JOSEPH ADDISON QUOTES IV

English essayist, poet & playwright (1672-1719)

Music, the greatest good that mortals know, and all of heaven we have here below.

JOSEPH ADDISON

A Song for St. Cecilia's Day

Tags: music, Heaven


What an absurd thing it is to pass over all the valuable parts of a man, and fix our attention on his infirmities.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Spectator, Dec. 15, 1711

Tags: faults


The most violent appetites in all creatures are lust and hunger: the first is a perpetual call upon them to propagate their kind; the latter to preserve themselves.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Spectator, Jul. 18, 1711

Tags: lust, hunger


Young men soon give and soon forget affronts; old age is slow in both.

JOSEPH ADDISON

Cato

Tags: youth, old age


When I read the several dates of the tombs, of some that died yesterday, and some six hundred years ago, I consider that great day when we shall all of us be contemporaries, and make our appearance together.

JOSEPH ADDISON

Thoughts in Westminster Abbey


When I consider the question, whether there are such persons in the world as those we call witches? my mind is divided between the two opposite opinions; or rather (to speak my thoughts freely) I believe in general that there is, and has been such a thing as witchcraft; but at the same time can give no credit to any particular instance of it.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Spectator, No. 117

Tags: witchcraft


But further, a man whose extraordinary reputation thus lifts him up to the notice and Observation of mankind, draws a multitude of eyes upon him that will narrowly inspect every part of him.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Spectator, No. 256


There is no virtue so truly great and godlike as justice.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Guardian, Jul. 4, 1713

Tags: justice


Take a brute out of his instinct, and you find him wholly deprived of understanding.

JOSEPH ADDISON

"Instinct in Animals"

Tags: instinct


To be an atheist requires an indefinitely greater measure of faith than to receive all the great truths which atheism would deny.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Spectator, Mar. 8, 1711

Tags: atheism


Great souls by instinct to each other turn, demand alliance, and in friendship burn.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Campaign

Tags: friendship


If there's a power above us, (And that there is all nature cries aloud through all her works) he must delight in virtue.

JOSEPH ADDISON

Cato

Tags: God, virtue


The honors of this world, what are they but puff, and emptiness, and peril of falling?

JOSEPH ADDISON

Cato

Tags: honor


If we may believe our logicians, man is distinguished from all other creatures by the faculty of laughter.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Spectator, Sept. 26, 1712

Tags: laughter


A man must be excessively stupid, as well as uncharitable, who believes that there is no virtue but on his own side, and that there are not men as honest as himself who may differ from him in political principles.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Spectator, Dec. 8, 1711

Tags: virtue, politics


A day, an hour, of virtuous liberty is worth a whole eternity in bondage.

JOSEPH ADDISON

Cato

Tags: liberty


On you, my lord, with anxious fear I wait, and from your judgment must expect my fate.

JOSEPH ADDISON

A Poem to His Majesty

Tags: fate


Sunday clears away the rust of the whole week.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Spectator, Jul. 9, 1711


A man governs himself by the dictates of virtue and good sense, who acts without zeal or passion in points that are of no consequence; but when the whole community is shaken, and the safety of the public endangered, the appearance of a philosophical or an affected indolence must arise either from stupidity or perfidiousness.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Freeholder, Feb. 3, 1716

Tags: apathy


Many of these great natural geniuses, that were never disciplined and broken by rules of art, are to be found among the ancients, and in particular among those of the more Eastern parts of the world. Homer has innumerable flights that Virgil was not able to reach, and in the Old Testament we find several passages more elevated and sublime than any in Homer. At the same time that we allow a greater and more daring genius to the ancients, we must own that the greatest of them very much failed in, or, if you will, that they were much above the nicety and correctness of the moderns. In their similitudes and allusions, provided there was a likeness, they did not much trouble themselves about the decency of the comparison: thus Solomon resembles the nose of his beloved to the tower of Lebanon which looketh towards Damascus, as the coming of a thief in the night is a similitude of the same kind in the New Testament. It would be endless to make collections of this nature. Homer illustrates one of his heroes encompassed with the enemy, by an ass in a field of corn that has his sides belaboured by all the boys of the village without stirring a foot for it; and another of them tossing to and fro in his bed, and burning with resentment, to a piece of flesh broiled on the coals. This particular failure in the ancients opens a large field of raillery to the little wits, who can laugh at an indecency, but not relish the sublime in these sorts of writings. The present Emperor of Persia, conformable to this Eastern way of thinking, amidst a great many pompous titles, denominates himself "the sun of glory" and "the nutmeg of delight." In short, to cut off all cavilling against the ancients, and particularly those of the warmer climates, who had most heat and life in their imaginations, we are to consider that the rule of observing what the French call the bienseance in an allusion has been found out of later years, and in the colder regions of the world, where we could make some amends for our want of force and spirit by a scrupulous nicety and exactness in our compositions. Our countryman Shakespeare was a remarkable instance of this first kind of great geniuses.

JOSEPH ADDISON

"Genius", Essays and Tales

Tags: genius