Quotes about vice

Honoré de Balzac - Cousin Bette

Parent may hinder their children's marriage but children cannot interfere with the insane acts of their parents in their second childhood.

William Shakespeare - Henry VIII

Men's evil manners live in brass their virtue we write in water.

Munia Khan -

Never try to lock the virtue’s door with the key of viceIt may lock forever never to be opened again

Molière -

Displaying vice to the mockery of men deals it a great blow. Men put up with admonition but are loath to be mocked. One might be willing to be wicked one cannot bear to appear foolish.

Raheel Farooq -

Everyone knows that evil should be avoided wherever possible few actually know where it is possible.

Barry M. Goldwater -

I would remind you that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice! And let me remind you also that moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue!

Ayn Rand -

If this is vise I want no virtue....I know what happiness is possible to me on earth. And my happiness needs no higher aim to vindicate it. My happiness is not the means to any end. It is the end. It is its own goal. It is its own purpose. Neither am I the means to any end others may wish to accomplish. I am not a tool for their use. I am not a servant of their needs. I am not a bandage for their wounds. I am not a sacrifice on their altars....But what is freedom? Freedom from what? There is not

Barbara W. Tuchman - A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century

Vainglory, however, no matter how much medieval Christianity insisted it was a sin, is a motor of mankind, no more eradicable than sex.

Washington Irving - Tales of the Alhambra

In the present day, when popular literature is running into the low levels of life, and luxuriating on the vices and follies of mankind; and when the universal pursuit of gain is trampling down the early growth of poetic feeling, and wearing out the verdure of the soul, I question whether it would not be of service for the reader occasionally to turn to these records of prouder times and loftier modes of thinking; and to steep himself to the very lips in old Spanish romance.

Baldassarre Castiglione - The Book of the Courtier

Then the soul, freed from vice, purged by studies of true philosophy, versed in spiritual life, and practised in matters of the intellect, devoted to the contemplation of her own substance, as if awakened from deepest sleep, opens those eyes which all possess but few use, and sees in herself a ray of that light which is the true image of the angelic beauty communicated to her, and of which she then communicates a faint shadow to the body.

Fyodor Dostoyevsky -

My wretched passions were acute, smarting, from my continual, sickly irritability I had hysterical impulses, with tears and convulsions. I had no resource except reading, that is, there was nothing in my surroundings which I could respect and which attracted me. I was overwhelmed with depression, too; I had an hysterical craving for incongruity and for contrast, and so I took to vice.

Thiruvalluvar - Thirukkural

Even if someone does something that brings bad to you,do something good for them and make them feel shy for what they have done to you

Eliza Parsons - The Girl of the Mountains

Vain mistaken mortals, who, valuing themselves on names and titles, suppose that the virtues of the mind must be attached to an empty sound, when every day's experience proves that birth is disgraced, titles rendered contemptible, and riches a curse, by the vices, meanness, and dissipation of its possessors!

Ralph Waldo Emerson - The Conduct of Life

The virtues are economists, but some of the vices are also...Pride is handsome, economical; pride eradicates so many vices, letting none subsist but itself, that it seems as if it were a great gain to exchange vanity for pride. Pride can go without domestics, without fine clothes, can live in a house with two rooms, can eat potato, purslain, beans, lyed corn, can work on the soil, can travel afoot, can talk with poor men, or sit silent well contented in fine saloons. But vanity costs money, labo

Marge Piercy - Dance the Eagle to Sleep

Whenever the balance of power was unequal, there was a driver and a driven. Power was the lethal vice, the turn-on with evil built into it, because it required a victim to manifest itself. Power implied subject and object. They needed some way to recognize (for everyone to recognize) that everybody was a subject.

Tallulah Bankhead -

Here's a rule I recommend: Never practice two vices at once.

Graham Greene - The Power and the Glory

How often the priest had heard the same confession--Man was so limited: he hadn't even the ingenuity to invent a new vice: the animals knew as much. It was for this world that Christ had died: the more evil you saw and heard about you, the greater the glory lay around the death; it was too easy to die for what was good or beautiful, for home or children or civilization--it needed a God to die for the half-hearted and the corrupt.

