Thursday, April 25, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

« All quotes from this author
 

Those that are most slow in making a promise are the most faithful in the performance of it.

 
Jean-Jacques Rousseau

» Jean-Jacques Rousseau - all quotes »



Tags: Jean-Jacques Rousseau Quotes, Faith Quotes, Authors starting by R


Similar quotes

 

He who is most slow in making a promise is the most faithful in performance of it. ** Variants: He who is slowest in making a promise is most faithful in its performance.
He who is the most slow in making a promise is the most faithful in the performance of it.

 
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
 

The person who is slowest in making a promise is most faithful in its performance.

 
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
 

There is a lot of piety among us, but not enough spirituality. Piety consists in the performance of external devotional practices and is measured by one’s fidelity to these practices. Whether or not the faithful performance of these exercises of piety improves the quality of one’s Christian life is a question that is seldom asked. One is at times surprised that priests, sisters and lay people who are obviously pious are manifestly unfair in their dealings with other people. Some of them show so little of the compassion of Christ and are quite unwilling to forgive others.

 
Kurien Kunnumpuram
 

Lesson #1 is that rock music is in the fighting spirit, not in the amperage of the guitars; indeed, some of the toughest rocking has come from all, or mostly acoustic bands; Elvis presented a primer lesson from the famous Sun sessions, with a simple blues song through the most famous faux false start in rock history; he and the boys start out all slow and bluesy, before stopping the band cold and calling it out like the hippest beat poet: 'Hold it fellas. That don't... move me. Let's get real, real gone for a change'. Then they did, let it loose, turned every bit of intensity in their beings into a jumping arrangement, much faster and more rhythmically nuanced a performance than the opening. Much of the intensity is in the fast and furious, but precisely laid out detail work; there is a strong sense of spontaneity and discovery, but what ultimately makes this a hall-of-fame performance is the vocal performance; Elvis doing tricks, making sudden octave wide jumps. "If you see my milkcow..." There is a charismatic determination of spirit that Nietzsche would no doubt have recognized as the will to power; when the King got through with it, it was no longer anything to do with a high calcium drink, but about the singer's assertion of his place in the universe.

 
Elvis Presley
 

I just spoke to him after his speech … and told him he has a responsibility to give meaning to those words, to take concrete steps and actions that deliver on that promise. Violence will not address the grievances of the Egyptian people. Suppressing ideas never succeeds in making them go away. … This moment of volatility has to be turned into a moment of promise.

 
Hosni Mubarak
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact