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Quotes About Proprieties

In her view the aim of every religion was merely to preserve certain proprieties while affording satisfaction to human desires
~ Joseph Conrad
English politics is so much more concerned with the proprieties than with defending dogmas.
~ Jim Crace
This is war time. We can't think of the proprieties now.
~ Margaret Mitchell
And we had our own laws. I mean, I wrote them. And we had our own customs, and traditions, and proprieties.
~ James Stockdale
Reactionary nostalgia for the proprieties of Victorian England is unfortunate, like a whore looking under the bed for her virginity.
~ Bruce Robinson
If names be not correct, language is not in accordance with the truth of things. If language be not in accordance with the truth of things, affairs cannot be carried on to success. When affairs cannot be carried on to success, proprieties and music do not flourish.
~ Confucius
Like life, games were governed by rules. But unlike life, games were utterly defined by those rules. The rules were the game, and if one played by different rules, then one simply played a different game. Since a fixed framework of rules determined the meaning of every move as a move, games possessed a clarity that made life seen like a drunken brawl by comparison. The proprieties were indubitable, the permutations secure; only the outcome was shrouded.
~ R. Scott Bakker
Like life, games were governed by rules. But unlike life, games were utterly defined by those rules. The rules were the game, and if one played by different rules, then one simply played a different game. Since a fixed framework of rules determined the meaning of every move as a move, games possessed a clarity that made life seem a drunken brawl by comparison. The proprieties were indubitable, the permutations secure; only the outcome was shrouded.
~ R. Scott Bakker
I don't think much of these eccentrics. Some people turn them into familiar acquaintances, even friends. Once a year they interest me, when I meet them, because their character stands in contrast to others and they break that fastidious uniformity which our education, our social conventions, and our habitual proprieties have introduced.
~ Denis Diderot