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

Please all who are worth pleasing; offend none


Pleased to some degree by showing a desire to please


Pleased with him, by making them first pleased with themselves


Pleasing in company is the only way of being pleased in yourself


Pleasure and business with equal inattention


Pleasure is necessarily reciprocal


Pleasure is the rock which most young people split upon


Pleasures do not commonly last so long as life


Pocket all your knowledge with your watch


Polite, but without the troublesome forms and stiffness


POLITICIANS NEITHER LOVE NOR HATE


Prefer useful to frivolous conversations


Prejudices are our mistresses


Pride remembers it forever


Pride of being the first of the company


Prudent reserve


Public speaking


Put out your time, but to good interest


Quarrel with them when they are grown up, for being spoiled


Quietly cherished error, instead of seeking for truth


Read my eyes out every day, that I may not hang myself


Read with caution and distrust


Real merit of any kind will be discovered


Real friendship is a slow grower


Reason ought to direct the whole, but seldom does


Reason, which always ought to direct mankind, seldom does


Receive them with great civility, but with great incredulity


Reciprocally profess wishes which they seldom form


Recommend (pleasure) to you, like an Epicurean


Recommends selfconversation to all authors


Refuge of people who have neither wit nor invention of their own


Refuse more gracefully than other people could grant


Repeating


Represent, but do not pronounce


Reserve with your friends


Respect without timidity


Respectful without meanness, easy without too much familiarity


Return you the ball 'a la volee'


Rich man never borrows


Richelieu came and shackled the nation


Rochefoucault, who, I am afraid, paints man very exactly


Rochefoucault


Rough corners which mere nature has given to the smoothest


Ruined their own son by what they called loving him


Same coolness and unconcern in any and every company


Scandal: receiver is always thought, as bad as the thief


Scarce any flattery is too gross for them to swallow


Scarcely any body who is absolutely good for nothing


Scrupled no means to obtain his ends


Secret, without being dark and mysterious


Secrets


See what you see, and to hear what you hear


Seem to like and approve of everything at first


Seeming frankness with a real reserve


Seeming inattention to the person who is speaking to you


Seeming openness is prudent


Seems to have no opinion of his own


Seldom a misfortune to be childless


Selflove draws a thick veil between us and our faults


Sentimentmongers


Sentiments that were never felt, pompously described


Serious without being dull


Settled here for good, as it is called


Shakespeare


She has all the reading that a woman should have


She who conquers only catches a Tartar


She has uncommon, sense and knowledge for a woman


Shepherds and ministers are both men


Silence in love betrays more woe


Singularity is only pardonable in old age


Six, or at most seven hours sleep


Smile, where you cannot strike


Some complaisance and attention to fools is prudent


Some men pass their whole time in doing nothing


Something or other is to be got out of everybody


Something must be said, but that something must be nothing


Sooner forgive an injury than an insult


Sow jealousies among one's enemies


Spare the persons while you lash the crimes


Speaking to himself in the glass


Stampact has proved a most pernicious measure


Stampduty, which our Colonists absolutely refuse to pay


State your difficulties, whenever you have any


Steady assurance, with seeming modesty


Studied and elaborate dress of the ugliest women in the world


Style is the dress of thoughts


Success turns much more upon manner than matter


Sure guide is, he who has often gone the road which you want to


Suspicion of age, no woman, let her be ever so old, ever forgive


Swearing


Tacitus


Take the hue of the company you are with


Take characters, as they do most things, upon trust


Take, rather than give, the tone of the company you are in


Take nothing for granted, upon the bare authority of the author


Taking up adventitious, proves their want of intrinsic merit


Talent of hating with goodbreeding and loving with prudence


Talk often, but never long


Talk sillily upon a subject of other people's


Talk of natural affection is talking nonsense


Talking of either your own or other people's domestic affairs


Tell me whom you live with, and I will tell you who you are


Tell stories very seldom


The longest life is too short for knowledge


The present moments are the only ones we are sure of


The best have something bad, and something little


The worst have something good, and sometimes something great


There are many avenues to every man


They thought I informed, because I pleased them


Thin veil of Modesty drawn before Vanity


Think to atone by zeal for their want of merit and importance


Think yourself less well than you are, in order to be quite so


Thinks himself much worse than he is


Thoroughly, not superficially


Those who remarkably affect any one virtue


Those whom you can make like themselves better


Three passions that often put honesty to most severe trials


Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Основы метафизики нравственности
Основы метафизики нравственности

Иммануил Кант – величайший философ Западной Европы, один из ведущих мыслителей эпохи Просвещения, родоначальник немецкой классической философии, основатель критического идеализма, внесший решающий вклад в развитие европейской философской традиции.Только разумное существо имеет волю, благодаря которой оно способно совершать поступки из принципов.И только разумное существо при достижении желаемого способно руководствоваться законом нравственности.Об этом и многом другом говорится в работе «Основы метафизики нравственности», ставшей предварением к «Критике практического разума».В сборник входит также «Антропология с прагматической точки зрения» – последняя крупная работа Канта, написанная на основе конспектов лекций, в которой представлена систематизация современных философу знаний о человеке.

И Кант , Иммануил Кант

Философия / Образование и наука