Conceit

Conceit can mean an over-high esteem of oneself, something conceived (especially, a novel or fanciful idea), or, in literature and poetry, a device of analogy consisting of an extended metaphor.

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  • Be not wise in your own conceits.
    • Romans 12:16

  • Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? There is more hope of a fool than of him.
    • Proverbs 26:12

  • Conceit is the most contemptible and one of the most odious qualities in the world. It is vanity driven from all other shifts, and forced to appeal to itself for admiration.
    • William Hazlitt, Characteristics, in the manner of Rochefoucauld's Maxims (1823) No. 110

  • Conceit is to nature what paint is to beauty; it is not only needless, but impairs what it would improve.
    • Alexander Pope, letter to Mr. Walsh 2 July, 1706

  • We go and fancy that everybody is thinking of us. But he is not: he is like us; he is thinking of himself.
    • Charles Reade, Griffith Gaunt; or, Jealousy (1866) ch. 5

  • Nature in her whole drama never drew such a part; she has sometimes made a fool, but a coxcomb is always of a man's own making…
    • Joseph Addison, The Spectator No. 404 (13 June 1712)

  • It was Mr. Greenaway's conceit, and a terrifically promising one, that in this "Tempest" Mr. Gielgud's Prospero should also be a mirror image of Shakespeare at the end of his career, with a further association to the actor himself, nearing the end of his career as an actor.

Unsourced

  • The certain way to be cheated is to fancy one's self more cunning than others.
    • Charron

  • Be very slow to believe that you are wiser than all others; it is a fatal but common error. Where one has been saved by a true estimation of another's weakness, thousands have been destroyed by a false appreciation of their own strength.
    • Colton

  • A man who is proud of small things shows that small things are great to him.
    • Madame de Girardin

  • Self-made men are most always apt to be a little too proud of the job.
    • H. W. Shaw

  • He who gives himself airs of importance exhibits the credentials of impotence.
    • Johann Kaspar Lavater
    • The original text may be in German.

  • The more any one speaks of himself, the less he likes to hear another talked of.
    • Johann Kaspar Lavater
    • The original text may be in German.
 
Quoternity
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