Benjamin Disraeli Quotes
Benjamin Disraeli Quotes. Below is a collection of famous Benjamin Disraeli quotes. Here you can find the most popular and greatest quotes by Benjamin Disraeli. Share these quotations with your friends and family.
The greatest good you can do for another is not just to share your riches but to reveal to him his own.
By Benjamin Disraeli
Action may not always bring happiness; but there is no happiness without action.
By Benjamin Disraeli
As a general rule, the most successful man in life is the man who has the best information.
By Benjamin Disraeli
Fame and power are the objects of all men. Even their partial fruition is gained by very few; and that, too, at the expense of social pleasure, health, conscience, life.
By Benjamin Disraeli
Nine-tenths of the existing books are nonsense and the clever books are the refutation of that nonsense.
By Benjamin Disraeli
Nothing can resist the human will that will stake even its existence on its stated purpose.
By Benjamin Disraeli
Man is made to adore and to obey: but if you will not command him, if you give him nothing to worship, he will fashion his own divinities, and find a chieftain in his own passions.
By Benjamin Disraeli
I have brought myself, by long meditation, to the conviction that a human being with a settled purpose must accomplish it, and that nothing can resist a will which will stake even existence upon its fulfillment.
By Benjamin Disraeli
Coalitions though successful have always found this, that their triumph has been brief.
By Benjamin Disraeli
When we would prepare the mind by a forcible appeal, and opening quotation is a symphony precluding on the chords those tones we are about to harmonize.
By Benjamin Disraeli
Upon the education of the people of this country the fate of this country depends.
By Benjamin Disraeli
Two nations between whom there is no intercourse and no sympathy; who are as ignorant of each other's habits, thoughts, and feelings, as if they were dwellers in different zones, or inhabitants of different planets. The rich and the poor.
By Benjamin Disraeli