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Cardinal Richelieu Quotes

French cardinal and politician, Birth: 9-9-1585, Death: 4-12-1642 Cardinal Richelieu Quotes
1.
If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, I will find something in them which will hang him.
Cardinal Richelieu

2.
Harshness towards individuals who flout the laws and commands of the state is for the public good; no greater crime against the public interest is possible than to show leniency to those who violate it.
Cardinal Richelieu

3.
Friendship is the medicine for all misfortune; but ingratitude dries up the fountain of all goodness.
Cardinal Richelieu

4.
Reason must be the universal rule and guide; all things must be done according to reason without allowing oneself to be swayed by emotion.
Cardinal Richelieu

5.
Had Luther and Calvin been confined before they had begun to dogmatize, the states would have been spared many troubles.
Cardinal Richelieu

Similar Authors: Barack Obama Thomas Jefferson Hillary Clinton George W. Bush Winston Churchill Abraham Lincoln Ronald Reagan Francois de La Rochefoucauld Theodore Roosevelt John F. Kennedy Vladimir Putin Bernie Sanders Adolf Hitler George Washington Nelson Mandela
6.
First, all means to conciliate; failing that, all means to crush.
Cardinal Richelieu

7.
A single word has sometimes lost or won an empire.
Cardinal Richelieu

8.
If God forbade drinking, would He have made wine so good?
Cardinal Richelieu

Quote Topics by Cardinal Richelieu: Kings Deception May Enemy Winter Firsts States Law Kingdoms Summer Mean Crime Men Virtue Reading Waking Roi Empires Letters Mules Sometimes Food Drinking People Famous Last Words Believe Made Thinking Done Luther
9.
Nothing so upholds the laws as the punishment of persons whose rank is as great as their crime.
Cardinal Richelieu

10.
Give me six lines written by the most honorable person alive, and I shall find enough in them to condemn them to the gallows.
Cardinal Richelieu

11.
Deception is the knowledge of kings.
Cardinal Richelieu

12.
Never write a letter and never destroy one.
Cardinal Richelieu

13.
Nothing is as dangerous for the state as those who would govern kingdoms with maxims found in books.
Cardinal Richelieu

14.
To know how to dissemble is the knowledge of kings. [Fr., Savoir dissimuler est le savoir des rois.]
Cardinal Richelieu

15.
One must believe neither the people of the palace, who ordinarily measure the power of the king by the shape of his crown, which, being round, has no end, nor those who, in the excesses of an indiscreet zeal, proclaim themselves openly as partisans of Rome.
Cardinal Richelieu

16.
Bakers of bread rolls and pastry cooks will not buy grain before eleven o'clock in winter and noon in summer; bakers of large loaves will not buy grain before two o'clock. This will enable the people of the town to obtain their supply first. Bakers shall put a distinctive trademark on their loaves, and keep weights and scales in their shops, under penalty of having their licenses removed.
Cardinal Richelieu

17.
To mislead a rival, deception is permissable; one may use all means against his enemies.
Cardinal Richelieu

18.
Who will be my equal?
Cardinal Richelieu

19.
I have the consolation of leaving your kingdom in the highest degree of glory and of reputation.
Cardinal Richelieu

20.
A virtuous and well-disposed person, like a good metal, the more he is fired, the more he is fined; the more he is opposed, the more he is approved: wrongs may well try him, and touch him, but cannot imprint in him any false stamp.
Cardinal Richelieu

21.
I have never had any [enemies] other than those of the state.
Cardinal Richelieu

22.
Not the least of the qualities that go into the making of a great ruler is the ability of letting others serve him.
Cardinal Richelieu

23.
Bakers of bread rolls and pastry cooks will not buy grain before eleven o'clock in winter and noon in summer.
Cardinal Richelieu

24.
When people are too comfortable, it is not possible to restrain them within the bounds of their duty? They may be compared to mules who, being accustomed to burdens, are spoilt by rest rather than labour.
Cardinal Richelieu

25.
Wise judges are we of each other!
Cardinal Richelieu

26.
Secrecy is the first essential in affairs of state.
Cardinal Richelieu

27.
Carry on any enterprise as if all future success depended on it.
Cardinal Richelieu

28.
Did you think I was immortal?
Cardinal Richelieu

29.
To know how to disguise is the knowledge of kings.
Cardinal Richelieu

30.
We may employ artifice to deceive a rival, anything against our enemies.
Cardinal Richelieu

31.
War is one of the scourges with which it has pleased God to afflict men.
Cardinal Richelieu

32.
I do not sleep to let others sleep in the shade of my waking.
Cardinal Richelieu