HAPPINESS QUOTES XIII

quotations about Happiness

Happiness and freedom begin with a clear understanding of one principle: Some things are within our control, and some things are not. It is only after you have faced up to this fundamental rule and learned to distinguish between what you can and can't control that inner tranquility and outer effectiveness become possible.

EPICTETUS

The Art of Living


To be without some of the things you want is an indispensable part of happiness.

BERTRAND RUSSELL

The Conquest of Happiness


You have to fight to carve little pieces of happiness out of your life, or the everyday emergencies will eat up everything.

LAURELL K. HAMILTON

Cerulean Sins


Do not procrastinate happiness. Enjoy every moment and find peace with yourself.

ANNET KATUSIIME

"What defines your happiness?", Daily Monitor, July 3, 2018


To be happy, even to conceive happiness, you must be reasonable or ... you must be tamed. You must have taken the measure of your powers, tasted the fruits of your passions and learned your place in the world.

GEORGE SANTAYANA

Egotism in German Philosophy


There is a difference between happiness, the supreme good, and the final end or goal toward which our actions ought to tend. For happiness is not the supreme good, but presupposes it, being the contentment or satisfaction of the mind which results from possessing it.

RENé DESCARTES

The Philosophical Writings of Descartes


To be conscious of happiness is to hear Nemesis rapping at the portals.

PHILIP MOELLER

The Roadhouse in Arden


Why do we so often settle for what makes us devoutly unhappy! Why do we accept that happiness just isn't possible?

ANNE RICE

The Wolves of Midwinter


Happiness consumes itself like a flame. It cannot burn for ever, it must go out, and the presentiment of its end destroys it at its very peak.

AUGUST STRINDBERG

A Dream Play


The paths by which people journey toward happiness lie in part through the world about them and in part through the experience of their souls. On the one hand, there is the happiness which comes from wealth, honor, the enjoyment of life, from health, culture, science, or art; and, on the other hand, there is the happiness which is to be found in a good conscience, in virtue, work, philanthropy, religion, devotion to great ideas and great deeds.

KARL HILTY

Happiness: Essays on the Meaning of Life


The best type of affection is reciprocally life-giving: each receives affection with joy and gives it without effort, and each finds the whole world more interesting in consequence of the existence of this reciprocal happiness. There is, however, another kind, by no means uncommon, in which one person sucks the vitality of the other, one receives what the other gives, but gives almost nothing in return. Some very vital people belong to this bloodsucking type. They extract the vitality from one victim after another, but while they prosper and grow interesting, those upon whom they live grow pale and dim and dull.

BERTRAND RUSSELL

The Conquest of Happiness


My capacity for happiness ... you could fit into a matchbox without taking out the matches first.

DOUGLAS ADAMS

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy


Can this be happiness, this terrifying freedom?

ALBERT CAMUS

Caligula


Our happiness, like our fortune, is often seriously injured by injudicious economy.

NORMAN MACDONALD

Maxims and Moral Reflections


Most folks are just about as happy as they've made up their minds to be.

KEN ALSTAD

Savvy Sayin's


Happiness is a thing to be practiced, like the violin.

JOHN LUBBOCK

The Use of Life


Happiness is variously associated by different people with a multiplicity of conscious states, such as calm contentment, ecstasy, hilarity, elation, and others. These states all have some claim to be parts or aspects of happiness.... However, they certainly don't all obtain together, and some of them, once again, seem incompatible with each other--ecstasy and calm contentment, for instance.... It may be that happiness is one of those concepts of "folk psychology" that doesn't designate any psychological state, and can't have any explication in terms of the kind of science that tries to discover general laws or regularities.

NICHOLAS P. WHITE

A Brief History of Happiness


Happiness is a hard master -- particularly other people's happiness.

ALDOUS HUXLEY

Brave New World


Happiness--like love--is itself an attitude.

STEPHANIE DOWRICK

Choosing Happiness


Happiness ... does not consist in the gratification of desires, nor in that freedom from care, that imaginary state of repose, to which most men look so anxiously forward, and with the prospect of which their labors are lightened, but which is more languid, irksome, and insupportable than all the toils of active life. True, the objects we pursue with so much ardor are insignificant in themselves, and never fulfil our extravagant expectations; but this by no means proves them unworthy of pursuit. Properly to estimate their value, we must take into view all the pleasurable emotions they awaken prior to attainment.

WILLIAM MATHEWS

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