182 Quotes About Vice
- Author Frédéric Bastiat
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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.
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- Author Émile Zola
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In Paris, everything's for sale: wise virgins, foolish virgins, truth and lies, tears and smiles.
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- Author Augustine of Hippo
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What could be more hapless than a man controlled by his own creations? It is surely easier for a man to cease to be a man by worshiping man-made gods than for idols to become divine by being adored.
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- Author Crystal Hudson
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I had a dream about you last night. Our vices had wings and our fears could breathe fire. There was nowhere to hide and we were trapped alive. So you reached for your sword and slashed my arm, waking me and saving my life.
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- Author Raheel Farooq
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Encouraging virtue is better than suppressing vice.
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- Author Jennifer Crusie
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You can’t just jump into debauchery one night and expect to get the hang of it by morning. It takes years.
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- Author Jean Lorrain
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Ensor sees with his imagination, but his vision is perfectly accurate, of an almost geometric precision. He is one of the very few who can really see. Like you, he has an obsession with masks; he is a seer as you and I are. The common herd, of course thinks that he is mad.*****************You shall see what sort of man Ensor is, and what a marvellous insight he has into the invisible realm where our vices are created... those vices for which our faces make masks.
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- Author Gordon R. Dickson
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Why should there be some sort of virtue always attributed to a frank admission of vice?
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- Author Georges Bizet
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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 reason.[From Bizet, by William Dean. Colier Books, 1962]
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