The acquisition of riches has been to many not an end to their miseries, but a change in them: The fault is not in the riches, but the disposition.
Whatever has overstepped its due bounds is always in a state of instability.
Many shed tears merely for show, and have dry eyes when no one’s around to observe them.
Life is most delightful on the downward slope.
That which achieves its effect by accident is not art.
Every one has time if he likes. Business runs after nobody: people cling to it of their own free will and think that to be busy is a proof of happiness.
Fine conduct is always spontaneous.
The kind of solace that arises from having company in misery is spiteful.
The man who thinks only of his own generation is born for few.
A troubled countenance oft discloses much.
We learn not for life but for the debating-room.
A disease is farther on the road to being cured when it breaks forth from concealment and manifests its power.
Death either destroys or unhusks us. If it means liberation, better things await us when our burden s gone: if destruction, nothing at all awaits us; blessings and curses are abolished.
Death takes us piecemeal, not at a gulp.
Death’s the discharge of our debt of sorrow.
There is nothing after death, and death itself is nothing.
Apples taste sweetest when they’re going.
The profit on a good action is to have done it.
Drunkenness doesn’t create vices, but it brings them to the fore.
He who fears from near at hand often fears less.