Publisher's Synopsis
Préambule. Oratory language dazzles more than it enlightens; it imposes more than it persuades, and there is in the solemnity of the speeches what can arouse certain sensibilities. On the contrary, the proverbial or citation language, which seems to say what everyone has felt and thought, where you do not see anything pretentious and masterful, calls for confidence, instead of exciting prevention, and lesson that it offers, indirect and general, rather taken than received by those for whom it is suitable, enters the understanding of its own accord. While artistically developed sentences in a speech or article are easily erased from memory, wise and learned proverbial and quotation sentences, originally concise, remain etched in memory.In my present work, I offer my dear readers a large number of sayings and personal quotes, dealing with various themes in the political, economic, scientific, philosophical, cultural and moral fields, so that every reader will find there the themes that agree and respond best to his inclinations.Amor Abbassi