Licentious Quotes Page 2

Part 2 of the licentious quotations list about hedonistic and forbear sayings citing Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel, Richard Whately and Alan Keyes captions

  • Without poetry, religion becomes obscure, false, and malignant;

    without philosophy, licentious in all wantonness, and lascivious to the point of self-castration.

    — Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel
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  • When men have become heartily wearied of licentious anarchy, their eagerness has been proportionately great to embrace the opposite extreme of rigorous despotism.

    — Richard Whately
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  • The gospel of licentiousness, of selfishness, of blaming all the difficulties of life on external factors - these are the things that are killing people today in ways that the slave whips and the overseers couldn't.

    — Alan Keyes
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  • Montesquieu well knew, and justly admired, the happy constitution of this country [Great Britain], where fixed and known laws equally restrain monarchy from tyranny and liberty from licentiousness.

    — Lord Chesterfield
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  • The liberty of the press is dear to England;

    the licentiousness of the press is odious to England: the liberty of it can never be so well protected as by beating down the licentiousness.

    — Sherrilyn Kenyon
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  • I can testify, from my own experience and observation, that slavery is a curse to the whites as well as to the blacks. It makes the white fathers cruel and sensual; the sons violent and licentious; it contaminates the daughters, and makes the wives wretched. And as for the colored race, it needs an abler pen than mine to describe the extremity of their sufferings, the depth of their degradation.

    — Harriet Ann Jacobs
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  • In literary representation, the distinction between the genuinely erotic and the licentious is a distinction not of subject-matter, but of perspective. The genuinely erotic work is one which invites the reader to re-create in imagination the first-person point of view of someone party to an erotic encounter. The pornographic work retains as a rule the third-person perspective of the voyeuristic observer.

    — Roger Scruton
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  • I have written a wicked book, and feel spotless as the lamb.

    Ineffable socialities are in me. I would sit down and dine with you and all the gods in old Rome's Pantheon. It is a strange feeling--no hopefulness is in it, no despair. Content--that is it; and irresponsibility; but without licentious inclination.

    — Herman Melville
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  • At the hour of midnight the Salerian gate was silently opened, and the inhabitants were awakened by the tremendous sound of the Gothic trumpet. Eleven hundred and sixty-three years after the foundation of Rome, the Imperial city, which had subdued and civilised so considerable a part of mankind, was delivered to the licentious fury of the tribes of Germany and Scythia.

    — Edward Gibbon
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  • The elegance of dress, of motion, and of manners gives a lustre to beauty, and inflames the senses through the imagination. Luxurious entertainments, midnight dances, and licentious spectacles, present at once temptation and opportunity to female frailty. From such dangers the unpolished wives of the barbarians were secured by poverty, solitude, and the painful cares of a domestic life.

    — Edward Gibbon
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  • Behold great Whitman, whose licentious line Delights the rake, and warms the souls of swine; Whose fever'd fancy shuns the measur'd pace, And copies Ovid's filth without his grace. In his rough brain a genius might have grown, Had he not sought to play the brute alone; But void of shame, he let his wit run wild, And liv'd and wrote as Adam's bestial child.

    — H. P. Lovecraft
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  • Marriage is the most licentious of human institutions.

    — George Bernard Shaw
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  • Related To Licentious Quotations

    • bawdy quotes
    • carnality quotes
    • debauch quotes
    • humored quotes
    • grieves quotes
    • affronts
    • dissolute
    • darkens
    • prurient
    • reminiscences
    • promiscuous
    • ravish
    • chaste
    • profligate
    • immoral
    • mild
    • adorns
    • guile
    • disclaim
    • satiety
    • undisciplined
    • riotous
    • intemperance
    • terrify
    • doest
    • licentiousness
    • impious
    • penitence
    • forbear
    • hedonistic
  • Where licentiousness begins, liberty ends.

    — Sayings
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  • It is a common teaching of the Saints that one of the principal means of leading a good and exemplary life is certainly modesty and the mortification of the eyes. Just as there is nothing better than modesty to preserve devotion in a soul and to edify one's neighbor, so too, there is nothing worse than immodesty and licentious glances to expose a person to the danger of becoming lax and loose in morals.

    — Alphonsus Rodriguez
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  • Liberty, when it degrades into licentiousness, begets confusion, and frequently ends in tyranny or some woeful confusion.

    — George Washington
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  • The freedom of the press is a valuable privilege, but the abuse of it in this country is a frightful evil. The licentiousness of the press is a deep stain upon the character of the country; and in addition to the evil of calumniating good men and giving a wrong direction to public measures, it corrupts the people by rendering them insensible to the value of truth and of reputation.

    — Noah Webster
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  • A large portion of our citizens, who will not believe, even on the evidence of facts, that any public evils exist, or are impending. They deride the apprehensions of those who foresee, that licentiousness will prove, as it ever has proved, fatal to liberty.

    — Fisher Ames
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  • During the course of administration, and in order to disturb it, the artillery of the press has been levelled against us, charged with whatsoever its licentiousness could devise or dare. These abuses of an institution so important to freedom and science are deeply to be regretted, inasmuch as they tend to lessen its usefulness and to sap its safety.

    — Thomas Jefferson
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  • [P]erfect freedom consists in obeying the dictates of right reason, and submitting to natural law. When a man goes beyond or contrary to the law of nature and reason, he . . . introduces confusion and disorder into society . . . [thus] where licentiousness begins, liberty ends.

    — Samuel West
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  • The newspapers! Sir, they are the most villainous - licentious -abominable - infernal - Not that I ever read them - No - I make it a rule never to look into a newspaper.

    — Richard Brinsley Sheridan
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  • I intend to marry Michael, and squander all his money and run his life, and make sure he never again consorts with wicked women or gambles with licentious men. I promise I will henpeck him until he has no life beyond what I allow him, and when we die, I will lie in his arms through all eternity.

    — Christina Dodd
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