A man is only as faithful as his options.
On neither the sun, nor death, can a man look fixedly.
No man is clever enough to know all the evil he does.
No man deserves to be praised for his goodness, who has it not in his power to be wicked. Goodness without that power is generally nothing more than sloth, or an impotence of will.
Nature seems at each man's birth to have marked out the bounds of his virtues and vices, and to have determined how good or how wicked that man shall be capable of being.
Ridicule dishonors a man more than dishonor does.
Being a blockhead is sometimes the best security against being cheated by a man of wit.
A wise man thinks it more advantageous not to join the battle than to win.
A man's worth has its season, like fruit.
A man is sometimes as different from himself as he is from others.
He is not to pass for a man of reason who stumbles upon reason by chance but he who knows it and can judge it and has a true taste for it.
Good advice is something a man gives when he is too old to set a bad example.
When a man must force himself to be faithful in his love, this is hardly better than unfaithfulness.
When a man is in love, he doubts, very often, what he most firmly believes.
There is no better proof of a man's being truly good than his desiring to be constantly under the observation of good men.