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Embrace the charisma and wisdom of Giacomo Casanova with our captivating collection of quote stickers. This downloadable and printable set features a selection of insightful and memorable quotes from the legendary adventurer and writer. Perfect for personalizing your journals, planners, or any creative space, these stickers are designed to inspire and charm anyone who appreciates the art of living and loving.
Our Giacomo Casanova Quote Stickers are elegantly crafted with a blend of classic and romantic typography, ensuring each quote stands out beautifully. Whether you're a history enthusiast, a romantic at heart, or someone who admires Casanova's wit and wisdom, these stickers will add a touch of sophistication and intrigue to your daily life. Simply download, print on your preferred material, and adorn your space with the timeless words of Casanova.
Quotes in this pack:
- Be the flame, not the moth.
- one who makes no mistakes makes nothing
- If you have not done things worthy of being written about, at least write things worthy of being read.
- Beauty without wit offers nothing but the enjoyment of its material charms, whilst witty ugliness captivates by the charms of the mind, and at last fulfils all the desires of the man it has captivated.
- As for myself, I always willingly acknowledge my own self as the principal cause of every good and of every evil which may befall me; therefore, I have always found myself capable of being my own pupil, and ready to love my teacher.
- I have always loved truth so passionately that I have often resorted to lying as a way of introducing it into the minds which were ignorant of its charms.
- I have loved women even to madness, but I have always loved liberty better.
- I am writing My Life to laugh at myself, and I am succeeding.
- Give me a man who is man enough to give himself just to the woman who is worth him. If that woman were me,I would love him alone and forever
- The same principle that forbids me to lie does not allow me to tell the truth.
- Desires are but pain and torment, and enjoyment is sweet because it delivers us from them.
- Man is a free agent; but he is not free if he does not believe it, for the more power he attributes to Destiny, the more he deprives himself of the power which God granted him when he gave him reason.
- Cheating is a sin, but honest cunning is simply prudence. It is a virtue. To be sure, it has a likeness to roguery, but that cannot be helped. He who has not learned to practice it is a fool.
- The story she had told me was possible, but it was not believable.
- lies, truth, loveI have always loved truth so passionately that I have often resorted to lying as a way of introducing it into the minds which were ignorant of it's charms.
- Love is a great poet, its resources are inexhaustible, but if the end it has in view is not obtained, it feels weary and remains silent.
- The thing is to dazzle
- From that moment our love became sad, and sadness is a disease which gives the death-blow to affection.
- There is no such thing as a perfectly happy or perfectly unhappy man in the world. One has more happiness in his life and another more unhappiness, and the same circumstance may produce widely different effects on individuals of different temperaments.
- I am writing My Life so that I may laugh at myself, and I am succeeding.
- economy spoils pleasure
- It is shallow desires which make a young man bold; strong desires confound him.
- I cannot think without a shudder of contracting any obligation towards death. I hate death; for, happy or miserable, life is the only blessing which man possesses, and those who do not love it are unworthy of it.
- My great treasure is that I am my own master, that I am not dependent upon anyone, and that I am not afraid of misfortunes.
- I found that the writer who says SUBLATA LUCERNA NULLUM DISCRIMEN INTER MULIERES ('when the lamp is taken away, all women are alike') says true; but without love, this great business is a vile thing.
- if you have not done anything worthy of being recorded, at least write something worthy of being read.
- youth runs away from old age, because it is its most cruel enemy
- Finishing first is nothing to brag about.
- It is always easy to break one’s word to oneself.
- Passion is the combination of lust and intellect. - (Giacomo Casanova)
- Happiness is gained by complying with the duties of whatever condition of life one is in, and you must constrain yourself to rise to that exalted station in which destiny has placed you.
- You will laugh when you discover that I often had no scruples about deceiving nitwits and scoundrels and fools when I found it necessary. As for women, this sort of reciprocal deceit cancels itself out, for when love enters in, both parties are usually dupes
- marriage is the tomb of love
- Love becomes imprudent only when it is impatient to enjoy; but when it is a matter of procuring the return of a happiness to which a baleful combination of circumstances has raised impediments, love sees and foresees all that the most subtle perspicacity can discover.
