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Dr. Johnson was a lazy learned man who liked to think and talk better than to read or write who, however, wrote much and well, but too often by rote.
William Hazlitt
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William Hazlitt
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Wm. Haslett
William Carew Hazlitt
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More quotes by William Hazlitt
Popularity is neither fame nor greatness.
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People are not soured by misfortune, but by the reception they meet with in it.
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It is the vice of scholars to suppose that there is no knowledge in the world but that of books.
William Hazlitt
Literature, like nobility, runs in the blood.
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If you give an audience a chance they will do half your acting for you.
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Prosperity is a great teacher adversity is a greater. Possession pampers the mind privation trains and strengthens it.
William Hazlitt
It might be argued, that to be a knave is the gift of fortune, but to play the fool to advantage it is necessary to be a learned man.
William Hazlitt
Those are ever the most ready to do justice to others, who feel that the world has done them justice.
William Hazlitt
Modesty is the lowest of the virtues, and is a real confession of the deficiency it indicates. He who undervalues himself is justly undervalued by others.
William Hazlitt
The idea of what the public will think prevents the public from ever thinking at all, and acts as a spell on the exercise of private judgment.
William Hazlitt
We do not see nature with our eyes, but with our understandings and our hearts.
William Hazlitt
The most phlegmatic dispositions often contain the most inflammable spirits, as fire is struck from the hardest flints.
William Hazlitt
It is well there is no one without fault for he would not have a friend in the world. He would seem to belong to s different species.
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Death puts an end to rivalship and competition. The dead can boast no advantage over us, nor can we triumph over them.
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There are only three pleasures in life pure and lasting, and all derived from inanimate things-books, pictures and the face of nature.
William Hazlitt
The incentive to ambition is the love of power.
William Hazlitt
Wit is, in fact, the eloquence of indifference.
William Hazlitt
The soil of friendship is worn out with constant use. Habit may still attach us to each other, but we feel ourselves fettered by it. Old friends might be compared to old married people without the tie of children.
William Hazlitt
Comedy naturally wears itself out - destroys the very food on which it lives and by constantly and successfully exposing the follies and weaknesses of mankind to ridicule, in the end leaves itself nothing worth laughing at.
William Hazlitt
The truly proud man knows neither superiors or inferiors. The first he does not admit of - the last he does not concern himself about.
William Hazlitt