Neel Burton -

One needs to be either more brave or more good, because if courage is lacking goodness can substitute, while cowardice is the deficiency of both.

Rachilde - Monsieur Venus: A Materialist Novel

A very special case. A few years more, and that pretty creature who you love too much, I think, will, without ever loving them, have known as many men as there are beads on her aunt's rosary. No happy medium! Either a nun or a monster! God's bosom or sensual passions! It would, perhaps, be better to put her in a convent, since we put hysterical women in the Saltpetriere! She does not know vice, she invents it!"That was ten years ago before the day our story begins and... Raoule was not a nun.

Neal Stephenson -

That's not what I'm asking. I'm asking, what's your vice and what brand of trouble does it lead to?

Frédéric Bastiat - Economic Harmonies

When misguided public opinion honors what is despicable and despises what is honorable, punishes virtue and rewards vice, encourages what is harmful and discourages what is useful, applauds falsehood and smothers truth under indifference or insult, a nation turns it's back on progress and can be restored only by the terrible lessons of catastrophe.

Chris Matakas - #Human: Learning To Live In Modern Times

Self-improvement is generally a removal of a vice rather than an acquisition of a virtue.

Moxie Will - Something That Will Change Your Life

Collectives can’t make money from virtues they make money from weakness. Where there are no weak, they create weak. Cowards hate strong people.

Michel de Montaigne - The Complete Essays

Is it that we pretend to a reformation? Truly, no: but it may be we are more addicted to Venus than our fathers were. They are two exercises that thwart and hinder one another in their vigor. Lechery weakens our stomach on the one side; and on the other sobriety renders us more spruce and amorous for the exercise of love.

Ludwig von Mises - Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis

Since its appearance the view that prostitution is a product of capitalism has gained ground enormously. And as, in addition, preachers still complain that the good old morals have decayed, and accuse modern culture of having led to loose living, everyone is convinced that all sexual wrongs represent a symptom of decadence peculiar to our age.

Guy de Maupassant -

Nevertheless man has found love, which is not a bad reply to that sly Deity, and he has adorned it with so much poetry that woman often forgets the sensual part of it. Those among us who are unable to deceive themselves have invented vice and refined debauchery, which is another way of laughing at God and paying homage, immodest homage, to beauty.

Friedrich Nietzsche - Beyond Good and Evil

Christianity gave Eros poison to drink; he did not die of it, certainly, but degenerated to Vice.

Isla Dewar - Women Talking Dirty

You must master the vices. You know that if a thing is worth doing it's worth doing well. If, however, a thing is not worth doing then it's worth doing fabulously, amazingly, with grace, style and panache.

Voltaire - Candide

Our labour preserves us from three great evils -- weariness, vice, and want.

Fyodor Dostoyevsky - and Selections from The House of the De

In the first place I spent most of my time at home, reading. I tried to stifle all that was continually seething within me by means of external impressions. And the only external means I had was reading. Reading, of course, was a great help--exciting me, giving me pleasure and pain. But at times it bored me fearfully. One longed for movement in spite of everything, and I plunged all at once into dark, underground, loathsome vice of the pettiest kind. My wretched passions were acute, smarting, fr

Jennifer Birkett -

The mask of art is the means through which corruption is spread. The mask makes vice seem beautiful, turns squalor and nastiness into glamorous thrill, seduces the onlooker into the game – and leaves him or her with the corpse on his hands.

Honoré de Balzac - Cousin Bette

Virtue will cut your head off, vice will only cut your hair.

Yevgeny Zamyatin - The Fisher Of Men

Accentuated plainness and accentuated vice ought to bring about harmony. Beauty lies in harmony, in style, whether it be the harmony of ugliness or beauty, vice or virtue.

Hinton Helper -

I have seen purer liquors, better segars, finer tobacco, truer guns and pistols, larger dirks and bowie knives, and prettier courtesans here in San Francisco than in any other place I have ever visited; and it is my unbiased opinion that California can and does furnish the best bad things that are available in America.

