Quote
"It is better to be able neither to read nor write than to be able to do nothing else."
T
Table-Talk"Great thoughts reduced to practice become great acts."
Table-Talk is a collection of essays by the English cultural critic and social commentator William Hazlitt. It was originally published as two volumes, the first of which appeared in April 1821. The essays deal with topics such as art, literature and philosophy. Duncan Wu has described the essays as the "pinnacle of [Hazlitt's] achievement", and argues that Table-Talk and The Plain Speaker (1826)
"It is better to be able neither to read nor write than to be able to do nothing else."
"Learning is, in too many cases, but a foil to common sense; a substitute for true knowledge."
"Any one who has passed through the regular gradations of a classical education, and is not made a fool by it, may consider himself as having had a very narrow escape."
"Scholars, like princes, may learn something by being incognito. Yet we see those who cannot go into a booksellers shop, or bear to be five minutes in a stage-coach, without letting you know who they are. They carry their reputation about with them as the snail does its shell, and sit under its canopy, like the lady in the lobster. I cannot understand this at all. What is the use of a mans always revolving round his own little circle? He must, one should think, be tired of it himself, as well as tire other people."
"First impressions are often the truest, as we find (not unfrequently) to our cost when we have been wheedled out of them by plausible professions or actions. A mans look is the work of years, it is stamped on his countenance by the events of his whole life, nay, more, by the hand of nature, and it is not to be got rid of easily."
"Modesty is the lowest of the virtues, and is a real confession of the deficiency it indicates. He who undervalues himself is justly undervalued by others."