Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De quotes
1741-1794 French Writer Journalist PlaywrightSometimes apparent resemblance of character will bring two men together and for a certain time unite them. But their mistake gradually becomes evident, and they are astonished to find themselves not only far apart, but even repelled, in some sort, at all their points of contact.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Compatibility
Education must have two foundations --morality as a support for virtue, prudence as a defense for self against the vices of others. By letting the balance incline to the side of morality, you only make dupes or martyrs; by letting it incline to the other, you make calculating egoists.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Education
Man arrives as a novice at each age of his life.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Experience
Most books today seemed to have been written overnight from books read the day before.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Books - Reading
No law reaches it, but all right-minded people observe it.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Decency
Real worth requires no interpreter: its everyday deeds form its emblem.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Deeds and Good Deeds
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.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Getting Ahead
I have three kinds of friends: those who love me, those who pay no attention to me, and those who detest me.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Friends and Friendship
How many fools does it take to make up a public?
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Fools and Foolishness
Change of fashion is the tax levied by the industry of the poor on the vanity of the rich.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Fashion
A person of intellect without energy added to it, is a failure.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Intelligence and Intellectuals
Pleasure can be supported by an illusion; but happiness rests upon truth.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Illusion
The most wasted of all days is that on which one has not laughed.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Laughter
A man is not necessarily intelligent because he has plenty of ideas, any more than he is a good general because he has plenty of soldiers.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Ideas
All passions exaggerate; and they are passions only because they do exaggerate.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Passion
When a man and a woman have an overwhelming passion for each other, it seems to me, in spite of such obstacles dividing them as parents or husband, that they belong to each other in the name of Nature, and are lovers by Divine right, in spite of human convention or the laws.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Lovers
Some things are easier to legalize than to legitimate.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Law and Lawyers
There are well-dressed foolish ideas, just as there are will-dressed fools.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Ideas
We leave unmolested those who set the fire to the house, and prosecute those who sound the alarm.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Justice
Nature never said to me: Do not be poor; still less did she say: Be rich; her cry to me was always: Be independent.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Independence
Living is a sickness to which sleep provides relief every sixteen hours. It s a palliative. The remedy is death.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Life and Death
If it were not for the government, we should have nothing to laugh at in France.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Nations
People are governed with the head; kindness of heart is little use in chess.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Reason
Pleasure may come from illusion, but happiness can come only of reality.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Pleasure
The person is always happy who is in the presence of something they cannot know in full. A person as advanced far in the study of morals who has mastered the difference between pride and vanity.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Morality
Preoccupation with money is the great test of small natures, but only a small test of great ones.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Money
Whatever evil a man may think of women, there is no woman but thinks more.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Men and Women
Conviction is the conscience of the mind.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Mind
Philosophy, like medicine, has plenty of drugs, few good remedies, and hardly any specific cures.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Philosophers and Philosophy
Scandal is an importunate wasp, against which we must make no movement unless we are quite sure that we can kill it; otherwise it will return to the attack more furious than ever.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Scandal
The art of the parenthesis is one of the greatest secrets of eloquence in Society.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Tact and Tactfulness
Success makes success, like money makes money.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Success
Secrecy is best taught by starting with ourselves.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Secrets
Eminence without merit earns deference without esteem.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Respectability
Society is composed of two great classes, those that have more dinners than appetite, and those who have more appetite than dinners.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Society
Society is divided into two classes, the shearers and the shorn.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Society
There are certain times when public opinion is the worst of all opinions.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Public Opinion
Paris, a city of gaieties and pleasures, where four-fifths of the inhabitants die of grief. [About Paris]
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Cities and City Life
Celebrity is the advantage of being known to people who we don t know, and who don t know us.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Fame
The person of intellect is lost unless they unite with energy of character. When we have the lantern of Diogenese we must also have his staff.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Action
An author is often obscure to the reader because they proceed from the thought to expression than like the reader from the expression to the thought.
Chamfort, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De
Writers and Writing

