France And Frenchmen Quotes
Discover the best quotes about France And Frenchmen. This collection showcases wisdom and insights on France And Frenchmen from various authors and personalities.
It's impossible in normal times to rally a nation that has 265 kinds of cheese.
The Revolution's most important result was Napoleon, whose most important result (as France learned in 1871, and again in 1914, and again in 1940) was the invention of Germany
In France every man is either an anvil or a hammer; he is a beater or must be beaten.
France has neither winter nor summer nor morals-apart from these drawbacks it is a fine country.
A French traveler with a sore throat is a wonderful thing to behold, but it takes more than tonsillitis to prevent a Frenchman from boasting.
The French are highly individualistic and ungovernable and the extraordinary thing is that, although they project great leaders about once a century, those leaders rule effectively but bequeath chaos.
The French complain of everything, and always.
The French, for example, are a contemptible nation.
Who can help loving the land that has taught us Six hundred and eighty-five ways to dress eggs?
The Frenchman is first and foremost a man. He is likeable often just because of his weaknesses, which are always thoroughly human, even if despicable.
There's a French story that tells how God created the world, and there was no place perfect on it, so he created France. And then he looked at it and said, This is too good for humanity, so he created Frenchmen to live in it.
How can you be expected to govern a country that has two hundred and forty-six kinds of cheese?
Political thought in France is either nostalgic or Utopian.
Everything ends this way in France-everything. Weddings, christenings, duels, burials, swindlings, diplomatic affairs-everything is a pretext for a good dinner.
In the past the French came to Germany less with the desire to understand it than with a zealous desire to interpret, to analyze it dispassionately something for which their training at the Ecole Normale Superieure or the Ecole des Hautes Etudes and the French language superbly equipped them to do.