HONORÉ DE BALZAC QUOTES VIII

French novelist and playwright (1799-1850)

Marriage is a fight to the death, before which the wedded couple ask a blessing from heaven, because it is the rashest of all undertakings to swear eternal love; the fight at once commences and victory, that is to say liberty, remains in the hands of the cleverer of the two.

HONORE DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: marriage


Of all the miseries that civil war can bring upon a country the greatest lies in the appeal which one of the contestants always ends by making to some foreign government.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: government


An honest woman is one whom her lover fears to compromise.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: compromise


Alas! if your wife has not yet kissed the apple of the Serpent, the Serpent stands before her.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage


The exercise of thought, whatever people may say, is more noble than the exercise of bodily organs, and we give precedence to science over cookery and to intellectual training over hygiene.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: exercise


As I took my leave of her, I caught a gleam of hate and rage in her eyes that made me shudder. We parted enemies. She would fain have crushed me out of existence; and for my own part, I felt pity for her, and for some natures pity is the deadliest of insults.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Gobseck

Tags: pity


A husband should never let his wife visit her mother unattended.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage


If a woman has received a man’s education, she possesses in very truth the most brilliant and most fertile sources of happiness both to herself and to her husband; but this kind of woman is as rare as happiness itself; and if you do not possess her for your wife, your best course is to confine the one you do possess, for the sake of your common felicity, to the region of ideas she was born in, for you must not forget that one moment of pride in her might destroy you, by setting on the throne a slave who would immediately be tempted to abuse her power.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: happiness


All the affected airs of sensibility which a woman puts on invariably deceive a lover; and on occasions when a husband shrugs his shoulders, a lover is in ecstasies.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage


Moral philosophy and political economy both condemn the individual who consumes without producing; who fills a place on the earth but does not shed upon it either good or evil--for evil is sometimes good the meaning of which is not at once made manifest.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

The Vicar of Tours

Tags: evil


Ah! darling, my life unrolls itself before my eyes like one of the great highways of France, level and easy, shaded with evergreen trees.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Letters of Two Brides

Tags: France


Before taking up the subject of modesty, it may perhaps be necessary to inquire whether there is such a thing. Is it anything in a woman but well understood coquetry?

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: modesty


We may note within ourselves many a long struggle the end of which is one of our own actions--struggles which are, as it were, the reverse side of humanity. This reverse side belongs to God; the obverse side to men.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Seraphita

Tags: humanity


My further advice on your relations to women is based upon that other motto of chivalry, "Serve all, love one."

HONORE DE BALZAC

The Lily of the Valley

Tags: women


You are a woman, and you can certainly win a priest to your interests.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

The Vicar of Tours


Mothers with marriageable daughters ought to look out for men of this stamp, men with brains to act as protecting divinity, with worldly wisdom to diagnose like a surgeon, and with experience to take a mother's place in warding off evil.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

A Daughter of Eve

Tags: Men


She worshiped her children. They were so young that she could hide the disorders of her life from their eyes, and could win their love.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Gobseck

Tags: children


Perhaps she only learned the worth of that life when she came to reap the woeful harvest sown by her errors.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Gobseck

Tags: life


How hungry one's heart gets!

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Letters of Two Brides


Chance, my dear, is the sovereign deity in child-bearing.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Letters of Two Brides