Robert Evans - A Brief History of Vice: How Bad Behavior Built Civilization

History, as taught by schools, has white washed the drunkenness out of the past. It has minimized the influence of drugs on history's great thinkers, and covered up the impact of prostitution and insults on human development.

Moderata Fonte - The Worth of Women: Wherein Is Clearly Revealed Their Nobility and Their Superiority to Men

[I]t was with a good end in mind – that of acquiring the knowledge of good and evil – that Eve allowed herself to be carried away and eat the forbidden fruit. But Adam was not moved by this desire for knowledge, but simply by greed: he ate it because he heard Eve say it tasted good.

Umberto Eco - The Name of the Rose

A monk should surely love his books with humility, wishing their good and not the glory of his own curiosity; but what the temptation of adultery is for laymen and the yearning for riches is for secular ecclesiastics, the seduction of knowledge is for monks.

William Shakespeare - The Merchant of Venice

So may the outward shows be least themselves:The world is still deceived with ornament.In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt,But, being seasoned with a gracious voice,Obscures the show of evil? In religion,What damned error, but some sober browWill bless it and approve it with a text,Hiding the grossness with fair ornament?There is no vice so simple but assumesSome mark of virtue on his outward parts.

Jindřich Štyrský - Emilie přichází ke mně ve snu

Death always knew how to connect vice with misfortune.

Mark Twain - Stories

I haven't a particle of confidence in a man who has no redeeming petty vices whatsoever.

Nina - - Johnny Kiddow

If God existed, he, for sure, had a vice of his own, a woman he could not say no to and, he would have acted the same way if he were in Johnny Kiddow’s position.

Jean Lorrain -

Her vice takes hold of her again, but she still refrains until some moment when, gnawed by some hideous caprice, she comes aground like a mournful wreck ruined by lust, in the midst of her own banal, perfidious pollution.

Jean Lorrain -

But that woman is an encyclopedia!Of all vices, ancient and modern, and terribly interesting to leaf through!

Jean Lorrain -

A strange girl, all phosphorous and cantharides, burning with every desire! And burning with every vice!

William Shakespeare -

The gods are just, and of our pleasant vicesMake instruments to plague us.

Georges Bizet -

Religion is a means of exploitation employed by the strong against the weak; religion is a cloak of ambition, injustice and vice . . . . Truth breaks free, science is popularized, and religion totters; soon it will fall, in the course of centuries--that is, tomorrow. . . . In good time we shall only have to deal with r

Rebecca McNutt -

Where did the stereotypical image of the reclusive author in a bathrobe and slippers, indulging in vices and spending hours before a typewriter, even come from? I don't know about you, but most writers don't have the luxury of doing any of this. Otherwise we'd have no life experience and nothing to write about, anyway.

Jocelyn Murray -

Pride is an expensive vice, for it is wedded to Greed whose hunger is never sated

Matthew Lewis - The Monk

Ambrosio was yet to learn, that to an heart unacquainted with her, Vice is ever most dangerous when lurking behind the Mask of Virtue.

Agatha Christie - Murder in the Mews

...But even then you have to reckon with a criminal's chief vice.''What is that?'' Conceit. A criminal never believes that his crime can fail.

Socrates - Crito and Phaedo of Socrates.

...[I]f at the time of its release the soul is tainted and impure, because it has always associated with the body and cared for it and loved it, and has been so beguiled by the body and its passions and pleasures that nothing seems real to it but those physical things which can be touched and seen and eaten and drunk and used for sexual enjoyment; and if it is accustomed to hate and fear and avoid what is invisible and hidden from our eyes, but intelligible and comprehensible by philosophy - if

Wilkie Collins - Hide and Seek

But in these modern times it may be decidedly asserted as a fact, that vice, in accomplishing the vast majority of its seductions, uses no disguise at all; appears impudently in its naked deformity; and, instead of horrifying all beholders, in accordance with the prediction of the classical satirist, absolutely attracts a much more numerous congregation of worshippers than has ever yet been brought together by the divinest beauties that virtue can display for the allurement of mankind.

William Kennedy - Roscoe

Well-lit streets discourage sin, but don't overdo it.

