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We pick our own sorrows out of the joys of other men, and from their sorrows likewise we derive our joys.
Owen Feltham
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Owen Feltham
Died: 1668
Died: January 1
Writer
Owen Felltham
Joys
Pick
Picks
Sorrow
Joy
Men
Derive
Likewise
Sorrows
More quotes by Owen Feltham
In business, three things are necessary: knowledge, temper, and time.
Owen Feltham
Some are so uncharitable as to think all women bad, and others are so credulous as to believe they are all good. All will grant her corporeal frame more wonderful and more beautiful than man's. And can we think God would put a worse soul into a better body?
Owen Feltham
The boundary of man is moderation. When once we pass that pale our guardian angel quits his charge of us.
Owen Feltham
To be gentle is the test of a lady.
Owen Feltham
Praise has different effects, according to the mind it meets with it makes a wise man modest, but a fool more arrogant, turning his weak brain giddy.
Owen Feltham
The irresolute man flecks from one egg to another, so hatches nothing.
Owen Feltham
Fear, if it be not immoderate, puts a guard about us that does watch and defend us but credulity keeps us naked, and lays us open to all the sly assaults of ill-intending men: it was a virtue when man was in his innocence but since his fall, it abuses those that own it.
Owen Feltham
The greatest results in life are usually attained by simple means and the exercise of ordinary qualities. These may for the most part be summed up in these two - common sense and perseverance.
Owen Feltham
Virtue were a kind of misery if fame were all the garland that crowned her.
Owen Feltham
He that always waits upon God is ready whenever He calls. Neglect not to set your accounts even he is a happy man who to lives as that death at all times may find him at leisure to die.
Owen Feltham
Every man should study conciseness in speaking it is a sign of ignorance not to know that long speeches, though they may please the speaker, are the torture of the hearer.
Owen Feltham
Vice is a peripatetic, always in progression.
Owen Feltham
He that despairs degrades the Deity, and seems to intimate that He is insufficient, or not just to His word and in vain hath read the scriptures, the world, and man.
Owen Feltham
There is no belittling worse than to over praise a man.
Owen Feltham
Virtue is the truest liberty.
Owen Feltham
Perfection is immutable. But for things imperfect change is the way to perfect them. It gets the name of wilfulness when it will not admit of a lawful change to the better. Therefore constancy without knowledge cannot be always good. In things ill it is not virtue, but an absolute vice.
Owen Feltham
Where there is plenty, charity is a duty, not a courtesy
Owen Feltham
Discontents are sometimes the better part of our life. I know not well which is the most useful joy I may choose for pleasure, but adversities are the best for profit and sometimes those do so far help me, as I should, without them, want much of the joy I have.
Owen Feltham
To trust God when we have securities in our iron chest is easy, but not thankworthy but to depend on him for what we cannot see, as it is more hard for man to do, so it is more acceptable to God.
Owen Feltham
He who would be singular in his apparel had need have something superlative to balance that affectation.
Owen Feltham