A Quote by Napoleon Bonaparte

Malice delights to blacken the characters of prominent men. — © Napoleon Bonaparte
Malice delights to blacken the characters of prominent men.
If any of my characters require me to blacken my beard I do it, otherwise I don't.
Famously, DC has been pretty great showing gay women, with characters like Batwoman, but has shown fewer prominent men on the sexuality spectrum outside of hetero. It's something we need to address. I also think it's lovely how the readers respond to this.
I got into comics on John Byrne's run of the X-Men and the Dark Phoenix Saga. I got in around X-Men 95, right when it turned to the new X-Men. So that whole family, all those characters are kind of my favorite characters, just the X-Men world.
When it comes to writing characters, whether men or women, I think a good writer writes good characters. I know many men who, for years, have written strong, progressive women characters.
Befikre' is not just about two characters. There is another very prominent third character, and that is Paris.
A bureaucrat is the most despicable of men, though he is needed as vultures are needed, but one hardly admires vultures whom bureaucrats so strangely resemble. I have yet to meet a bureaucrat who was not petty, dull, almost witless, crafty or stupid, an oppressor or a thief, a holder of little authority in which he delights, as a boy delights in possessing a vicious dog. Who can trust such creatures?
To consider this desirable would be to delight in the slaughter of men; and he who delights in the slaughter of men cannot get his will in the kingdom.
Malicious men may die, but malice never.
Superiority to circumstances is one of the most prominent characteristics of great men.
The virtuous man delights in this world and he delights in the next
Men that make Envy and crooked malice nourishment, Dare bite the best.
Most men would rather be charged with malice than with making a blunder.
Prosperity inebriates men, so that they take delights in their own merits.
Fear, prejudice, malice, and the love of approbation bribe a thousand men where gold bribes one.
The least glimmering or shade of acting, in man or woman, is a sure motive of envy in the rest; and, if their malice can't persuade the town's-people into a dislike of their performance, they'll cruelly endeavor to taint their characters.
I did 'Malice,' 'Sommersby,' and 'Sleepless in Seattle,' and they're as disparate characters as I've ever played. But somehow, there was that thing - they were all second male leads, so they all didn't get the girl in some weird way.
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