Читаем Letters to His Son on the Art of Becoming a Man of the World and a Gentleman (Письма к сыну – полный вариант) полностью

Man of sense may be in haste, but can never be in a hurry


Man who is only good on holydays is good for very little


Mangles what he means to carve


Manner is full as important as the matter


Manner of doing things is often more important


Manners must adorn knowledge


Many things which seem extremely probable are not true


Many are very willing, and very few able


Mastery of one's temper


May you live as long as you are fit to live, but no longer!


May you rather die before you cease to be fit to live


May not forget with ease what you have with difficulty learned


Mazarin and Lewis the Fourteenth riveted the shackles


Meditation and reflection


Mere reason and good sense is never to be talked to a mob


Merit and goodbreeding will make their way everywhere


Method


Mistimes or misplaces everything


Mitigating, engaging words do by no means weaken your argument


MOB: Understanding they have collectively none


Moderation with your enemies


Modesty is the only sure bait when you angle for praise


Money, the cause of much mischief


More people have ears to be tickled, than understandings to judge


More one sees, the less one either wonders or admires


More you know, the modester you should be


More one works, the more willing one is to work


Mortifying inferiority in knowledge, rank, fortune


Most people enjoy the inferiority of their best friends


Most long talkers single out some one unfortunate man in company


Most ignorant are, as usual, the boldest conjecturers


Most people have ears, but few have judgment; tickle those ears


Much sooner forgive an injustice than an insult


My own health varies, as usual, but never deviates into good


Mystical nonsense


Name that we leave behind at one place often gets before us


National honor and interest have been sacrificed to private


Necessity of scrupulously preserving the appearances


Neglect them in little things, they will leave you in great


Negligence of it implies an indifference about pleasing


Neither know nor care, (when I die) for I am very weary


Neither abilities or words enough to call a coach


Neither retail nor receive scandal willingly


Never would know anything that he had not a mind to know


Never read history without having maps


Never affect the character in which you have a mind to shine


Never implicitly adopt a character upon common fame


Never seek for wit; if it presents itself, well and good


Never to speak of yourself at all


Never slattern away one minute in idleness


Never quit a subject till you are thoroughly master of it


Never maintain an argument with heat and clamor


Never seem wiser, nor more learned, than the people you are with


Never saw a froward child mended by whipping


Never to trust implicitly to the informations of others


Nipped in the bud


No great regard for human testimony


No man is distrait with the man he fears, or the woman he loves


No one feels pleasure, who does not at the same time give it


Not tumble, but slide gently to the bottom of the hill of life


Not to communicate, prematurely, one's hopes or one's fears


Not only pure, but, like Caesar's wife, unsuspected


Not make their want still worse by grieving and regretting them


Not making use of any one capital letter


Not to admire anything too much


Not one minute of the day in which you do nothing at all


Notes by which dances are now pricked down as well as tunes


Nothing in courts is exactly as it appears to be


Nothing much worth either desiring or fearing


Nothing so precious as time, and so irrecoverable when lost


Observe, without being thought an observer


Often more necessary to conceal contempt than resentment


Often necessary, not to manifest all one feels


Often necessary to seem ignorant of what one knows


Oftener led by their hearts than by their understandings


Old fellow ought to seem wise whether he really be so or not


One must often yield, in order to prevail


Only doing one thing at a time


Only because she will not, and not because she cannot


Only solid and lasting peace, between a man and his wife


Our understandings are generally the DUPES of our hearts


Our frivolous dissertations upon the weather, or upon whist


Out of livery; which makes them both impertinent and useless


Outward air of modesty to all he does


Overvalue what we do not know


Oysters, are only in season in the R months


Passes for a wit, though he hath certainly no uncommon share


Patience is the only way not to make bad worse


Patient toleration of certain airs of superiority


Pay your own reckoning, but do not treat the whole company


Pay them with compliments, but not with confidence


People never desire all till they have gotten a great deal


People lose a great deal of time by reading


People will repay, and with interest too, inattention


People angling for praise


People hate those who make them feel their own inferiority


Perfection of everything that is worth doing at all


Perseverance has surprising effects


Person to you whom I am very indifferent about, I mean myself


Pettish, pouting conduct is a great deal too young


Petty jury


Plain notions of right and wrong


Planted while young, that degree of knowledge now my refuge


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