- What has infused my very blood with an unconquerable hatred of the whole tribe of fools from the day of my birth is that I become a fool myself whenever I am in their company.
- What do you want to say to me?’ ‘Nothing—just to talk about the profession I am entering. I am about to practice virtue in order to find a man who loves it only to destroy it' [replied Mademoiselle Vesian.] ‘That is it exactly; and believe me, everything in this life is much the same. We refer everything to ourselves, and each of us is a tyrant. That is why the best of mortals is he who is tolerant.
- Feeling that I was born for the opposite sex, I have always loved it, and I have done everything I could to make myself beloved by it.
- A beautiful woman without a mind of her own leaves her lover with no resource after he had physically enjoyed her charms.
- I always feel the greatest bliss when I recollect those I have caught in my snares, for they generally are insolent, and so self-conceited that they challenge wit. We avenge intellect when we dupe a fool, and it is a victory not to be despised for a fool is covered with steel and it is often very hard to find his vulnerable part. In fact, to gull a fool seems to me an exploit worthy of a witty man.
- faith must believe without discussion, and the stronger it is, the more it keeps silent.
- Rhetoric makes use of nature’s secrets in the same way as painters who try to imitate it: their most beautiful work is false.
- The longer you remain in Rome,' said [Cardinal] S.C., ‘the smaller you will find it.
- In fact, I do not believe there is an honest man alive without some pretension,
- One who makes no mistakes makes nothing at all.
- Death is a monster which drives an attentive spectator from the great theater before the play in which he is infinitely interested is over. This alone is reason enough to hate it.
- Nequicquam sapit qui sibi non sapit. (He knows nothing who does not profit from what he knows.)
- Happy are those who know how to obtain pleasures without injury to anyone; insane are those who fancy that the Almighty can enjoy the sufferings, the pains, the fasts and abstinences which they offer to Him as a sacrifice,
- When a man gets it into his head to do something, and when he exclusively occupies himself in that design, he must succeed, whatever the difficulties. That man will become Grand Vizier or Pope.
- I have not written my memoirs for those young people who can only save themselves from falling by spending their youth in ignorance, but for those whom experience of life has rendered proof against being seduced, whom living in the fire has transformed into salamanders.
- My life's been filled with adventures, and truths often become larger than life when they're retold. I never correct the tales that are especially hard to believe. It would be unkind to those who want to believe in them. - Giacomo Casanova
- Happy are those who know how to obtain pleasures without injury to anyone; insane are those who fancy that the Almighty can enjoy the sufferings, the pains, the fasts and abstinences which they offer to Him as a sacrifice, and that His love is granted only to those who tax themselves so foolishly.
- I have never done anything in my life except try to make myself ill when I had my health and try to make myself well when I had lost it. I have been equally and thoroughly successful in both, and today in that particular I enjoy perfect health, which I wish I could ruin again; but age prevents me.
- Death is a monster that chases the rapt spectator from the theater before the play he is watching with infinite interest has ended.
- lord, if my enemy kills me, I am damned; so save me from death
- Having observed that I have all my life acted more from the force of feeling than from my reflections, I have concluded that my conduct has depended more on my character than on my mind, after a long struggle between them in which I have alternately found myself with too little intelligence for my character and too little character for my intelligence.
- I have had friends who have acted kindly towards me, and it has been my good fortune to have it in my power to give them substantial proofs of my gratitude.
- Hatred, in the course of time, kills the unhappy wretch who delights in nursing it in his bosom. Should
- Oh, cruel ennui! It must be by mistake that those who have invented the torments of hell have forgotten to ascribe thee the first place among them.
- I hate death; for, happy or miserable, life is the only blessing which man possesses, and those who do not love it are unworthy of it. If we prefer honour to life, it is because life is blighted by infamy; and if, in the alternative, man sometimes throws away his life, philosophy must remain silent. Oh,
- Death is a monster which turns away from the great theatre an attentive hearer before the end of the play which deeply interests him, and this is reason enough to hate it. All
- I always feel the greatest bliss when I recollect those I have caught in my snares, for they generally are insolent, and so self-conceited that they challenge wit. We avenge intellect when we dupe a fool, and it is a victory not to be despised for a fool is covered with steel and it is often very hard to find his vulnerable part. In
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