Jean rostand quotes
Explore a curated collection of Jean rostand's most famous quotes. Dive into timeless reflections that offer deep insights into life, love, and the human experience through his profound words.
The nobility of a human being is strictly independent of that of his convictions.
God, that checkroom of our dreams.
It is sometimes well for a blatant error to draw attention to overmodest truths.
We find it easy to believe that praise is sincere: why should anyone lie in telling us the truth?
The ideal, without doubt, varies, but its enemies, alas, are always the same.
We give others praise which we ourselves don't believe, as long as they respond with praise we can believe.
To be able to observe with a stranger's eye helps one to see with an artist's eye. What alienates us inspires.
When I was young I pitied the old. Now old, it is the young I pity.
There are big and little truths, but all belong to the same race.
Hatred, for the man who is not engaged in it, is a little like the odor of garlic for one who hasn't eaten any.
Prerequisite for rereadability in books: that they be forgettable.
Kill one man, and you are a murderer. Kill millions of men, and you are a conqueror. Kill them all, and you are a god.
Certain brief sentences are peerless in their ability to give one the feeling that nothing remains to be said.
When a scientist is ahead of his times, it is often through misunderstanding of current, rather than intuition of future truth. In science there is never any error so gross that it won't one day, from some perspective, appear prophetic.
Science had better not free the minds of men too much, before it has tamed their instincts.
To love an idea is to love it a little more than one should.
On the brink of being satiated, desire still appears infinite.
Quotations--always inexact. I don't trust people who cannot even copy out.
One must credit an hypothesis with all that has had to be discovered in order to demolish it.
Science has made us gods even before we are worthy of being men.
Think? Why think! We have computers to do that for us.
On tue un homme, on est un assassin. On tue des millions d'hommes, on est un conquérant. On les tue tous, on est un dieu. Kill a man, and you are an assassin. Kill millions of men and you are a conqueror. Kill everyone, and you are a god.
A man is not old as long as he is seeking something.
I think I am one of those who can manage not to take on a completely different appearance under their own glance.
Le biologiste passe, la grenouille reste. The biologist passes, the frog remains.
Kill one man and you're a murderer, kill a million and you're a conqueror.
The biologist passes. The frog stays the same.
If a given scientist had not made a given discovery, someone else would have done so a little later. Johann Mendel dies unknown after having discovered the laws of heredity: thirty-five years later, three men rediscover them. But the book that is not written will never be written. The premature death of a great scientist delays humanity; that of a great writer deprives it.
Somebody told me I should put a pebble in my mouth to cure my stuttering. Well, I tried it, and during a scene I swallowed the pebble. That was the end of that.
Literature: proclaiming in front of everyone what one is careful to conceal from one's immediate circle
My pessimism extends to the point of even suspecting the sincerity of other pessimists.
We must watch over our modesty in the presence of those who cannot understand its grounds.
To live is often to struggle toward goals one has no desire to reach.
Whether man is disposed to yield to nature or to oppose her, he cannot do without a correct understanding of her language
One kills a man, one is an assassin; one kills millions, one is a conqueror; one kills everybody, one is a god.
To reflect is to disturb one's thoughts.
Greatness, in order to gain recognition, must all too often consent to ape greatness.
In order to remain true to oneself one ought to renounce one's party three times a day.
I should have no use for a paradise in which I should be deprived of the right to prefer hell.
To be adult is to be alone.
It is horrible to see everything that one detested in the past coming back wearing the colors of the future.
One must either take an interest in the human situation or else parade before the void.
I prefer the honest jargon of reality to the outright lies of books.
A married couple are well suited when both partners usually feel the need for a quarrel at the same time.
We bestow on others praise in which we do not believe, on condition that in return they bestow upon us praise in which we do.
In art as in life the valid sacrifices are those that bring no income.
There are some persons we could not cut down to size without diminishing ourselves as well.
A body of work such as Pasteur's is inconceivable in our time: no man would be given a chance to create a whole science. Nowadays a path is scarcely opened up when the crowd begins to pour in.
Stupidity, outrage, vanity, cruelty, iniquity, bad faith, falsehood - we fail to see the whole array when it is facing in the same direction as we.
What makes our opponents useful is that they allow us to believe that without them we would be able to realize our goals.
Marriage simplifies life and complicates the day.
Falsity cannot keep an idea from being beautiful; there are certain errors of such ingenuity that one could regret their not ranking among the achievements of the human mind.
It takes a very deep-rooted opinion to survive unexpressed.
There are moments when very little truth would be enough to shape opinion. One might be hated at extremely low cost.
What scientist would not long to go on living, if only to see how the little truths he has brought to light will grow up?
We spend our time envying people whom we wouldn't wish to be.
In politics, yesterday's lie is attacked only to flatter today's.
Far too often the choices reality proposes are such as to take away one's taste for choosing.
The books one has written in the past have two surprises in store: one couldn't write them again, and wouldn't want to.
Theories pass. The frog remains.
It may offend us to hear our own thoughts expressed by others: we are not sure enough of their souls.
Being right is less important to us than the freedom to be wrong.
Truth is always served by great minds, even if they fight it.
Take heed of critics even when they are not fair; resist them even when they are.
Never feel remorse for what you have thought about your wife; she has thought much worse things about you.
It is not easy to imagine how little interested a scientist usually is in the work of any other, with the possible exception of the teacher who backs him or the student who honors him.
There are things that don't deserve to be said briefly.
Nothing leads the scientist so astray as a premature truth.
I don't judge a regime by the damning criticism of the opposition, but by the ingenuous praise of the partisan.
Kill one man, and you are murderer.
Already at the origin of the species man was equal to what he was destined to become.
It is sometimes important for science to know how to forget the things she is surest of.
There are certain moments when we might wish the future were built by men of the past.
I still understand a few words in life, but I no longer think they make a sentence.
The divine is perhaps that quality in man which permits him to endure the lack of God.
To say of men that they are bad is to say they are worse than we think we are, or worse than the ideal man whose image we have built up on the basis of a certain few.
The least one can say of power is that a vocation for it is suspicious.
A few great minds are enough to endow humanity with monstrous power, but a few great hearts are not enough to make us worthy of using it.
We are not naïve enough to ask for pure men; we ask merely for men whose impurity does not conflict with the obligations of their job.
Renown? I've already got more of it than those I respect, and will never have as much as those for whom I feel contempt.
Beauty in art is often nothing but ugliness subdued.
In our ideals we unwittingly reveal our vices.