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Persons of delicate taste endure stupid criticism better than they do stupid praise.
Philibert Joseph Roux
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Philibert Joseph Roux
Age: 73 †
Born: 1780
Born: April 26
Died: 1854
Died: March 23
Surgeon
Persons
Better
Delicate
Stupidity
Endure
Criticism
Praise
Taste
Stupid
More quotes by Philibert Joseph Roux
Nothing vivifies, and nothing kills, like the emotions.
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Poetry is the exquisite expression of exquisite impressions.
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The vital air of friendship is composed of confidence. Friendship perishes in proportion as this air diminishes.
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There are people who laugh to show their fine teeth and there are those who cry to show their good hearts.
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Great dejection often follows great enthusiasm.
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History, if thoroughly comprehended, furnishes something of the experience which a man would acquire who should be a contemporary of all ages and a fellow citizen of all peoples.
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Length of saying makes languor of hearing.
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Everything that is exquisite hides itself.
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No labor is hopeless.
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It is a very rare thing for a man of talent to succeed by his talent.
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Poetry is truth in its Sunday clothes.
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The habit of prayer communicates a penetrating sweetness to the glance, the voice, the smile, the tears,--to all one says, or does, or writes.
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God often visits us, but most of the time we are not at home.
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What is experience? A poor little hut constructed from the ruins of the palace of gold and marble called our illusions.
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When orators and auditors have the same prejudices, those prejudices run a great risk of being made to stand for incontestable truths.
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A face which is always serene possesses a mysterious and powerful attraction: sad hearts come to it as to the sun to warm themselves again.
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The folly which we might have ourselves committed is the one which we are least ready to pardon in another.
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Philosophers call God the great unknown The great misknown is more like it!
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Morality is the fruit of religion: to desire the former without the latter is to desire an orange without an orange-tree.
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Friendship is the ideal friends are the reality reality always remains far apart from the ideal.
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