Accordingly, the death of young men seems to me like putting out a great fire with a deluge of water; but old men die like a fire going out because it has burnt down of its own nature without artificial means
Nikolai C.has quoted5 years ago
What the object of senile avarice may be I cannot conceive. For can there be anything more absurd than to seek more journey money, the less there remains of the journey?
Nikolai C.has quoted5 years ago
But, it will be said, old men are fretful, fidgety, ill-tempered, and disagreeable. If you come to that, they are also avaricious. But these are faults of character, not of the time of life.
Nikolai C.has quoted5 years ago
For the crowning grace of old age is influence
Nikolai C.has quoted5 years ago
Therefore nothing can be so execrable and so fatal as pleasure; since, when more than ordinarily violent and lasting, it darkens all the light of the soul.
Nikolai C.has quoted5 years ago
For when appetite is our master, there is no place for self-control; nor where pleasure reigns supreme can virtue hold its ground
Nikolai C.has quoted5 years ago
You should use what you have, and whatever you may chance to be doing, do it with all your might
Nikolai C.has quoted5 years ago
The great affairs of life are not performed by physical strength, or activity, or nimbleness of body, but by deliberation, character, expression of opinion.
Nikolai C.has quoted5 years ago
The fact is that when I come to think it over, I find that there are four reasons for old age being thought unhappy: First, that it withdraws us from active employments; second, that it enfeebles the body; third, that it deprives us of nearly all physical pleasures; fourth, that it is the next step to death.
Nikolai C.has quoted5 years ago
Men, of course, who have no resources in themselves for securing a good and happy life find every age burdensome. But those who look for all happiness from within can never think anything had which nature makes inevitable