret of Valois
No one perfectly loves God who does not perfectly love some of his creatures.
Margaret of Valois
envy and hatred fascinate the eyes and never make them see things as they are.
Margaret of Valois
The more hidden the venom, the more dangerous it is.
Margaret of Valois
There is in us more of the appearance of sense and virtue than of the reality.
Margaret of Valois
distrust ... is the beginning of hatred.
Margaret of Valois
Bashfulness is not becoming to maidenhood, though modesty always is.
Margaret of Valois
Extreme concupiscence may be found under extreme austerity.
Margaret of Valois
Adversity is solitary, while prosperity dwells in a crowd
Margaret of Valois