Umberto Eco - The Name of the Rose

The monkish vows keep us far from that sink of vice that is the female body, but often they bring us close to other errors. Can I finally hide from myself the fact that even today my old age is still stirred by the noonday demon when my eyes, in choir, happen to linger on the beardless face of a novice, pure and fresh as a maiden's?

Anthony Ryan - The Waking Fire

Curiosity is also my worst vice, and once stirred one not to be denied.

John Owen - The Mortification of Sin

Sin aims always at the utmost; every time it rises up to tempt or entice, might it have its own course, it would go out to the utmost sin in that kind. Every unclean thought or glance would be adultery if it could; every covetous desire would be oppression, every thought of unbelief would be atheism, might it grow to its head. Men may come to that, that sin may not be heard speaking a scandalous word in their hearts - that is, provoking to any great sin with scandal in its mouth; but yet every r

Hannah More - Coelebs in Search of a Wife

I did not intend making a philippic against covetousness, a sin to which I believe no one here is addicted. Let us not, however, plume ourselves in not being guilty of a vice to which, as we have no natural bias so in not committing it, we resist no temptation. What I meant to insist on was, that exchanging a turbulent for a quiet sin, or a scandalous for an orderly one, is not reformation.

Peter S. Beagle - The Last Unicorn

When I was a young man and very well thought of,I couldn't ask aught that the ladies denied.I nibbled their hearts like a handful of raisins,And I never spoke love but I knew that I lied. But I said to myself, 'Ah, they none of them know The secret I shelter and savor and save I wait for the one who will see through my seeming, And I'll know when I love by the way I behave.'The years drifted over like clouds in the heavens;The ladies went by me like snow on the wind.I charmed and I cheated, dece

José Saramago - Blindness

Virtue, should there be anyone who still ignores the fact, always finds pitfalls on the extremely difficult path of perfection, but sin and vice are so favoured by fortune...

Peter Ackroyd - Hawksmoor

Be informed, also, that this good and savoury Parish is the home of Hectors, Trapanners, Biters who all go under the general appelation of Rooks. Here are all the Jilts, Cracks, Prostitutes, Night-walkers, Whores, Linnen-lifters, who are like so many Jakes, Privies, Houses of Office, Ordures, Excrements, Easments and piles of Sir-reverence: the whores of Ratcliffe High-way smell of Tarpaulin and stinking Cod from their continuall Traffick with seamen's Breeches. There are other such wretched Obj

William Makepeace Thackeray -

Of all the vices which degrade the human character, Selfishness is the most odious and contemptible. An undue love of Self leads to the most mon¬strous crimes and occasions the greatest misfortunes both in States and Families. As a selfish man will impoverish his family and often bring them to ruin, so a selfish king brings ruin on his people and often plunges them into war.

Hannah Arendt - The Origins of Totalitarianism

As far as the Jews were concerned, the transformation of the "crime" of Judaism into the fashionable "vice" of Jewishness was dangerous in the extreme. Jews had been able to escape from Judaism into conversion; from Jewishness there was no escape. A crime, moreover, is met with punishment; a vice can only be exterminated.

Joseph Pulitzer -

There is not a crime, there is not a dodge, there is not a trick, there is not a swindle, there is not a vice which does not live by secrecy.

Idries Shah - Learning How to Learn: Psychology and Spirituality in the Sufi Way

Feeling important is a vice, not a virtue, however concealed as participation in something noble.

Mokokoma Mokhonoana -

Courting is an activity where a man and a woman flaunt their virtues. Dating is an activity where life exposes the other’s vices.

Ludwig von Mises - Interventionism: An Economic Analysis

It is irrelevant to the entrepreneur, as the servant of the consumers, whether the wishes and wants of the consumers are wise or unwise, moral or immoral. He produces what the consumers want. In this sense he is amoral. He manufactures whiskey and guns just as he produces food and clothing. It is not his task to teach reason to the sovereign consumers. Should one entrepreneur, for ethical reasons of his own, refuse to manufacture whiskey, other entrepreneurs would do so as long as whiskey is wan

Ludwig von Mises - The Anti-Capitalistic Mentality

Nonetheless, many people, and especially intellectuals, passionately loathe capitalism. As they see it, this ghastly mode of society’s economic organization has brought about nothing but mischief and misery. Men were once happy and prosperous in the good old days preceding the Industrial Revolution. Now under capitalism the immense majority are starving paupers ruthlessly exploited by rugged individualists. For these scoundrels nothing counts but their moneyed interests. They do not produce good

Justin K. McFarlane Beau -

There are those who are legitimately corrupt, who cannot admit that legitimacy allows them to corrupt legitimacy, and to legitimately corrupt others.

