Joseph Addison

England
1 May 1672 // 17 Jun 1719
Author / Poet / Essayist

Quotes

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Others proclaim the infirmities of a great man with satisfaction and complacence, if they discover none of the like in themselves
One would think that the larger the company is in which we are engaged, the greater variety of thoughts and subjects would be started into discourse; but, instead of this we find that conversation is never so much straightened and confined, as in numerous assemblies
One would fancy that the zealots in atheism would be exempt from the single fault which seems to grow out of the imprudent fervor of religion. But so it is, that irreligion is propagated with as much fierceness and contention, wrath and indignation, as if the safety of mankind depended upon it
One of the most important, but one of the most difficult things to a powerful mind is to be its own master; a pond may lay quiet in a plain, but a lake wants mountains to compass and hold it in
Of his shallow species there is not a more unfortunate, empty and conceited animal than that which is generally known by the name of a critic
Nothing makes a woman more esteemed by the opposite sex than chastity; whether it be that we always prize those most who are hardest to come at, or that nothing besides chastity, with its collateral attendants, truth, fidelity, and constancy, gives the man a property in the person he loves, and consequently endears her to him above all things
No man writes a book without meaning something, though he may not have the faculty of writing consequentially and expressing his meaning
Most of our fellow-subjects are guided either by the prejudice of education or by a deference to the judgment of those who perhaps in their own hearts disapprove the opinions which they industriously spread among the multitude
Method is not less requisite in ordinary conversation than in writing, provided a man would talk to make himself understood
Many actions calculated to procure fame are not conducive to ultimate happiness
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