Constant success shows us but one side of the world. For as it surrounds us with friends who will tell us only our merits, so it silences those enemies from whom alone we can learn our defects.
CHARLES CALEB COLTONRevenge is fever in our own blood, to be cured only by letting the blood of another; but the remedy too often produces a relapse, which is remorse–a malady far more dreadful than the first disease, because it is incurable.
More Charles Caleb Colton Quotes
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None are so fond of secrets as those who do not mean to keep them.
CHARLES CALEB COLTON -
Unlike the sun, intellectual luminaries shine brightest after they set.
CHARLES CALEB COLTON -
None are so fond of secrets as those who do not mean to keep them; such persons covet secrets as a spendthrift covets money, for the purpose of circulation.
CHARLES CALEB COLTON -
Our admiration of fine writing will always be in proportion to its real difficulty and its apparent ease.
CHARLES CALEB COLTON -
We are sure to be losers when we quarrel with ourselves; it is civil war.
CHARLES CALEB COLTON -
If merited, no courage can stand against its just indignation.
CHARLES CALEB COLTON -
God will excuse our prayers for ourselves whenever we are prevented from them by being occupied in such good works as to entitle us to the prayers of others.
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Cruel men are the greatest lovers of Mercy, avaricious men of generosity, and proud men of humility; that is to say, in other, not in themselves.
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Let those who would affect singularity with success first determine to be very virtuous, and they will be sure to be very singular.
CHARLES CALEB COLTON -
Happiness, that grand mistress of the ceremonies in the dance of life, impels us through all its mazes and meanderings, but leads none of us by the same route.
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Oppression cannot prosper where none will submit to be enslaved.
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We may anticipate bliss, but who ever drank of that enchanted cup unalloved?
CHARLES CALEB COLTON -
The acquirements of science maybe termed the armor of the mind.
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He that studies books alone, will know how things ought to be; and he that studies men, will know how things are.
CHARLES CALEB COLTON -
The Grecian’s maxim would indeed be a sweeping clause in Literature; it would reduce many a giant to a pygmy; many a speech to a sentence; and many a folio to a primer.
CHARLES CALEB COLTON