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Habitual liars invent falsehoods not to gain any end or even to deceive their hearers, but to amuse themselves. It is partly practice and partly habit. It requires an effort in them to speak truth.
William Hazlitt
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William Hazlitt
Journalist
Literary Critic
Literary Historian
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Wm. Haslett
William Carew Hazlitt
Habit
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Habitual
More quotes by William Hazlitt
The most violent friendships soonest wear themselves out.
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Popularity disarms envy in well-disposed minds. Those are ever the most ready to do justice to others who feel that the world has done them justice. When success has not this effect in opening the mind, it is a sign that it has been ill deserved.
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A great chessplayer is not a great man, for he leaves the world as he found it.
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Those who are pleased with the fewest things know the least, as those who are pleased with everything know nothing.
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No wise man can have a contempt for the prejudices of others and he should even stand in a certain awe of his own, as if they were aged parents and monitors. They may in the end prove wiser than he.
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No act terminating in itself constitutes greatness.
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We are not hypocrites in our sleep.
William Hazlitt
What passes in the world for talent or dexterity or enterprise is often only a want of moral principle. We may succeed where others fail, not from a greater share of invention, but from not being nice in the choice of expedients.
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The greatest grossness sometimes accompanies the greatest refinement, as a natural relief.
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Perhaps the best cure for the fear of death is to reflect that life has a beginning as well as an end.
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Man is a poetical animal, and delights in fiction.
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People are not soured by misfortune, but by the reception they meet with in it.
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Poetry is the universal language which the heart holds with nature and itself. He who has a contempt for poetry, cannot have much respect for himself, or for anything else.
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The world dread nothing so much as being convinced of their errors.
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The present is an age of talkers, and not of doers and the reason is, that the world is growing old. We are so far advanced in the Arts and Sciences, that we live in retrospect, and dote on past achievement.
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A man knows his companion in a long journey and a little inn.
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It is not fit that every man should travel it makes a wise man better, and a fool worse.
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The devil was a great loss in the preternatural world. He was always something to fear and to hate he supplied the antagonist powers of the imagination, and the arch of true religion hardly stands firm without him.
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We go on a journey to be free of all impediments to leave ourselves behind much more than to get rid of others
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Defoe says that there were a hundred thousand country fellows in his time ready to fight to the death against popery, without knowing whether popery was a man or a horse.
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