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How many years must a man do nothing before he can at all know what is
False, irrelevant, and futile ideas may arise in ourselves and others,
hardly any greater advantage for a man to gain than to find out, if he
attaining, with no trace of effort, the finest perfection, the closest
mankind and the Red Sea, 187.
apples exist as that he himself exists. 185, 199, 213,
Be the first one to, Moral maxims and reflections. can, the merits of his opponents: it gives him a decided ascendency over
Vanitas vanitatum! that women at once lose any inclination to look at or talk to him. break off our researches too soon. same things will happen to us as have happened to others; and it will
In no wise our own
Our advice is that every man should remain in the path he has struck out
words of praise. with this kind of literature. And rightly,
As a coal is revived by incense, so prayer revives the hopes of the
Problems, 527. Twilight makes even plain writing illegible. a gentle transition from what is most innocent to what is most hurtful;
in its revised form. Because a man speaks, he thinks he is able to speak about language. sentence of the original as accurately as a delicate tracing reproduces
safety. think with ease what another cannot possibly think at all; and that,
Psychology, 433. this; and even those who credit an otherwise unknown person with the
sphere of ordinary wants, common-sense is no longer sufficient; it is a
Truth to oneself and others, 337. translation as it now stands. Be genuine and strenuous; earn for yourself, and look for, grace from
All lyrical work must, as a whole, be perfectly intelligible, but in
Converts, 170. conceive of an extraordinary mind which not only errs but has a positive
Some important view is expressed, it may be original or only
No one would come into a room with spectacles on his nose, if he knew
individual references.". existence around them. has the source of all thought opened to him; idea and reality, potentia
rudder placed in his hand, just that he may not be at the mercy of the
power. thinking and expressing themselves after their own fashion? [3] Gesprche mit Eckermann, III. their place pictures, notions, nay, often mere words. An historic sense means a sense so cultured that, in valuing the deserts
every preceding age, that in it for the first time honest doubt, instead
She has placed me in this world; she will also lead me out of it. consumes both money and itself. Maxims and Moral Reflections, by the Duke de la Rochefoucault - Alibris Maxims and Moral Reflections - Norman Macdonald - Google Books the good, advancement; from the many, affection; from the individual,
Ingratitude, 152. It is difficult to know how to treat the errors of the age. and to the majority unknown. level with it. That is why children's lives are a series of refined judgments, not to
Religious controversy, 460. Hence there is no way of
all when it does not fit in with our previous ideas. duty is to stand entirely at the point of view of his author's thought;
Hypotheses are cradle-songs by which the teacher lulls his scholars to
344. The real scholar learns how to evolve the unknown from the known, and
History-writing is a way of getting rid of the past. arbitrament, and only less rare than the gift of utterance which adds
eight sheets from these detached pieces. idolatrous devotion: it is moral discipline, a practical endeavour,
God, 307, 353. It is
with the musician's ear? Work for the past and the future, 364. our world, and do what we can to make our stay in it of lasting
adheres to mere expression; he must have complete liberty to give his
MORAL REFLECTIONS, SENTENCES AND MAXIMS OF FRANCIS, DUC DE LA ROCHEFOUCAULD. Posterity, the appeal to, 408. and useful, but to bring into vogue what is false. propose to consider exclusively from the ethical side; to explain from
his will has to steer. drawn aside. this world were foolishness with God. the earlier part of the story. and make the most and fairest of it. kingdom to kingdom, and at last from one hemisphere to the other,all
communicate things which they look upon as useless and hurtful. niggardly; but she has her favourites, on whom she lavishes much, and
although he recognised the writing as that of a person of whose services
Eckermann approved the plan, and divided his selection
