VANITY QUOTES VI

quotations about vanity

"Vanitas vanitatum" has rung in the ears
Of gentle and simple for thousands of years;
The wail still is heard, yet its notes never scare
Either simple or gentle from Vanity Fair.

FREDERICK LOCKER-LAMPSON

Vanity Fair


Vanity working on a weak head produces every sort of mischief.

JANE AUSTEN

Emma

Tags: Jane Austen


Vanity is obviously my middle name. I think I inherited the trait from my maternal grandmother who was sure, even as she approached 90, that workmen were still whistling at her ... and perhaps they were.

ADRIENNE KAVELLE

"Ayesha", TAP Into, April 26, 2017


Vanity is a confounded donkey, very apt to put his head between his legs and chuck us over.

FREDERICK MARRYAT

attributed, Day's Collacon


V is for vanity, every time I look at me
I turn myself on, yeah

CHRISTINA AGUILERA

"Vanity"


That was the source of my vanity and my cowardice: always I believed everyone was watching me.

ANDRE DUBUS

"The Judge and Other Snakes", Broken Vessels


What people regard as vanity--leaving great works, having children, acting in such a way as to prevent one's name from being forgotten--I regard as the highest expression of human dignity.

PAULO COELHO

The Pilgrimage


If vanity does not overthrow all virtues, at least she makes them totter.

FRANÇOIS DE LA ROCHEFOUCAULD

Reflections; or Sentences and Moral Maxims


Vanity's a confounded donkey, very apt to put his head between his legs and chuck us over; but Pride's a fine horse, who will carry us over the ground, and enable us to distance our fellow travelers.... How often have you read of people rising from nothing, and becoming great men? This was from talent, sure enough; but it was talent with pride to force it onward, not talent with vanity to check it.

FREDERICK MARRYAT

Peter Simple


Vanity is the poison of agreeableness; yet as poison, when artfully and properly applied, has a salutary effect in medicine, so has vanity in the commerce and society of the world.

LORD GREVILLE

attributed, Day's Collacon


To be a man's own fool is bad enough; but the vain man is everybody's.

WILLIAM PENN

Fruits of Solitude

Tags: William Penn


There is nothing which so carries the mass of men along with it as that which flatters the vanity of the human mind. It may assume the lowliest air, but sinful man seeks his own honour and present exaltation.

WILLIAM KELLY

Lectures Introductory to the Study of the Minor Prophets


A cultivated and decent man cannot be vain without setting a fearfully high standard for himself, and without despising and almost hating himself at certain moments.

FYODOR DOSTOEVSKY

Notes from Underground

Tags: Fyodor Dostoevsky


A man's vanity is more fragile that you might think. It's easy for us to mistake shyness for coldness, and silence for indifference.

LISA KLEYPAS

Devil in Winter


Most People dislike Vanity in others whatever Share they have of it themselves, but I give it fair Quarter wherever I meet with it, being persuaded that it is often productive of Good to the Possessor and to others that are within his Sphere of Action: And therefore in many Cases it would not be quite absurd if a Man were to thank God for his Vanity among the other Comforts of Life.

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN

Autobiography

Tags: Benjamin Franklin


The tyrant is a child of Pride
Who drinks from his sickening cup
Recklessness and vanity,
Until from his high crest headlong
He plummets to the dust of hope.

SOPHOCLES

Oedipus Rex

Tags: Sophocles


It is our own vanity that makes the vanity of others intolerable to us.

LA ROCHEFOUCAULD

Maxims

Tags: La Rochefoucauld


Alas for human nature, that the wounds of vanity should smart and bleed so much longer than the wounds of affection!

THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY

Essays and Lays of Ancient Rome


Vanity (pictures in magazines, movie screens)
Vanity (there is a camera, so many beauty queens)
Vanity (it's so good to be)
Fabulous and glamourous, we love ourselves and no one else
Va-va-va-va-vanity va-vanity, va-va-va-vanity

LADY GAGA

"Vanity"


Where doth the world thrust forth a vanity--
So it be new, there's no respect how vile--
That is not quickly buzzed into his ears?

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Richard II