Gravity Quotes




Gravity is only the bark of wisdom; but it preserves it.
Confucius.

Too much gravity argues a shallow mind.
Lavater.

Those wanting wit affect gravity, and go by the name of solid men.
Dryden.

Gravity is a mysterious carriage of the body, invented to cover the defect of the mind.
Rochefoucauld.

The very essence of assumed gravity is design, and consequently deceit; a taught trick to gain credit with the world fro more sense and knowledge than a man is worth.
Sterene

There is a gravity which is not austere not captious, which belongs not to melancholy nor dwells in contraction of heart, but arise from tenderness and hangs on reflections.
Landor.

All the sobriety religion needs or requires is that which real earnestness produces. When men say “be Sober”, they usually mean “be stupid>’ when the Bible says “be sober,” it means “rouse up to the earnestness and vivacity of life,’ the old scriptural sobriety was effectual doing; ascetic sobriety is effectual dullness.
H.W. Beecher.

An in a man’s life, so in his studies, it is the most beautiful and humane thing in the world so to mingle gravity with pleasure, that the one may not sink into melancholy, nor the other rise up into wantonness.
Pliny.

There is a false gravity that is a very ill symptom; and as rivers which run very slowly have always most mud at the bottom, so a solid stiffness in the constant course of a man’s life, is the sign of a thick bed of mud at the bottom of his brain.
Saville.

Gravity is but the rind of wisdom; but it is a preservative rind.
Joubert.

Gravity is the very essence of imposture; it not only mistakes other things, but is apt perpetually to mistake itself.
Shaftesbury.

Gravity must be natural and simple; there must be urbanity and tenderness in it. A man must not formalize on everything. He who does so is a fool; and a grave fool is, perhaps, more injurious than a light fool.
Cecil.

Gravity is the ballast of the soul, which keeps the mind steady.
Fuller.

There is a care for trifles which proceeds from love and conscience, and which is most holy; and there is a care for trifles which comes of idleness and frivolity, and is most base. And so, also, there is a gravity proceeding from thought, which is most noble, and a gravity proceeding from dullness and mere incapability for enjoyment, which is most base.
Ruskin.

Gravity the body’s wisdom to conceal the mind.
Young.

As in our lives, so also in our studies it is most becoming and most wise to temper gravity with cheerfulness, that the former may not imbue our minds with melancholy ,nor the latter degenerate into licentiousness.
Pliny.

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