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Nicolas Chamfort quotes - page 3
Living is a sickness to which sleep provides relief every sixteen hours. It's a palliative. The remedy is death.
Nicolas Chamfort
It is commonly supposed that the art of pleasing is a wonderful aid in the pursuit of fortune; but the art of being bored is infinitely more successful.
Nicolas Chamfort
Nature never said to me: Do not be poor; still less did she say: Be rich; her cry to me was always: Be independent.
Nicolas Chamfort
Preoccupation with money is the great test of small natures, but only a small test of great ones.
Nicolas Chamfort
If it were not for the government, we should have nothing to laugh at in France.
Nicolas Chamfort
One must not hope to be more than one can be.
Nicolas Chamfort
There are two things that one must get used to or one will find life unendurable: the damages of time and injustices of men.
Nicolas Chamfort
Most books today seemed to have been written overnight from books read the day before.
Nicolas Chamfort
Do you think that revolutions are made with rose water?
Nicolas Chamfort
Society is not, as is commonly supposed, the development of nature, but rather her dismantling and entire recasting. It is a second building made from the ruins of the first.
Nicolas Chamfort
Both the court and the general public give a conventional value to men and things, and then are surprised to find themselves deceived by it. This is as if arithmeticians should give a variable an arbitrary value to the figures in a sum, and then, after restoring their true and regular value in the addition, be astonished at the incorrectness of their answer.
Nicolas Chamfort
After a certain age, any new friends we make in our attempt to replace the ones we've lost are like glass eyes, false teeth and wooden legs.
Nicolas Chamfort
An honest fellow stripped of all his illusions is the ideal man. Though he may have little wit, his society is always pleasant. As nothing matters to him, he cannot be pedantic; yet is he tolerant, remembering that he too has had the illusions which still beguile his neighbor. He is trustworthy in his dealings, because of his indifference; he avoids all quarreling and scandal in his own person, and either forgets or passes over such gossip or bickering as may be directed against himself. He is more entertaining than other people because he is in a constant state of epigram against his neighbor. He dwells in truth, and smiles at the stumbling of others who grope in falsehood. He watches from a lighted place the ludicrous antics of those who walk in a dim room at random. Laughing, he breaks the false weight and measure of men and things.
Nicolas Chamfort
People are always annoyed by men of letters who retreat from the world; they expect them to continue to show interest in society even though they gain little benefit from it. They would like to force them be present when lots are being drawn in a lottery for which they have no tickets.
Nicolas Chamfort
What I admire in the ancient philosophers is their desire to make their lives conform to their writings, a trait which we notice in Plato, Theophrastus and many others. Practical morality was so truly their philosophy's essence that many, such as Xenocrates, Polemon, and Speusippus, were placed at the head of schools although they had written nothing at all. Socrates was none the less the foremost philosopher of his age, although he had not composed a single book or studied any other science than ethics.
Nicolas Chamfort
Economists are surgeons ... who operate beautifully on the dead and torment the living.
Nicolas Chamfort
The public is governed as it reasons; its own prerogative is foolish speech and that of its governors is foolish action.
Nicolas Chamfort
Unfortunately for mankind-and perhaps fortunately for tyrants-the poor and downtrodden lack the instinct or pride of the elephant, who refuses to breed in captivity.
Nicolas Chamfort
In cities the old are more corrupt than the young.
Nicolas Chamfort
I asked M.-why he'd turned down the offer of a particular post. "I didn't want a post where the office is more important than the holder of it,” he replied.
Nicolas Chamfort
The success of many books is due to the affinity between the mediocrity of the author's ideas and those of the public.
Nicolas Chamfort
Marriage follows on love as smoke on flame.
Nicolas Chamfort
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