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The most violent friendships soonest wear themselves out.
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
The way to get on in the world is to be neither more nor less wise, neither better nor worse than your neighbours.
William Hazlitt
The world dread nothing so much as being convinced of their errors.
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Love turns, with a little indulgence, to indifference or disgust hatred alone is immortal.
William Hazlitt
The love of fame is almost another name for the love of excellence or it is the ambition to attain the highest excellence, sanctioned by the highest authority, that of time.
William Hazlitt
The way to secure success is to be more anxious about obtaining than about deserving it.
William Hazlitt
If our hours were all serene, we might probably take almost as little note of them as the dial does of those that are clouded.
William Hazlitt
The fear of punishment may be necessary to the suppression of vice but it also suspends the finer motives of virtue.
William Hazlitt
Learning is its own exceeding great reward and at the period of which we speak, it bore other fruits, not unworthy of it.
William Hazlitt
Every man, in judging of himself, is his own contemporary. He may feel the gale of popularity, but he cannot tell how long it will last. His opinion of himself wants distance, wants time, wants numbers, to set it off and confirm it.
William Hazlitt
We talk little when we do not talk about ourselves.
William Hazlitt
Good temper is one of the great preservers of the features.
William Hazlitt
Diffidence and awkwardness are antidotes to love.
William Hazlitt
Life is the art of being well deceived and in order that the deception may succeed it must be habitual and uninterrupted.
William Hazlitt
Honesty is one part of eloquence. We persuade others by being in earnest ourselves.
William Hazlitt
All is without form and void. Someone said of his landscapes that they were pictures of nothing and very like.
William Hazlitt
He who does nothing renders himself incapable of doing any thing but while we are executing any work, we are preparing and qualifying ourselves to undertake another.
William Hazlitt
Love may turn to indifference with possession.
William Hazlitt
Language, if it throws a veil over our ideas, adds a softness and refinement to them, like that which the atmosphere gives to naked objects.
William Hazlitt
The origin of all science is the desire to know causes, and the origin of all false science is the desire to accept false causes rather than none or, which is the same thing, in the unwillingness to acknowledge our own ignorance.
William Hazlitt
The temple of fame stands upon the grave: the flame that burns upon its altars is kindled from the ashes of great men.
William Hazlitt