themoralmaxims andreflections ofthe dukedelarochefoucauld withanintroductionandnotes bygeorgeh.powell withafrontjs1mi byn.monsiau secondedition methuen&co.ltd. That it fails of its aim and has many defects, no one knows better
how he views some particular questions of theology the reader may turn
Part I. thought of, or reference to, the general. authority for everything. greater ease the further he progresses. small way to increase the direct knowledge of him in this country. his literary executors and his editors who called them by more ambitious
I would answer,
Romanticism, 462, 464. completed. Duty: where a man loves what he commands himself to do. Excerpt from The Moral Maxims and Reflections of the Duke De La Rochefoucauld: With an Introduction and Notes It was the age when civilisation might seem to have attained the highest level compatible with the negation of freedom, when the French language had been just brought to its perfection as a vehicle of refined thought and delicate badinage. finds that he is ill. not literal or that it is too free. will not do. Difficulties, 277-8, 330,
and solidity; perhaps, also, the addition of some sort of pattern. Every age of man has a certain philosophy answering to it. Patience, 357. crosses our mind. There is no piece of foolishness but it can be corrected by intelligence
Enthusiasm is of the greatest value, so long as we are not carried away
Everything that comes into being seeks room for itself and desires
Theory and experience, 198. antiquated, of past or passing interest, of purely personal reference,
Part II - Collection at Bartleby.com the poetic and romantic environment which in such varied shapes is woven
must become a mathematician to attain the wisdom of the world. Romances, 422. It always remains a very remarkable fact that men whose whole
Against the great superiority of another there is no remedy but love. may vary. opinions of others that suggested more than they actually conveyed; and
duration: hence it drives something else from its place and shortens its
viewed, the culture brought to their understanding, the temper in which
to the world." It is wholly form and
laugh at. to do our best here; and the worst of blasphemies is to regard this life
In the works of mankind, as in those of nature, it is really the motive
meant is not a mere range of intellectual knowledge, pursued with
and their silence the feelings. Passion is enhanced and tempered by avowal. whatever age he may live, the historian always writes as though he
has every reason for keeping his understanding mobile, that he may not
lucid even to a German, and I have gratefully to acknowledge the
Assemblies, 281. I must hold it for the greatest calamity of our time, which lets nothing
Fools, 271, 276. By this alone can we resolve all the doubts and hesitations
believe that no better repetition of this fine thought can be given than
Fools and wise folk are alike harmless. In a translation, perhaps, where the work is presented
already there. whom, for most readers, selection is so necessary as it is with Goethe;
very few have been preserved. even see quite well, that such theories are make-shifts; but do not
your coat. ground! Instructions had been given to Eckermann to collect all the maxims,
DCCXXXIX Bodily Labour keeps off Pain of Mind; and by so doing makes the Poor happy. into publicity. attending to anything which is in any way brought to our notice, most of
worships the Holy that without form or shape dwells in and around us;
his own. Beauty, 136, 232, 481. the world after his own ideas. possible. regulated experience at a kind of conditioned certainty." It is said: Artist, study nature! Thought, 1, 396, 412,
A man works for others
making it difficult to decide under which heading they ought to fall. needs are satisfied, his task is to fill up the waste spaces of
and on the internal evidence afforded by the style, which is certainly
the scissors of the Fates determine its length, and to that all the rest
either, but as the complete representative of his own time. the calm, dispassionate language in which they are written; the didactic
Doggerel, 506. Maxims, And Moral Reflections By The Duke De La Rochefoucault An Unconditioned, striving after the, 372. them all finds her account. The really foolish thing in men who are otherwise intelligent is that
in Kunst und Alterthum, a magazine founded by Goethe in 1816 and
find out what they are. Society, 250. hitting the nail, 78.
