As you know, no one over thirty years of age is afraid of tittle-tattle. I myself find it much less difficult to strangle a man than to fear him. |
As you know, no one over thirty years of age is afraid of tittle-tattle. I myself find it much less difficult to strangle a man than to fear him. |
Dignity is like a perfume; those who use it are scarcely conscious of it |
Dignity is like a perfume; those who use it are scarcely conscious of it |
Fools are more to be feared than the wicked. |
God has neither form nor shape under which we can know Him; when he speaks of Himself in metaphors and similes, He is adapting Himself to our foolishness, our limited capacity |
I love men, not because they are men, but because they are not women |
It is necessary to try to pass one's self always; this occupation ought to last as long as life. |
Life becomes useless and insipid when we have no longer either friends or enemies. |
Nuns and married women are equally unhappy, if in different ways |
There is a star above us which unites souls of the first order, though worlds and ages separate them |
We grow old more through indolence, than through age |