Fear is the beginning of wisdom.

One fancies that what one loves cannot die.

Solitude causes us to write because it causes us to think.

Witticisms are fire-arms, that make a noise and give pain.

in God alone is love without tears, and of eternal duration.

Kings may see their palaces fall, but the ants will always have their dwellings.

The errors of the intellect are fatal, still more dangerous than those of the heart.

How long time is when one is sad! Is it three years or three days since you went away?

Certainly, friends are sufficiently rare not to be neglected; they are life's best comforters.

We all owe each other concessions of taste and opinion for the sake of family peace and affection.

My God, how badly one calculates in this world! ... Let us leave off calculating on anything but death -- it is the only certainty.

The effect of every burden laid down is to leave us relieved; and when the soul has laid down that of its faults at the feet of God, it feels as though it had wings.

One has so much time for thought in the country! However occupied one may be, 'tis with nothing that engrosses the mind, which works away on its own account like a mill-wheel.

We are only here below as in an inn on a journey. Let us, then have the feelings of travelers. We should think a man very strange who attached himself much to his inn. The wise Christian will not do this.

A little time separates us from those who depart - a time of tears, a time of sadness and solitude; but, that over, we go to rejoin them and to enjoy with them the society of the blessed. Oh, how sweetly the heart rests in this immortal hope!

Oh! if people were but acquainted with piety, they would not fear it so much, or give it so unattractive a character; 'tis the balm of life, and perhaps in the world it is believed to consist of bitterness, harshness, uncouthness; but, take my word for it, nothing is more gentle, more yielding, more loving than a pious soul.

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