Sayings about behaviour
- You are never so rediculous for the skills you have but for those you pretend to have.
(La Rochefoucault)
- Sometimes you have to do something crazy just to live normal for some time.
(Goethe)
- Sincerety is probably the bravest kind of courage.
(William Somerset Maugham)
- Drunkeness does not produce mistakes but uncovers them.
(From China)
- Never neither arrogant nor discard yourself for nothing.
(Lavater)
- There are moments in a mens life when it is wise not to be really wise.
(Friedrich Schiller)
- Power does not depend from physical skills but from unbending will.
(Mahatma Ghandi)
- A lie is like a snoball: The longer it runs, the bigger it becomes.
(Martin Luther)
- Those who are hardhearted suffer from the most dangerous heart desease.
(Hope)
- Who put others down beside himself is never great.
(Joahnn Gottfried Seume)
- Treat others like wood: You would never throw it away just because a little part got a wormhole.
(From China)
- Too much trust is often dumb but too much mistrust is always a disaster.
(Johann Nestroy)
- These are the ones which are flat and sad: Never laughing women and never crying men.
(Paul Heyse)
- It is better not only to know how to present but also how to receive and accept.
(Adrianne von Speyer)
- We will not remain to be great if we do not continue to become better.
(Gottfried Keller)
- Torturing other people makes so much sense than sculpturing one's own gravestone: It is the cemenation of the imputence to be a human.
(Wolperin)
- The very clever ones can look around 5 corners - and straight ahead, they are blind.
(Benjamin Franklin)
- Who makes himself too green will be eaten by goats.
(Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- To articulate an apology is not a sign of humiliation but of maturation and sincerety.
(Norman Vincent Peale)
- Heaven will never help those who do not want to react.
(Sophokles)
- Who really learnt to control himself will not be keen to control others any more.
(Harry S. Haskins)
- Most people are so much keen on having fun that they miss it entirely.
(Sören Kierkegaard)
- If you want to know someone's character, give him power.
(Abraham Lincoln)
- Who not to know how to hush does not know how to talk.
(Seneca)