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Quotes from Richard Brinsley Sheridan

Those that vow the most are the least sincere.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
I open with a clock striking, to beget an awful attention in the audience - it also marks the time, which is four o clock in the morning, and saves a description of the rising sun, and a great deal about gilding the eastern hemisphere.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
For if there is anything to one's praise, it is foolish vanity to be gratified at it, and if it is abuse - why one is always sure to hear of it from one damned good-natured friend or another!
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
Never say more than is necessary.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
The number of those who undergo the fatigue of judging for themselves is very small indeed.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
There is not a passion so strongly rooted in the human heart as envy.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
When of a gossiping circle it was asked, What are they doing? The answer was, Swapping lies.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
Certainly nothing is unnatural that is not physically impossible.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
A circulating library in a town is as an evergreen tree of diabolical knowledge.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
The newspapers! Sir, they are the most villainous — licentious — abominable — infernal — Not that I ever read them — no — I make it a rule never to look into a newspaper.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
To pity, without the power to relieve, is still more painful than to ask and be denied.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
Had I a thousand daughters, by Heaven! I'd as soon have them taught the black art as their alphabet!
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
The heart that is conscious of its own integrity is ever slow to credit another´s treachery.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
The right honorable gentleman is indebted to his memory for his jests, and to his imagination for his facts.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
My hair has been in training some time.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
If to raise malicious smiles at the infirmities or misfortunes of those who have never injured us be the province of wit or humour, Heaven grant me a double portion of dullness.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
tis an old observation, and a very true one; but what's to be done, as I said before? how will you prevent people from talking?...
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
You write with ease, to show your breeding, But easy writing's curst hard reading.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
Egad, I think the interpreter is the hardest to be understood of the two!
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
There's no possibility of being witty without a little ill-nature.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
PETER. Egad — and so we must — that's impossible. Ah! Master Rowley when an old Batchelor marries a young wife — He deserves — no the crime carries the Punishment along with it.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
Alas! the devil's sooner raised than laid.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
MARIA. Well I'll not debate how far Scandal may be allowable — but in a man I am sure it is always contemtable. — We have Pride, envy, Rivalship, and a Thousand motives to depreciate each other — but the male-slanderer must have the cowardice of a woman before He can traduce one.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan
I am compliance itself—when I am not thwarted;—no one more easily led—when I have my own way.
~ Richard Brinsley Sheridan