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Quotes About Vice

Cuando se trata de satisfacer al corazón, ningún vicio estaba a la altura de la hipocresía
~ Yukio Mishima
Depravity feeds on depravity, and with no sense right and wrong, there is nothing for them to hold on to.
~ Debbie Viguié
We love each other like this!… On my bed all in white, So white and vaporous like the flower of innocence, Like the froth of vice, Winter, Winter, Winter, We fall in a cluster of roses and lilies!
~ Delmira Agustini
Elbridge Gerry, the fifth vice president of the United States—under President James Madison—and a signer of the Declaration of Independence. (Due to his incessant fiddling with voter districts in Massachusetts to shape them in his favor, Elbridge Gerry infamously inspired the term "gerrymandering.")
~ Denise Kiernan
I normally can't stand vice-free people. They conflate a narcissistic instinct for self-preservation with moral superiority. Plus they suck the life right out of a party.
~ Dennis Lehane
Public schools are the nurseries of all vice and immorality.
~ Henry Fielding
My boy! Smoking is one of the greatest and cheapest enjoyments in life, and if you decide in advance not to smoke, i can only feel sorry for you.
~ Sigmund Freud
The mask of art is the means through which corruption is spread. The mask makes vice seem beautiful, turns squalor and nastiness into glamorous thrill, seduces the onlooker into the game – and leaves him or her with the corpse on his hands.
~ Jennifer Birkett
He [Maxime] was twenty, and already there was nothing left to surprise or disgust him. He had certainly dreamt of the most extreme forms of debauchery. Vice with him was not an abyss, as with certain old men, but a natural, external growth.
~ Émile Zola
You'd never get Burle to behave decently. When a man sank as low as that, the only thing to do was to throw a spadeful of mud over him and get rid of him like the rotting carcass of some poisonous beast. And even if you shoved his nose in his own shit, he'd only start again the next day and end up stealing a few sous to buy sticks of barley sugar for lice-ridden little beggar-girls.
~ Émile Zola
know so well that human nature is human nature everywhere, whether under tile or thatch, and that in every specimen of human nature that breathes, vice and virtue are ever found blended, in smaller or greater proportions, and that the proportion is not determined by station. I have seen villains who were rich, and I have seen villains who were poor, and I have seen villains who were neither rich nor poor
~ Emily Bronte
Of all human vices, none is so insidious and destructive as the blind worship of ability. That way lies abomination.
~ Eric Flint
Dali is like a man who hesitates between talent and genius, or, as one might once have said, between vice and virtue.
~ Andre Breton
Human beings are fallible, frightened and prone to corruption.
~ Robert K. Tanenbaum
Smith's doctrine of self-interest did more than just turn avarice into a virtue; it turned classical virtue into a vice.
~ Robert Skidelsky
safe haven of murderers, the native land and cover for cardsharps, the general lure for loose women
~ Laurence Bergreen
I watched men win and I watched them lose. They were playing a straight house. Nothing was loaded. The house took its own little percentage and got rich. Money made in bootlegging and gunrunning and dope smuggling and whoremongering was invested quite properly in an entire town that stood as a monument to human stupidity, a boomtown in the state with the sparsest population and the densest people in the country. Vegas.
~ Lawrence Block
Suppress prostitution, and capricious lusts will overthrow society.
~ Saint Augustine
We surf the waves of capitalism, from crest to trough and back again, but the funny thing is that no matter how often we ride the wave, nobody notices that it's wet. When we are on the crest, we believe that we have climbed a mountain through our own virtuous efforts, and when we are in the trough, we believe that we have fallen into a pit through out own vice.
~ Adam Gopnik
It is, I think, the journalist's vice to believe that all history can instantly be reduced to experience: ("Pierre, an out-of-work pipe fitter in the suburb of Boulougne, is typical of the new class of chômeurs . . .") just as it is the scholar's vice to believe that all experience can be reduced to history ("The new world capitalist order produced a new class of chômeurs, of whom Pierre, a pipe fitter, was a typical case . . .").
~ Adam Gopnik
Virtue is more to be feared than vice because its excesses are not subject to the regulation of conscience.
~ Adam Smith
Pleasure and pain are the great objects of desire and aversion: but these are distinguished not by reason, but by immediate sense and feeling. If virtue, therefore, be desirable for its own sake, and if vice be, in the same manner, the object of aversion, it cannot be reason which originally distinguishes those different qualities, but immediate sense and feeling.
~ Adam Smith
Misfortune prompts us to summon our utmost strength to oppose grief and recover tranquility, while prosperity hurries us away until we are overwhelmed by our passions. Queen Margot Hypocrisy is the homage vice pays to virtue. La Rochefoucault We promise according to our hopes; we perform according to our fears. I sometimes wonder is the esprit, gaiety, intellectual seriousness and serious stylishness of the earlier period was the reflex of poverty and shared hardship.
~ Diane Johnson
Radoznalost je ?ovekov najopasniji porok.
~ Dobrica ?osi?