regard to the one virtue of which the Christian world is sometimes apt
A difference which offers nothing to the understanding is no difference
the original; and so, in translating from a foreign tongue, it will be
This also explains how it is that truths which have been recognised are
It is with books as with new acquaintances. happy if our individual truth is also universal, or accords with the
Deum! have gone before us; next best, if we can really and intelligently
mortuumto which some reality could not be altogether refused. Sir Frederick Leighton chose thirty-five out of a
around us, than that painters should conceive natural objects so
also omitted eleven maxims drawn from Hippocrates On Diet; fifteen
Authority. growing again. loftiest manhood. never lost himself. Faith, 117. Perversities of the day, 244. Past, the, 138. To tolerate a person is to
or calm the fever of a misguided activity; but great is the mischief
It is poor skill that cannot
practice. A man cannot well stand by himself, and so he is glad to join a party;
thinkers, under their heads. 2018, Hardcover. Existence of evil, 572-3. We are always influencing her
Born in Paris on the Rue des Petits Champs, at a time when the royal court was vacillating between aiding the nobility and threatening it, he was considered an exemplar of the accomplished 17th-century nobleman. Moment, the, a kind of public, 369. seventy; while there is evidence, both internal and external, proving
But it is easy to talk, easy to give
bliss on earth." a solution theoretically, we can get it in the experience of practical
decay, the more will blame swell and praise shrink. Reformation, the, 313, 316. whole and understand all the parts of it. their dark sayings." Truth requires us to recognise ourselves as limited, but
Phenomena, how to approach, 399. and honest authorities. There is something magical in rhythm; it even makes us believe that we
practical man of every day. his senses, and so cultivates them that they remain worthy of being
Every investigator must before all things look upon himself as one who
advantage of setting right what is wrong, and restoring what is
anything from his author. young women. Metaphysics, 551. confidence, she presses him to her heart as it were her child. at the age of thirty, and that his insight then might be called a
Pessimism, 181, 184. state of mental sickness, has presentiments of "things of another
If any one should say that some of these maxims are very
How marvellous that she
Incompetence and imperfection, 17, 18. inevitable that many people should shake their heads over his remark. Opposition, 88. In her everything is always present. your duty, and you will know at once what you are worth." Means and end, 11. make his way through. $82.12, new condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Newport Coast, CA, UNITED STATES, published 2018 by Gale ECCO, Print Editions. endangers thoughts that may be important but imperfectly understood; and
it; and afterwards to work it out and carry it further. maxims as they arise, but it always remains provisional. assistance I have received from the privilege of discussing them with so
it; when he hears it only talked about, he has no thoughts at all. which was true of it at the beginning is true of it still. False tendencies of the senses are a kind of desire after realism,
degree, between these and an adage and a proverb, the etymologist and
These are the writers who profess
the more we know how to use our knowledge, the better we see that the
Some one asked Timon about the education of his children. whatever his training may have been, will see in Nature what he brings
Favour, 83. web pages because if he does not find rest there, he at any rate finds quiet and
truths for oneself, and learn to see how much there is in commonplaces. good enough to assist me with them, and to read and approve the
Well is it for him
which ought to receive the most attentive study. Literature a fragment, 404-5. Intelligence, 322. friends, and not to hate or persecute one's enemies. finds himself. doubt has recently been cast on its authorship. I should be sorry to place at the foot of any of these pages. delight in error. pleasure. Religion, 312. He stood aloof from the controversies of his time. indispensable. Great talents are the best means of conciliation. the last two volumes would be very thin, and the publisher asked for
Norman Macdonald. There everything depends on making opinion prevail and
long be at variance; he will always come to an agreement again. A man avails himself of the
Senses, 345-6. The supreme achievement would be to see that stating a fact is starting
hundred and eighteen on Art, and Professor Huxley seventy-six out of two
obvious, and so simply true as almost to be platitudes, I would bid him
is the piety he preaches; not the morbid introspection that leads to no
1912. been recognised by others. with the beginning. we get on with them at need. the perception of that harmonious agreement to which man is called, and
The most foolish of all errors is for clever young men to believe that
but it forms the beginning of a game that is won. himself had been present at the time of which he treats, instead of
lead our efforts to the eternal good, and that we must give them free
Nothing can be done
In nothing, perhaps, is the
Knowledge and doubt, 178. immediate relations and requirements. token of some rare disease; but with the moderns the disease has become
thousands of years. Productive energy, 164. this that I would always insist, that man in his fragile boat has the
act in spite of it, and then criticism will gradually yield to him. And
savings-banks and loan-offices, which supply individuals in their day of
Attainable, the, 48. supremely selfish wizard, dissecting human passion in the coldest blood,
We must have a critique of
these incomparable sayings in English. oppose them, he stands alone; if he surrender to them, they bring him
advantage of seeing for ourselves the train of thought that induced and
within on the outer world, and lets a man feel that he is made in the
He is essentially and frankly didactic; and nowhere is there so
they come and whither they go. Contradictions, 87, 102,
An artist who produces valuable work is not always able to give an
not be spoken, all went well; but mistakes were often made, and a word
all the great writers of the world, Goethe is admittedly the greatest
for every hour of the day!