top of page
Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde

"Patriotism is the virtue of the vicious."

Standard 
 Customized
"Patriotism is the virtue of the vicious."

More 

Quote_1.png
Donna Grant

"In defense of our persons and properties under actual violation, we took up arms. When that violence shall be removed, when hostilities shall cease on the part of the aggressors, hostilities shall cease on our part also."

Author Name

Personal Development

Quote_1.png
Donna Grant

"What this country needs what every country needs occasionally is a good hard bloody war to revive the vice of patriotism on which its existence as a nation depends."

Author Name

Personal Development

Quote_1.png
Donna Grant

"Patriotism. Combustible rubbish ready to the torch of any one ambitious to illuminate his name."

Author Name

Personal Development

Quote_1.png
Donna Grant

"Let us be sure that those who come after will say of us in our time, that in our time we did everything that could be done. We finished the race; we kept them free; we kept the faith."

Author Name

Personal Development

Quote_1.png
Donna Grant

"How could man rejoice in victory and delight in the slaughter of men?"

Author Name

Personal Development

Quote_1.png
Donna Grant

"Patriotism is a kind of religion; it is the egg from which wars are hatched."

Author Name

Personal Development

Quote_1.png
Donna Grant

"When a nation is filled with strife, then do patriots flourish."

Author Name

Personal Development

Quote_1.png
Donna Grant

"We need to have a sense of patriotism like Jesus Christ, to the Kingdom first and to our nations second."

Author Name

Personal Development

Quote_1.png
Donna Grant

"I would entertain the apparently fading idea that patriotism that serves the self is greed dressed in the garments of liberty and adorned with the fashion accessories of other associated patriotic notions."

Author Name

Personal Development

Quote_1.png
Donna Grant

"Real patriotism embraces the wholly immovable belief that without freedom, the essence of the human soul and the life-breath of the human spirit is doomed to perish for lack of space and absence of light."

Author Name

Personal Development

More 

Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde
"The post on her left was occupied by Mr. Erskine of Treadley, an old gentleman of considerable charm and culture, who had fallen, however, into bad habits of silence, having, as he explained once to Lady Agatha, said everything that he had to say before he was thirty."

Wisdom

Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde
"Up to the present man has hardly cultivated sympathy at all. He has merely sympathy with pain, and sympathy with pain is not the highest form of sympathy. All sympathy is fine, but sympathy with suffering is the least fine mode. It is tainted with egotism. It is apt to become morbid. There is in it a certain element of terror for our own safety. We become afraid that we ourselves might be as the leper or as the blind, and that no man would have care of us. It is curiously limiting, too. One should sympathise with the entirety of life, not with life's sores and maladies merely, but with life's joy and beauty and energy and health and freedom."

Philosophy

Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde
"Because sometimes you have to do something bad to do something good."

Ethics

Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde
"It is so easy to convince others, it is so difficult to convince oneself."

Philosophy

Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde
"The world has grown suspicious of anything that looks like a happily married life."

Life

Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde
"Poets are not so scrupulous as you are. They know how useful passion is for publication. Nowadays a broken heart will run to many editions.""I hate them for it," cried Hallward. "An artist should create beautiful things, but should put nothing of his own life into them. We live in an age when men treat art as if it were meant to be a form of autobiography. We have lost the abstract sense of beauty. Some day I will show the world what is it; and for that the world shall never see my portrait of Dorian Gray."

Art

Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde
"The arts that have escaped [uniformity] best are the arts in which the public take no interest. Poetry is an instance of what I mean. We have been able to have fine poetry in England because the public do not read it, and consequently do not influence it."

Art

Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde
"What people call insincerity is simply a method by which we can multiply our personalities."

Philosophy

Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde
"When a man has once loved a woman he will do anything for her except continue to love her."

Love

Quote_1.png
Oscar Wilde
"Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth."

Truth

bottom of page