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Quotes About Virtues

Shame and suffering, as St. Bernard says, are the two ladder-uprights which are set up to heaven, and between those two uprights are the rungs of all virtues fixed, by which one climbs to the joy of heaven… In these two things, in which is all penance, rejoice and be glad, for in return for these, twofold blisses are prepared: in return for shame honour; in return for suffering, delight and rest without end.
~ Philip Zaleski
Wifehood, the house, a family they are woman's traditional concern and each in its way represents one of the other great three- faith, hope, charity - which St. Paul sets down as the virtues of earth. (For how can one rear a family without faith? Or build a roof without hope? Or remain a proper wife without charity?) They are life's most vital elements and no ordered world can endure without them.
~ Phyllis McGinley
Two virtues remain to be discovered in the State—first, temperance, and then justice which is the end of our search. Very true. Now, can we find justice without troubling ourselves about temperance? I do not know how that can be accomplished, he said, nor do I desire that justice should be brought to light and temperance lost sight of; and therefore I wish that you would do me the favour of considering temperance first. Certainly
~ Plato
The same is true of patience or mental quickness. A brain like a sponge and an even temper are all very well in one who minds the proper use of such things; to anyone else, they may bring harm.
~ Plato
Shall this be the manner in which I am to distribute justice and reverence among men, or shall I give them to all?' 'To all,' said Zeus; 'I should like them all to have a share; for cities cannot exist, if a few only share in the virtues, as in the arts. And further, make a law by my order, that he who has no part in reverence and justice shall be put to death, for he is a plague of the state.
~ Plato
One of the gifts that comes with age is an appreciation for some of the more simple, more commonplace things that seem mundane earlier in one's life. As the years pass, the hidden treasure to be found in humble and unpretentious virtues becomes more accentuated—things like rest, silence, and the joy of an ordinary day. The attraction toward activity and achievement lessens, becoming slowly, steadily, and appropriately replaced by an interest in more internal matters.
~ Priscilla Shirer
If Scotsmen were stubborn about anything—and, in fact, they tended to be stubborn about quite a number of things, truth be known—it was the virtues of oatmeal parritch for breakfast. Through eons of living in a land so poor there was little to eat but oats, they had as usual converted necessity into a virtue, and insisted that they liked the stuff.
~ Diana Gabaldon
There is little I can tell you about Aglaura beyond the things its own inhabitants have always repeated: an array of proverbial virtues, of equally proverbial faults, a few eccentricities, some punctilious regard for rules.
~ Italo Calvino
Capì questo: che le associazioni rendono l'uomo più forte e mettono in risalto le doti migliori delle singole persone, e danno la gioia che raramente s'ha restando per proprio conto, di vedere quanta gente c'è onesta e brava e capace e per cui vale la pena di vedere cose buone (mentre vivendo per proprio conto capita più spesso il contrario, di vedere l'altra faccia della gente, quella per cui bisogna tener sempre la mano alla guardia della spada)
~ Italo Calvino
Britain, which in the years immediately before this war was rapidly losing such democratic virtues as it possessed, is now being bombed and burned into democracy.
~ J. B. Priestley
It is the enemy who can truly teach us to practice the virtues of compassion and tolerance.
~ Dalai Lama
Men are more easily governed through their vices than through their virtues.
~ Napoleon Bonaparte
When the norm is decency, other virtues can thrive: integrity, honesty, compassion, kindness, and trust.
~ Raja Krishnamoorthi
The science of psychology has been far more successful on the negative than on the positive side... It has revealed to us much about man's shortcomings, his illnesses, his sins, but little about his potentialities, his virtues, his achievable aspirations, or his psychological health.
~ Abraham Maslow
The virtues are lost in self-interest as rivers are lost in the sea.
~ Franklin D. Roosevelt
A few vices are sufficient to darken many virtues.
~ Plutarch
Teach your children poetry; it opens the mind, lends grace to wisdom and makes the heroic virtues hereditary.
~ Walter Scott
Sanitation and cleanliness are among the humblest of the civic virtues, and it is easy to underestimate their significance.
~ Ram Nath Kovind
The virtues, like the Muses, are always seen in groups. A good principle was never found solitary in any breast.
~ Buddha
Vices are sometimes only virtues carried to excess!
~ Charles Dickens
Conductors make too much fuss about conductors! Humility and hard work are virtues. We're nothing without our musicians.
~ Simon Rattle
The way of fortune is like the milkyway in the sky; which is a number of small stars, not seen asunder, but giving light together: so it is a number of little and scarce discerned virtues, or rather faculties and customs, that make men fortunate.
~ Francis Bacon
The great pleasure that comes from reading poets such as Mark Doty and Marianne Moore is the realisation that the essential virtues - compassion, wonder, humility, respect for the mysterious - are far from conventionally heroic.
~ John Burnside
My parents had always preached the virtues of hard work. But hard work is one thing; economic struggle is another.
~ Sargent Shriver