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To great evils we submit, we resent little provocations.
William Hazlitt
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William Hazlitt
Journalist
Literary Critic
Literary Historian
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Wm. Haslett
William Carew Hazlitt
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More quotes by William Hazlitt
Zeal will do more than knowledge.
William Hazlitt
If you give an audience a chance they will do half your acting for you.
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An orator can hardly get beyond commonplaces: if he does he gets beyond his hearers.
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Actors are the only honest hypocrites.
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Virtue steals, like a guilty thing, into the secret haunts of vice and infamy, clings to their devoted victim, and will not be driven quite away. Nothing can destroy the human heart.
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One said a tooth drawer was a kind of unconscionable trade, because his trade was nothing else but to take away those things whereby every man gets his living.
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The way to secure success is to be more anxious about obtaining than about deserving it.
William Hazlitt
The public have neither shame or gratitude.
William Hazlitt
It is better to drink of deep grief than to taste shallow pleasures.
William Hazlitt
Painting for a whole morning gives one as excellent an appetite for one's dinner, as old Abraham Tucker acquired for his by riding over Banstead Downs.
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The amiable is the voluptuous in expression or manner. The sense of pleasure in ourselves is that which excites it in others or, the art of pleasing is to seem pleased.
William Hazlitt
The most fluent talkers or most plausible reasoners are not always the justest thinkers.
William Hazlitt
In some situations, if you say nothing, you are called dull if you talk, you are thought impertinent and arrogant. It is hard to know what to do in this case. The question seems to be, whether your vanity or your prudence predominates.
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Perhaps propriety is as near a word as any to denote the manners of the gentleman elegance is necessary to the fine gentleman dignity is proper to noblemen and majesty to kings.
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I hate anything that occupies more space than it is worth... I hate to see a parcel of big words without anything in them.
William Hazlitt
It is the vice of scholars to suppose that there is no knowledge in the world but that of books.
William Hazlitt
Experience makes us wise.
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We talk little when we do not talk about ourselves.
William Hazlitt
The measure of any man's virtue is what he would do, if he had neither the laws nor public opinion, nor even his own prejudices, to control him.
William Hazlitt
No man is truly great who is great only in his lifetime. The test of greatness is the page of history.
William Hazlitt