Top 32 Quotes & Sayings by Charles Peguy

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a French philosopher Charles Peguy.
Last updated on December 22, 2024.
Charles Peguy

Charles Pierre Péguy was a French poet, essayist, and editor. His two main philosophies were socialism and nationalism. By 1908 at the latest, after years of uneasy agnosticism, he had become a believing but non-practicing Roman Catholic. From that time, Catholicism strongly influenced his works.

He who does not bellow the truth when he knows the truth makes himself the accomplice of liars and forgers.
Freedom is a system based on courage.
Homer is new this morning, and perhaps nothing is as old as today's newspaper. — © Charles Peguy
Homer is new this morning, and perhaps nothing is as old as today's newspaper.
A word is not the same with one writer as with another. One tears it from his guts. The other pulls it out of his overcoat pocket.
Any father whose son raises his hand against him is guilty of having produced a son who raised his hand against him.
Love is rarer than genius itself. And friendship is rarer than love.
We must always tell what we see. Above all, and this is more difficult, we must always see what we see.
Tyranny is always better organized than freedom.
Short of genius a rich man cannot even imagine poverty.
A great philosophy is not a philosophy without reproach; it is philosophy without fear.
A great philosophy is not one that passes final judgments and establishes ultimate truth. It is one that causes uneasiness and starts commotion.
When a man dies, he does not just die of the disease he has: he dies of his whole life.
There will be things that I do that no one will be left to understand.
When you love someone you love him as he is.
One has not the right to betray even a traitor. Traitors must be fought, got betrayed.
It is the essence of genius to make use of the simplest ideas.
The classical artist can be recognized by his sincerity, the romantic by his laborious insincerity.
We shall never know how many acts of cowardice have been motivated by the fear of appearing not sufficiently progressive.
The honest man must be a perpetual renegade, the life of an honest man a perpetual infidelity. For the man who wishes to remain faithful to truth must make himself perpetually unfaithful to all the continual, successive, indefatigable renascent errors
I prefer a saint with faults to a sinner with none.
What is most contrary to salvation is not sin but habit.
The life of an honest man must be a perpetual infidelity.
It is innocence that is full and experience that is empty. It is innocence that wins and experience that loses.
Suffering passes; having suffered never passes. — © Charles Peguy
Suffering passes; having suffered never passes.
The sinner is at the heart of Christianity. No one is as competent as the sinner in matters of Christianity. No one, except a saint.
It is better to have a war for justice than peace in injustice.
The references you do not verify are the good ones.
Life holds only one tragedy, ultimately: not to have been a saint.
We said that a single injustice, a single crime, a single illegality, particularly if it is officially recorded, confirmed, a single wrong to humanity, a single wrong to justice and to right, particularly if it is universally, legally, nationally, commodiously accepted, that a single crime shatters and is sufficient to shatter the whole social pact, the whole social contract, that a single legal crime, a single dishonorable act will bring about the loss of ones honor, the dishonor of a whole people. It is a touch of gangrene that corrupts the entire body.
Everything begins in mysticism and ends in politics.
The faith that I love the best, says God, is hope.
It has never been given to a man to attain at once his happiness and his salvation.
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