Book Read Free

Quotable Quotes

Page 7

by Editors of Reader's Digest


  Any kid who has two parents who are interested in him and has a houseful of books isn’t poor.

  —SAM LEVENSON

  Sometimes the poorest man leaves his children the richest inheritance.

  —RUTH E. RENKEL

  in National Enquirer

  The greatest gifts you can give your children are the roots of responsibility and the wings of independence.

  —DENIS WAITLEY

  A truly rich man is one whose children run into his arms when his hands are empty.

  —Spotlight (Boise, Idaho)

  I have found that the best way to give advice to your children is to find out what they want, and then advise them to do it.

  —HARRY S. TRUMAN

  If a child lives with approval, he learns to like himself.

  —DOROTHY LAW NOLTE

  Parents need to fill a child’s bucket of self-esteem so high that the rest of the world can’t poke enough holes in it to drain it dry.

  —ALVIN PRICE

  Every adult needs a child to teach; it’s the way adults learn.

  —FRANK A. CLARK

  Children are likely to live up to what you believe of them.

  —LADY BIRD JOHNSON

  If you can’t hold children in your arms, please hold them in your heart.

  —MOTHER CLARA HALE

  You cannot train a horse with shouts and expect it to obey a whisper.

  —DAGOBERT D. RUNES

  Letters to My Son

  What’s done to children, they will do to society.

  —DR. KARL MENNINGER

  What a father says to his children is not heard by the world; but it will be heard by posterity.

  —JEAN PAUL RICHTER

  Never fear spoiling children by making them too happy. Happiness is the atmosphere in which all good affections grow.

  —THOMAS BRAY

  The only thing worth stealing is a kiss from a sleeping child.

  —JOE HOULDSWORTH

  MANNERS ARE THE HAPPY WAY . . .

  Manners are the happy way of doing things.

  —RALPH WALDO EMERSON

  Manners are a sensitive awareness of the feelings of others. If you have that awareness, you have good manners, no matter what fork you use.

  —EMILY POST

  Most arts require long study and application, but the most useful of all, that of pleasing, requires only the desire.

  —LORD CHESTERFIELD

  Life is not so short but that there is always time for courtesy.

  —RALPH WALDO EMERSON

  Politeness is the art of selecting among one’s real thoughts.

  —MADAME DE STAËL

  To have a respect for ourselves guides our morals; to have a deference for others governs our manners.

  —LAURENCE STERNE

  Manners are like the zero in arithmetic; they may not be much in themselves, but they are capable of adding a great deal to the value of everything else.

  —FREYA STARK

  The Journey’s Echo

  Etiquette is getting sleepy in company and not showing it.

  —HYMAN MAXWELL BERSTON

  You can get through life with bad manners, but it’s easier with good manners.

  —LILLIAN GISH

  Diplomacy gets you out of what tact would have kept you out of.

  —BRIAN BOWLING

  The point of tact is not sharp.

  —COLLEEN CARNEY

  People with tact have less to retract.

  —ARNOLD H. GLASOW

  Tact consists in knowing how far we may go too far.

  —JEAN COCTEAU

  A Call to Order

  Tact is the knack of making a point without making an enemy.

  —HOWARD W. NEWTON

  Tact is the art of making guests feel at home when that’s really where you wish they were.

  —GEORGE E. BERGMAN

  in Good Housekeeping

  Tact is rubbing out another’s mistake instead of rubbing it in.

  —Farmers’ Almanac

  Tact is the art of recognizing when to be big and when not to belittle.

  —BILL COPELAND

  Tact is the ability to stay in the middle without getting caught there.

  —FRANKLIN P. JONES

  Tact is the art of convincing people that they know more than you do.

  —RAYMOND MORTIMER

  Tact is the art of building a fire under people without making their blood boil.

  —FRANKLIN P. JONES

  Never insult an alligator until after you have crossed the river.

  —CORDELL HULL

  The truly free man is he who knows how to decline a dinner invitation without giving an excuse.

  —JULES RENARD

  Every generation is convinced there has been a deplorable breakdown of manners.

  —BYRON DOBELL

  in American Heritage

  To be agreeable in society, you must consent to be taught many things which you already know.

  —TALLEYRAND

  It takes a lot of thought and effort and downright determination to be agreeable.

  —RAY D. EVERSON

  Praise is like champagne; it should be served while it is still bubbling.

  —Robins Reader

  Charm is the quality in others that makes us more satisfied with ourselves.

