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Fire and swords are slow engines of destruction, compared to the tongue of a Gossip.
Richard Steele
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Richard Steele
Age: 57 †
Born: 1672
Born: March 12
Died: 1729
Died: September 1
Journalist
Playwright
Politician
Writer
Dublin city
Sir Richard Steele
Engines
Gossip
Compared
Slow
Tongue
Destruction
Fire
Swords
More quotes by Richard Steele
The insupportable labor of doing nothing.
Richard Steele
Zeal for the public good is the characteristic of a man of honor and a gentleman, and must take the place of pleasures, profits and all other private gratifications.
Richard Steele
Conversation never sits easier upon us than when we now and then discharge ourselves in a symphony of laughter, which may not improperly be called the chorus of conversation.
Richard Steele
Vanity makes people ridiculous, pride odious, and ambition terrible.
Richard Steele
It is the duty of a great person so to demean himself, as that whatever endowments he may have, he may appear to value himself upon no qualities but such as any man may arrive at.
Richard Steele
It is a wonderful thing that so many, and they not reckoned absurd, shall entertain those with whom they converse by giving them the history of their pains and aches and imagine such narrations their quota of conversation.
Richard Steele
The praise of an ignorant man is only good-will, and you should receive his kindness as he is a good neighbor in society, and not as a good judge of your actions in point of fame and reputation.
Richard Steele
Though very troublesome to others, anger is most so to him that has it.
Richard Steele
It has been a sort of maxim, that the greatest art is to conceal art but I know not how, among some people we meet with, their greatest cunning is to appear cunning.
Richard Steele
I love to consider an Infidel, whether distinguished by the title of deist, atheist, or free-thinker.
Richard Steele
A favor well bestowed is almost as great an honor to him who confers it as to him who receives it.
Richard Steele
Modesty never rages, never murmurs, never pouts when it is ill-treated, it pines, it beseeches, it languishes.
Richard Steele
He that has sense knows that learning is not knowledge, but rather the art of using it.
Richard Steele
A fool is in himself the object of pity, until he is flattered.
Richard Steele
The world is grown so full of dissimulation and compliment, that men's words are hardly any signification of their thoughts.
Richard Steele
Simplicity of all things is the hardest to be copy.
Richard Steele
Whenever you commend, add your reasons for doing so it is this which distinguishes the approbation of a man of sense from the flattery of sycophants and admiration of fools.
Richard Steele
No woman is capable of being beautiful who is not incapable of being false.
Richard Steele
When a man is not disposed to hear music, there is not a more disagreeable sound in harmony than that of the violin.
Richard Steele
Age in a virtuous person, of either sex, carries in it an authority which makes it preferable to all the pleasures of youth.
Richard Steele