A good number of works owe their success to the mediocrity of their authors' ideas, which match the mediocrity of those of the general public.
--Nicolas Chamfort
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.
--Nicolas Chamfort
A philosopher told me that, having examined the civil and political order of societies, he now studied nothing except the savages in the books of explorers, and children in everyday life.
--Nicolas Chamfort
A witty woman once told me something which may well be the genuine secret of her sex: that in choosing a lover each one of her kind takes more account of how other women regard him than of how she regards him herself.
--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 economist is a surgeon with an excellent scalpel and a rough-edged lancet, who operates beautifully on the dead and tortures the living.
--Nicolas Chamfort
And so I leave this world, where the heart must either break or turn to lead. (Suicide note).
--Nicolas Chamfort
Anyone who relies too heavily on reason to achieve happiness, who analyses it, who, so to speak, quibbles over his enjoyment and can accept only refined pleasures, ends up not having any at all. He's like a man who wants to get rid of all the lumps in his mattress and eventually ends up sleeping on bare boards.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Anyone whose needs are small seems threatening to the rich, because he's always ready to escape their control.
--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
Chance is a nickname for Providence.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Economists are surgeons... who operate beautifully on the dead and torment the living.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Every day I add to the list of things I refuse to discuss. The wiser the man, the longer the list.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Few people are prepared to use their reason without fear or favor, or bold enough to apply it relentlessly to every moral, political and social issue: to kings and ministers, to men in high places... And if we don't, we're doomed to remain mediocre.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Good taste, tact, and propriety have more in common than men of letters affect to believe. Tact is good taste applied to bearing and conduct, and propriety is good taste applied to conversation.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Having lots of ideas doesn't mean you're clever, any more than having lots of soldiers means you're a good general.
--Nicolas Chamfort
High society is a poor play, a bad, boring opera, made slightly better by its staging, costumes and scenery.
--Nicolas Chamfort
I believe that illusions are necessary to man, yet live without illusion; I believe that the passions are more profitable than reason, and yet no longer know what passion is.
--Nicolas Chamfort
I once read that there's nothing worse for everyone concerned than a reign that's lasted too long. I've also heard that God is eternal.
--Nicolas Chamfort
I only study the things I like; I apply my mind only to matters that interest me. They'll be useful- or useless- to me or to others in due course, I'll be given- or not given- the opportunity of benefiting from what I've learned. In any case, I'll have enjoyed the inestimable advantage of doing things I like doing and following my own inclinations.
--Nicolas Chamfort
I've destroyed my passions, rather like a violent man who, finding he can't control his horse, kills it.
--Nicolas Chamfort
In great affairs men show themselves as they wish to be seen; in small things they show themselves as they are.
--Nicolas Chamfort
In the world you have three sorts of friends: your friends who love you, your friends who do not care about you and your friends who hate you.
--Nicolas Chamfort
It is safe to wager that every public idea and every accepted convention is sheer foolishness, because it has suited the majority.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Love is like epidemic diseases. The more one fears it, the more likely one is to contract it.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Love, a pleasant folly; ambition, a serious stupidity.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Middle-class women who entertain the hope or fancy of being something in the world, lose Nature's happiness and miss Society's. They are the most unfortunate creatures I have known.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Money is the greatest concern for small characters, but is nothing but the smallest for great characters.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Most social institutions seem to be designed to keep man in a state of intellectual and emotional mediocrity that makes him more fit to govern or be governed.
--Nicolas Chamfort
My whole life is woven of threads which are in blatant contrast to my principles.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Nature didn't tell me 'Don't be poor'; and certainly didn't say: 'Get rich'; but she did shout: 'Always be independent!'
--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
Petty souls are more susceptible to ambition than great ones, just as straw or thatched cottages burn more easily than palaces.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Pleasure can be supported by illusion but happiness rests upon truth.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Poets, orators, even philosophes, say the same things about fame we were told as boys to encourage us to win prizes. What they tell children to make them prefer being praised to eating jam tarts is the same idea constantly drummed into us to encourage us to sacrifice our real interests in the hope of being praised by our contemporaries or by posterity.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Poverty puts crime at a discount.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Public opinion reigns in society because stupidity reigns amongst the stupid.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Running a house should be left to innkeepers.
--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
Stubbornness equals character roughly as lust equals love.
--Nicolas Chamfort
The art of the parenthesis is one of the great secrets of eloquence in Society.
--Nicolas Chamfort
The most completely wasted of all days is that in which we have not laughed.
--Nicolas Chamfort
The only thing that stops God sending a second Flood is that the first one was useless.
--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
The things you know best are: first, those you know intuitively; second, those you've learned from experience; third, those you've learned not from but through books and the ideas they've inspired in you; and finally, those you've learned in books and from your teachers.
--Nicolas Chamfort
There are girls who manage to sell themselves, whom no one would take as gifts.
--Nicolas Chamfort
There are more fools than wise men, and even in a wise man there is more folly than wisdom.
--Nicolas Chamfort
There are well-dressed foolish ideas just as there are well-dressed fools.
--Nicolas Chamfort
There is a kind of harmful modesty which... sometimes affects men of superior character to their detriment by keeping them in a state of mediocrity. I am reminded of the remark that a certain gentleman of acknowledged eminence once made at luncheon to some persons of the Court, 'How bitterly I regret the time I wasted merely to learn how superior I am to all of you!'
--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
What one knows best is... what one has learned not from books but as a result of books, through the reflections to which they have given rise.
--Nicolas Chamfort
Found 51 occurence(s) in 52,059 quotation(s).