  —HENRI FRÉDÉRIC AMIEL

  A gentleman is a man who uses a butter knife when dining alone.

  —W. F. DETTLE

  Nothing prevents us from being natural so much as the desire to appear so.

  —FRANÇOIS DE LA ROCHEFOUCAULD

  It is a great mistake for men to give up paying compliments, for when they give up saying what is charming, they give up thinking what is charming.

  —OSCAR WILDE

  Politeness is to human nature what warmth is to wax.

  —ARTHUR SCHOPENHAUER

  He who says what he likes, hears what he does not like.

  —LEONARD LOUIS LEVINSON

  The manner in which it is given is worth more than the gift.

  —PIERRE CORNEILLE

  To receive a present handsomely and in a right spirit, even when you have none to give in return, is to give one in return.

  —LEIGH HUNT

  Essays by Leigh Hunt

  It is much easier to be a hero than a gentleman.

  —LUIGI PIRANDELLO

  Never claim as a right what you can ask as a favor.

  —JOHN CHURTON COLLINS

  To err is human; to refrain from laughing, humane.

  —LANE OLINGHOUSE

  A CONTINENT OF UNDISCOVERED CHARACTER . . .

  Every one of us has in him a continent of undiscovered character. Blessed is he who acts the Columbus to his own soul.

  —Quoted in Words of Life, edited by

  Charles L. Wallis

  Character is a strange blending of flinty strength and pliable warmth.

  —ROBERT SHAFFER

  No man knows his true character until he has run out of gas, purchased something on the installment plan, and raised an adolescent.

  —EDNA MCCANN

  The Heritage Book 1985

  Character may be manifested in the great moments, but it is made in the small ones.

  —PHILLIPS BROOKS

  Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man’s character, give him power.

  —ABRAHAM LINCOLN

  Everyone journeys through character as well as through time. The person one becomes depends on the person one has b
een.

  —DICK FRANCIS

  A Jockey’s Life: The Biography of Lester Piggott

  Character consists of what you do on the third and fourth tries.

  —JAMES MICHENER

  Chesapeake

  You can measure a man by the opposition it takes to discourage him.

  —ROBERT C. SAVAGE

  Life Lessons

  We know what a person thinks not when he tells us what he thinks, but by his actions.

  —ISAAC BASHEVIS SINGER

  in The New York Times Magazine

  Another flaw in the human character is that everybody wants to build and nobody wants to do maintenance.

  —KURT VONNEGUT

  Hocus Pocus

  Men are men before they are lawyers, or physicians, or merchants, or manufacturers; and if you make them capable and sensible men, they will make themselves capable and sensible lawyers or physicians.

  —JOHN STUART MILL

  The severest test of character is not so much the ability to keep a secret as it is, when the secret is finally out, to refrain from disclosing that you knew it all along.

  —SYDNEY J. HARRIS

  Show me the man you honor, and I will know what kind of man you are.

  —THOMAS CARLYLE

  People need responsibility. They resist assuming it, but they cannot get along without it.

  —JOHN STEINBECK

  in Saturday Review

  If anyone thinks he has no responsibilities, it is because he has not sought them out.

  —MARY LYON

  Duty is a very personal thing. It is what comes from knowing the need to take action and not just a need to urge others to do something.

  —MOTHER TERESA OF CALCUTTA

  Our concern is not how to worship in the catacombs, but rather how to remain human in the skyscrapers.

  —RABBI ABRAHAM JOSHUA HESCHEL

  The Insecurity of Freedom

  The treacherous, unexplored areas of the world are not in continents or the seas; they are in the minds and hearts of men.

  —ALLEN E. CLAXTON

  The truth about a man is, first of all, what it is that he keeps hidden.

  —ANDRÉ MALRAUX

  Men show their character in nothing more clearly than by what they think laughable.

  —JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE

  You can discover more about a person in an hour of play than in a year of conversation.

  —PLATO

  There are two insults no human being will endure: that he has no sense of humor, and that he has never known trouble.

  —SINCLAIR LEWIS

  Sports do not build character. They reveal it.

  —HEYWOOD HALE BROUN

  How a man plays the game shows something of his character; how he loses shows all of it.

  —Tribune (Camden County, Georgia)

  In our play we reveal what kind of people we are.

  —OVID

  You can tell more about a person by what he says about others than you can by what others say about him.

  —LEO AIKMAN

  Character is what you know you are, not what others think you are.

