"From that awful encounter of the soul with the outer world, enunciation, wisdom, and charity are born; and with their birth a new life begins. To take into the inmost shrine of the soul the irresistible forces whose puppets we seem to be - Death and change, the irrevocableness of the past, and the powerlessness of Man before the blind hurry of the universe from vanity to vanity - to feel these things and know them is to conquer them."
Vanity quotes
Vanity
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Vanity quotes (page 8 of 48)
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"I guess I'm larger than life. That's my problem."
"Vanity is but the surface."
"There is no arena in which vanity displays itself under such a variety of forms as in conversation."
"How vain is painting, which is admired for reproducing the likeness of things whose originals are not admired."
"Curiosity is only vanity. Most frequently we wish not to know, but to talk. We would not take a sea voyage for the sole pleasure of seeing without hope of ever telling."
"I have always found that Angels have the vanity to speak of themselves as the only wise."
"Be good, be young, be true! Evil is nothing but vanity, let us have the pride of good, and above all let us never despair."
"We are all potentially such sick men. The sanest and best of us are of one clay with lunatics and prison-inmates. And whenever we feel this, such a sense of the vanity of our voluntary career comes over us, that all our morality appears but as a plaster hiding a sore it can never cure, and all our well-doing as the hollowest substitute for that well-being that our lives ought to be grounded in, but alas! are not."
"Without vanity, without coquetry, without curiosity, in a word, without the fall, woman would not be woman. Much of her grace is in her frailty."
"Yet some natures are too good to be spoiled by praise, and wherever the vein of thought reaches down into the profound, there is no danger from vanity. Solemn friends will warn them of the danger of the head's being turned by the flourish of trumpets, but they can afford to smile."
"We have always pretensions to fame which, in our own hearts, we know to be disputable."
"The greatest human virtue bears no proportion to human vanity. We always think ourselves better than we are, and are generally desirous that others should think us still better than we think ourselves. To praise us for actions or dispositions which deserve praise is not to confer a benefit, but to pay a tribute. We have always pretensions to fame which, in our own hearts, we know to be disputable, and which we are desirous to strengthen by a new suffrage; we have always hopes which we suspect to be fallacious, and of which we eagerly snatch at every confirmation."
"No man sympathizes with the sorrows of vanity."
"I doubt if there ever was a man who was not gratified by being told that he was liked by the women."
"Take away ambition and vanity, and where will be your heroes and patriots?"
"Man that is of woman born is apt to be as vain has his mother."
"Luxury is the income tax of vanity. But it is so pleasant."
"The evil effect of science upon men is principally this, that by far the greatest number of those who wish to display a knowledge of it accomplish no improvement at all of the understanding, but only a perversity of it, not to mention that it serves most of them as a tool of vanity."
"After all, what does fame everlasting mean? Mere vanity."