Talk:Antoine de Rivarol

Unsourced

 * The most civilized people are as near to barbarism as the most polished steel is to rust. Nations, like metals, have only a superficial brilliancy.


 * Opinions, theories, and systems pass by turns over the grindstone of time, which at first gives them brilliancy and sharpness, but finally wears them out.


 * That which happens to the soil when it ceases to be cultivated by the social man happens to man himself when he foolishly forsakes society for solitude; the brambles grow up in his desert heart.


 * Extremes produce reaction. Beware that our boasted civilization does not lapse into barbarism.


 * Man spends his life in reasoning on the past, in complaining of the present, in fearing future.


 * It has been very truly said that the mob has many heads, but no brains.


 * Vices are often habits rather than passions.


 * A fool may have his coat embroidered with gold, but it is a fool's coat still.


 * The methods that help a man acquire a fortune are the very ones that keep him from enjoying it.


 * The only thing wealth does for some people is to make them worry about losing it.


 * The modest man has everything to gain, and the arrogant man everything to lose; for modesty has always to deal with generosity, and arrogance with envy.


 * Brave men do not boast nor bluster. Deeds, not words, speak for such.

Biohistorian15 (talk) 15:34, 7 April 2024 (UTC)
 * Of every ten persons who talk about you, nine will say something bad, and the tenth will say something good in a bad way.