Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
What an argument in favor of social connections is the observation that by communicating our grief we have less, and by communicating our pleasure we have more.
Sir Fulke Greville
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Sir Fulke Greville
Age: 70 †
Born: 1536
Born: January 1
Died: 1606
Died: January 1
Sir Fulke Greville
Social
Favors
Observation
Connections
Communicate
Grief
Argument
Pleasure
Communicating
Less
Favor
More quotes by Sir Fulke Greville
A proud man never shows his pride so much as when he is civil.
Sir Fulke Greville
As charity covers a multitude of sins before God, so does politeness before men.
Sir Fulke Greville
Discernment is a power of the understanding in which few excel. Is not that owing to its connection with impartiality and truth? for are not prejudice and partiality blind?
Sir Fulke Greville
We laugh heartily to see a whole flock of sheep jump because one did so. Might not one imagine that superior beings do the same, and for exactly the same reason?
Sir Fulke Greville
There is an unfortunate disposition in a man to attend much more to the faults of his companions which offend him, than to their perfections which please him.
Sir Fulke Greville
The world is an excellent judge in general, but a very bad one in particular.
Sir Fulke Greville
Weak men often from the very principle of their weakness derive a certain susceptibility delicacy and taste which render them, in those particulars, much superior to men of stronger and more consistent minds, who laugh at them.
Sir Fulke Greville
Respect is better procured by exacting than soliciting it.
Sir Fulke Greville
The brains of a pedant however full, are vacant.
Sir Fulke Greville
I hardly know so melancholy a reflection as that parents are necessarily the sole directors of the management of children, whether they have or have not judgment, penetration or taste to perform the task.
Sir Fulke Greville
A lively and agreeable man has not only the merit of liveliness and agreeableness himself, but that also of awakening them in others.
Sir Fulke Greville
True joy is only hope put out of fear.
Sir Fulke Greville
Vanity is the poison of agreeableness yet as poison, when artfully and properly applied, has a salutary effect in medicine, so has vanity in the commerce and society of the world.
Sir Fulke Greville
Some characters are like some bodies in chemistry very good, perhaps, in themselves, yet fly off and refuse the least conjunction with each other.
Sir Fulke Greville
Avarice starves its possessor to fatten those who come after, and who are eagerly awaiting the demise of the accumulator.
Sir Fulke Greville
We should do by our cunning as we do by our courage--always have it ready to defend ourselves, never to offend others.
Sir Fulke Greville
I hardly know so true a mark of a little mind as the servile imitation of others.
Sir Fulke Greville
Removing prejudices is, alas! too often removing the boundary of a delightful near prospect in order to let in a shockingly extensive one.
Sir Fulke Greville
Many with trust, with doubt few, are undone.
Sir Fulke Greville
Whatever natural right men may have to freedom and independency, it is manifest that some men have a natural ascendency over others.
Sir Fulke Greville