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Oscar Wilde

"I always pass on good advice. It is the only thing to do with it. It is never of any use to oneself."

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"I always pass on good advice. It is the only thing to do with it. It is never of any use to oneself."

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Donna Grant

"Never give anyone the advice to buy or sell shares, because the most benevolent price of advice can turn out badly."

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Donna Grant

"Never let your education interfere with your learning."

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Donna Grant

"One of my father's RULES FOR LIFE was to marry a woman who was smarter than you. "I did this," he would say to me, "and you should do it, too. I say, why do all the thinking?"

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Donna Grant

"Giving advice is like seeing an elephant in someone's path and suggesting they remove it. Heeding advice requires forcing the elephant to budge. Huge difference."

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Donna Grant

"The longer you chase the wrong person, the further you travel in the wrong direction. You're better than that."

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Donna Grant

"I sometimes give myself admirable advice, but I am incapable of taking it."

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Donna Grant

"Sandler's always good. Tom Hanks gave me some good advice."

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Donna Grant

"Take it with a whole shaker of salt, a grain won't be close to enough."

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Donna Grant

"We hate those who will not take our advice, and despise them who do."

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Donna Grant

"It's easy to give advice on trials that have caused you to stumble. It's harder to talk about those that have knocked you flat."

Explore more quotes by Oscar Wilde

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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."
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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."
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Oscar Wilde
"Because sometimes you have to do something bad to do something good."
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Oscar Wilde
"It is so easy to convince others, it is so difficult to convince oneself."
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Oscar Wilde
"The world has grown suspicious of anything that looks like a happily married life."
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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."
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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."
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Oscar Wilde
"What people call insincerity is simply a method by which we can multiply our personalities."
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Oscar Wilde
"When a man has once loved a woman he will do anything for her except continue to love her."
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Oscar Wilde
"Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth."
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