  —MARVA COLLINS AND CIVIA TAMARKIN

  Marva Collins’ Way

  You can easily judge the character of a man by how he treats those who can do nothing for him.

  —JAMES D. MILES

  Character is much easier kept than recovered.

  —THOMAS PAINE

  The way to gain a good reputation is to endeavor to be what you desire to appear.

  —SOCRATES

  A good reputation is better than fame.

  —LOUIS DUDEK

  Epigrams

  Reputation is character minus what you’ve been caught doing.

  —MICHAEL IAPOCE

  A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Boardroom

  Life is for one generation; a good name is forever.

  —JAPANESE PROVERB

  To have lost your reputation is to be dead among the living.

  —S. H. SIMMONS

  Modesty is to merit what shade is to figures in a picture; it gives it strength and makes it stand out.

  —JEAN DE LA BRUYÈRE

  Modesty is the clothing of talent.

  —PIERRE VERON

  He who is slowest in making a promise is most faithful in its performance.

  —JEAN JACQUES ROUSSEAU

  The only way to make a man trustworthy is to trust him.

  —HENRY L. STIMSON

  in Harper’s Magazine

  Willpower is being able to eat just one salted peanut.

  —PAT ELPHINSTONE

  The best discipline, maybe the only discipline that really works, is self-discipline.

  —WALTER KIECHEL III

  in Fortune

  You can find on the outside only what you possess on the inside.

  —ADOLFO MONTIEL BALLESTEROS

  La Honda y La Flor

  In great matters men show themselves as they wish to be seen; in small matters, as they are.

  —GAMALIEL BRADFORD

  What lies behind us and what lies before us are small matters compared to what lies within us.

  —RALPH WALDO EMERSON

  I see God in every human being.

  —MOTHER TERESA OF CALCUTTA

  Men may be divided almost any way we please, but I have found the most useful distinction to be made between those who devote their lives to conjugating the verb “to be,” and those who spend their lives conjugating the verb “to have.”

  —SYDNEY J. HARRIS

  There is more simplicity in the man who eats caviar on impulse than in the man who eats Grape Nuts on principle.

  —G. K. CHESTERTON

  One of the best ways to measure people is to watch the way they behave when something free is offered.

  —ANN LANDERS

  Say not you know a man entirely till you have divided an inheritance with him.

  —JOHANN KASPAR LAVATER

  Not what I have but what I do is my kingdom.

  —THOMAS CARLYLE

  The reputation of a thousand years may be determined by the conduct of one hour.

  —JAPANESE PROVERB

  Fame is the perfume of heroic deeds.

  —SOCRATES

  Dollars have never been known to produce character, and character will never be produced by money.

  —W. K. KELLOGG

  I’ll Invest My Money in People

  One isn’t born one’s self. One is born with a mass of expectations, a mass of other people’s ideas—and you have to work through it all.

  —V. S. NAIPAUL

  Don’t laugh at a youth for his affectations; he is only trying on one face after another to find a face of his own.

  —LOGAN PEARSALL SMITH

  It has amazed me that the most incongruous traits should exist in the same person and, for all that, yield a plausible harmony.

  —W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM

  We spend our time searching for security and hate it when we get it.

  —JOHN STEINBECK

  America and Americans

  Without heroes, we are all plain people and don’t know how far we can go.

  —BERNARD MALAMUD

  The Natural

  The great man is he who does not lose his child-heart.

  —MENCIUS

  No great scoundrel is ever uninteresting.

  —MURRAY KEMPTON

  in Newsday (Long Island, New York)

  Characters live to be noticed. People with charac
ter notice how they live.

  —NANCY MOSER

  Man is harder than iron, stronger than stone and more fragile than a rose.

  —TURKISH PROVERB

  He is ill clothed that is bare of virtue.

  —BENJAMIN FRANKLIN

  All of us are experts at practicing virtue at a distance.

  —THEODORE M. HESBURGH

  To err is human; to blame it on the other guy is even more human.

  —BOB GODDARD

  Man is the only kind of varmint sets his own trap, baits it, then steps in it.

  —JOHN STEINBECK

  Sweet Thursday

  There’s man all over for you, blaming on his boots the faults of his feet.

  —SAMUEL BECKETT

  Waiting for Godot

  AN OPTIMIST STAYS UP UNTIL MIDNIGHT . . .

  An optimist stays up until midnight to see the new year in. A pessimist stays up to make sure the old year leaves.

 

‹ Prev