{"query": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_082: Reconciliation with our enemie", "count": 20, "results": [{"id": "card_n_540aced688be", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_082: Reconciliation with our enemies is but a desire to better our condition, a we...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Reconciliation with our enemies is but a desire to better our condition, a weariness of war, the fear of some unlucky accident. [\"Thus terminated that famous war of the Fronde. The Duke de la Rochefou"}, {"id": "card_n_d19f3d94e92c", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_268: We credit judges with the meanest motives, and yet we desire our reputation a...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "We credit judges with the meanest motives, and yet we desire our reputation and fame should depend upon the judgment of men, who are all, either from their jealousy or pre-occupation or want of intell"}, {"id": "card_n_75558cb470fa", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_081: We can love nothing but what agrees with us, and we can only follow our taste...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "We can love nothing but what agrees with us, and we can only follow our taste or our pleasure when we prefer our friends to ourselves; nevertheless it is only by that preference that friendship can be"}, {"id": "card_n_c162e037bf89", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_038: We promise according to our hopes; we perform according to our fears.", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "We promise according to our hopes; we perform according to our fears. [\"The reason why the Cardinal (Mazarin) deferred so long to grant the favours he had promised, was because he was persuaded that h"}, {"id": "card_n_fba06ae2fcf0", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_102: The head is ever the dupe of the heart.", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "The head is ever the dupe of the heart. [A feeble imitation of that great thought \"All folly comes from the heart.\"--Aime Martin. But Bonhome, in his L'art De Penser, says \"Plusieurs diraient en perio"}, {"id": "card_n_588e244306c8", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_297: Bodily temperaments have a common course and rule which imperceptibly affect ...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Bodily temperaments have a common course and rule which imperceptibly affect our will. They advance in combination, and successively exercise a secret empire over us, so that, without our perceiving i"}, {"id": "card_n_7d8095bca522", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_239: Nothing flatters our pride so much as the confidence of the great, because we...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Nothing flatters our pride so much as the confidence of the great, because we regard it as the result of our worth, without remembering that generally 'tis but vanity, or the inability to keep a secre"}, {"id": "card_n_e813ad395000", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_016: This clemency of which they make a merit, arises oftentimes from vanity, some...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "This clemency of which they make a merit, arises oftentimes from vanity, sometimes from idleness, oftentimes from fear, and almost always from all three combined. [La Rochefoucauld is content to paint"}, {"id": "card_n_955aa36ca9c3", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_088: Self love increases or diminishes for us the good qualities of our friends, i...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Self love increases or diminishes for us the good qualities of our friends, in proportion to the satisfaction we feel with them, and we judge of their merit by the manner in which they act towards us."}, {"id": "card_n_556376b8b2c9", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_426: The charm of novelty and old custom, however opposite to each other, equally ...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "The charm of novelty and old custom, however opposite to each other, equally blind us to the faults of our friends. [\"Two things the most opposite blind us equally, custom and novelty.\"-La Bruyere, De"}, {"id": "card_n_d53a18dfd5fe", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_012: Whatever care we take to conceal our passions under the appearances of piety ...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Whatever care we take to conceal our passions under the appearances of piety and honour, they are always to be seen through these veils. [The 1st edition, 1665, preserves the image perhaps better--\"ho"}, {"id": "card_n_d09c750e53ec", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_412: Whatever disgrace we may have deserved, it is almost always in our power to r...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Whatever disgrace we may have deserved, it is almost always in our power to re-establish our character. [\"This is hardly a period at which the most irregular character may not be redeemed. The mistake"}, {"id": "card_n_ff5a44af024e", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_287: Fertility of mind does not furnish us with so many resources on the same matt...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Fertility of mind does not furnish us with so many resources on the same matter, as the lack of intelligence makes us hesitate at each thing our imagination presents, and hinders us from at first disc"}, {"id": "card_n_ce0a908f32d9", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_347: We hardly find any persons of good sense, save those who agree with us.", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "We hardly find any persons of good sense, save those who agree with us. [\"That was excellently observed, say I, when I read an author when his opinion agrees with mine.\"--Swift, Thoughts On Various Su"}, {"id": "card_n_5f6931f49ffb", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_382: Our actions are like the rhymed ends of blank verses (Bouts-Rimes) where to e...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Our actions are like the rhymed ends of blank verses (Bouts-Rimes) where to each one puts what construction he pleases. [The Bouts-Rimes was a literary game popular in the 17th and 18th centuries--the"}, {"id": "card_n_80c9bd7b82d7", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_488: The calm or disturbance of our mind does not depend so much on what we regard...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "The calm or disturbance of our mind does not depend so much on what we regard as the more important things of life, as in a judicious or injudicious arrangement of the little things of daily occurrenc"}, {"id": "card_n_76ef1e2e7fab", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_148: Some reproaches praise; some praises reproach.", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Some reproaches praise; some praises reproach. [\"Damn with faint praise, assent with civil leer, And, without sneering, teach the rest to sneer.\" Pope {Essay On Man, (1733), Epistle To Dr. Arbuthnot.}"}, {"id": "card_n_55041a1251fd", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_365: There are virtues which degenerate into vices when they arise from Nature, an...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "There are virtues which degenerate into vices when they arise from Nature, and others which when acquired are never perfect. For example, reason must teach us to manage our estate and our confidence, "}, {"id": "card_n_64d4d7258e38", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_085: We often persuade ourselves to love people who are more powerful than we are,...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "We often persuade ourselves to love people who are more powerful than we are, yet interest alone produces our friendship; we do not give our hearts away for the good we wish to do, but for that we exp"}, {"id": "card_n_56af95e219fe", "title": "La Rochefoucauld §laroch_440: The cause why the majority of women are so little given to friendship is, tha...", "shelf": "classics", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "The cause why the majority of women are so little given to friendship is, that it is insipid after having felt love. [\"Those who have experienced a great passion neglect friendship, and those who have"}]}