Justin K. McFarlane Beau -

Service that is purely self serving, becomes a vice.Do not serve, vice.

Napoléon Bonaparte -

Men are more easily governed through their vices than through their virtues.

Thorstein Veblen -

The quasi-peaceable gentleman of leisure, then, not only consumes of the staff of life beyond the minimum required for subsistence and physical efficiency, but his consumption also undergoes a specialisation as regards the quality of the goods consumed. He consumes freely and of the best, in food, drink, narcotics, shelter, services, ornaments, apparel, weapons and accoutrements, amusements, amulets, and idols or divinities.

Thorstein Veblen - The Theory of the Leisure Class

The ceremonial differentiation of the dietary is best seen in the use of intoxicating beverages and narcotics. If these articles of consumption are costly, they are felt to be noble and honorific. Therefore the base classes, primarily the women, practice an enforced continence with respect to these stimulants, except in countries where they are obtainable at a very low cost. From archaic times down through all the length of the patriarchal regime it has been the office of the women to prepare an

Bertrand Russell - On Education

No one gossips about other people’s secret virtues.

Don Johnson -

I struggled for 15 years in this business before Miami Vice came along.

Émile Zola - The Attack on the Mill and Other Stories

In Paris, everything's for sale: wise virgins, foolish virgins, truth and lies, tears and smiles.

Theodore Dalrymple -

There is something deeply attractive, at least to quite a lot of people, about squalor, misery, and vice. They are regarded as more authentic, and certainly more exciting, than cleanliness, happiness, and virtue.

Ouida - and Pathos of Ouida

To vice, innocence must always seem only a superior kind of chicanery.

Ralph Waldo Emerson -

Every vice is only an exaggeration of a necessary and virtuous function.

Colette -

As for an authentic villain the real thing the absolute the artist one rarely meets him even once in a lifetime. The ordinary bad hat is always in part a decent fellow.

Baltasar Gracian -

It is a great misfortune to be of use to nobody scarcely less to be of use to everybody.

Moliere -

It's true Heaven forbids some pleasures but a compromise can usually be found.

Edwin Way Teale -

The difference between utility and utility plus beauty is the difference between telephone wires and the spider's web.

John Milton -

They also serve who only stand and wait.

Benjamin Franklin -

What maintains one vice would bring up two children.

Finley Peter Dunne -

Vice goes a long way tow'rd makin' life bearable. A little vice now an' thin is relished by th' best iv men.

Michel de Montaigne -

When I religiously confess myself to myself I find that the best virtue I have has in it some tincture of vice.

Bret Harte -

One big vice in a man is apt to keep out a great many smaller ones.

Mavor Moore -

Vice is as much a part of human nature as folly and pornography may be as necessary to vent vice as satire is to vent folly.

John Morley -

He who hates vice hates men.

Thornton Wilder -

Nurse one vice in your bosom. Give it the attention it deserves and let your virtues spring up modestly around it. Then you'll have the miser who's no liar and the drunkard who's the benefactor of a whole city.

Thomas Browne -

The vices we scoff at in others laugh at us within ourselves.

Samuel Butler -

It is the function of vice to keep virtue within reasonable grounds.

La Rochefoucauld -

When our vices leave us we flatter ourselves with the credit of having left them.

John Ray -

Many without punishment none without sin.

Junius -

If individuals have no virtues their vices may be of use to us.

Chinese proverb -

If you don't want anyone to know it don't do it.

John Dryden -

I'll habits gather by unseen degrees As brooks make rivers rivers run to seas.

Seneca -

Vice can be learnt even without a teacher.

William Shakespeare -

There's a small choice in rotten apples.

Related Quote Subjects

vice

evil