Charles Buxton Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Charles Buxton's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Writer Charles Buxton's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 25 quotes on this page collected since November 18, 1823! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • Success soon palls. The joyous time is when the breeze first strikes your sails, and the waters rustle under your bows.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”, p.126
  • I once met a man who had forgiven an injury. I hope some day to meet the man who has forgiven an insult.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”, p.210
  • In life, as in chess, forethought wins.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1883). “Notes of Thought”
  • A successful career has been full of blunders.

  • You have not fulfilled every duty unless you have fulfilled that of being pleasant.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1883). “Notes of Thought”
  • Proverbs are potted wisdom.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”
  • All high truth is poetry. Take the results of science: they glow with beauty, cold and hard as are the methods of reaching them.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”
  • Failure means that you would not, or could not, pay for success. Success is a matter of sale. It can (most often) be bought by a large outlay--of hard forethought--of pains--of steadiness--of the golden wisdom coined from experience. But the figure is too high for most of us. We are too poor, or too slothful, to bring the price.

  • You cannot win without sacrifice.

  • In one family, every little plan or question is discussed amid bickering and irritation. In another, without the least effort, every discussion goes on amid perfect peace. This is just as easy, and infinitely more agreeable: only, in many homes it does not happen to be the family habit.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1883). “Notes of Thought”
  • You will never 'find' time for anything. If you want time, you must make it.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”, p.220
  • Bad temper is its own scourge. Few things are more bitter than to feel bitter. A man's venom poisons himself more than his victim.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”, p.243
  • Pounds are the sons, not of pounds, but of pence.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”, p.285
  • Experience shows that success is due less to ability than to zeal.

    "Notes of Thought". Book by Charles Buxton and John Llewelyn Davies, 1873.
  • Few things are more bitter than to feel bitter.

  • The fact is - nothing comes, at least nothing good. All has to be fetched.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1883). “Notes of Thought”
  • Indulge in procrastination, and in time yon will come to this, that because a thing ought to be done, therefore you can't do it.

  • Self-laudation abounds among the unpolished, but nothing can stamp a man more sharply as ill-bred.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”
  • A large family party is rather too much like a flight of tomtits; everlasting twitter, but no conversation; gregariousness without companionship.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”
  • A man's venom poisons himself more than his victims.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”, p.243
  • To make pleasures pleasant shorten them.

    Charles Buxton (1883). “Notes of Thought”
  • In life, as in Chess, ones own Pawns block ones way. A mans very wealth, ease, leisure, children, books, which should help him to win, more often checkmate him

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”, p.277
  • In one family, all goes by two and two. If a member of it has any interest, he or she will confide it to some one other; but the rest know nothing. In another family, all feel what touches one; nothing is kept dark from the father and mother, brothers and sisters--all share. This family habit is by far the better, it strengthens the tie between the members, and makes the home one home.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1873). “Notes of Thought”, p.287
  • All movement, of every creature, comes from the desire after something better.

    Charles Buxton, John Llewelyn Davies (1883). “Notes of Thought”
  • The longer I live, the more deeply am I convinced that that which makes the difference between one person and another-between the weak and the powerful, the great and the insignificant-is energy-invisible determination.

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