Maxims and Reflections - LightNovelsOnl.com
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162
There are people who make no mistakes because they never wish to do anything worth doing.
163
If I know my relation to myself and the outer world, I call it truth.
Every man can have his own peculiar truth; and yet it is always the same.
164
No one is the master of any truly productive energy; and all men must let it work on by itself.
165
A man never understands how anthropomorphic he is.
166
A difference which offers nothing to the understanding is no difference at all.
167
A man cannot live for every one; least of all for those with whom he would not care to live.
168
If a man sets out to study all the laws, he will have no time left to transgress them.
169
Things that are mysterious are not yet miracles.
170
'Converts are not in my good books.'
171
A frivolous impulsive encouragement of problematical talents was a mistake of my early years; and I have never been able to abandon it altogether.
172
I should like to be honest with you, without our falling out; but it will not do. You act wrongly, and fall between two stools; you win no adherents and lose your friends. What is to be the end of it?
173
It is all one whether you are of high or of humble origin. You will always have to pay for your humanity.
174
When I hear people speak of liberal ideas, it is always a wonder to me that men are so readily put off with empty verbiage. An idea cannot be liberal; but it may be potent, vigorous, exclusive, in order to fulfil its mission of being productive. Still less can a concept be liberal; for a concept has quite another mission. Where, however, we must look for liberality, is in the sentiments; and the sentiments are the inner man as he lives and moves. A man's sentiments, however, are rarely liberal, because they proceed directly from him personally, and from his immediate relations and requirements. Further we will not write, and let us apply this test to what we hear every day.
175
If a clever man commits a folly, it is not a small one.
176
There is a poetry without figures of speech, which is a single figure of speech.
177
I went on troubling myself about general ideas until I learnt to understand the particular achievements of the best men.
178
It is only when a man knows little, that he knows anything at all. With knowledge grows doubt.
179
The errors of a man are what make him really lovable.
180
There are men who love their like and seek it; others love their opposite and follow after it.
181
If a man has always let himself think the world as bad as the adversary represents it to be, he must have become a miserable person.
182
Ill-favour and hatred limit the spectator to the surface, even when keen perception is added unto them; but when keen perception unites with good-will and love, it gets at the heart of man and the world; nay, it may hope to reach the highest goal of all.
183
Raw matter is seen by every one; the contents are found only by him who has his eyes about him; and the form is a secret to the majority.
184
We may learn to know the world as we please: it will always retain a bright and a dark side.
185
Error is continually repeating itself in action, and we must unweariedly repeat the truth in word.
186
As in Rome there is, apart from the Romans, a population of statues, so apart from this real world there is a world of illusion, almost more potent, in which most men live.