quotations about custom
Morality is the custom of one’s country and the current feeling of one’s peers. Cannibalism is moral in a cannibal country.
SAMUEL BUTLER
Samuel Butler's Notebooks
Outside in accordance with custom; inside as we please.
SENECA
Epistulae ad Lucilium
A good custom is surer than law.
EURIPIDES
Pirithoüs
Choose what is best; custom will make it agreeable and easy.
PYTHAGORAS
Ethical Sentences from Stobaeus
An ancient custom obtains force of nature.
CICERO
De Inventione
Man yields to custom, as he bows to fate,
In all things ruled--mind, body, and estate;
In pain, in sickness, we for cure apply
To them we know not, and we know not why.
GEORGE CRABBE
The Gentleman Farmer
If you are determined to live and die a slave to custom, see that it is at least a good one.
E. P. DAY
attributed, Day's Collacon
To attack a man's customs is to attack his very foundation.
FABIAN BYOMUHANGI
The Whirlwind
The customs and fashions of men change like leaves on the bough, some of which go and others come.
DANTE ALIGHIERI
Paradiso
Custom suffers naught to be strange to the eye.
AUSONIUS
Epigram
Never can custom conquer nature.
CICERO
Tusculanarum Disputationum
Men do more things from custom than from reason.
FABARIA
attributed, Day's Collacon
If you reject the food, ignore the customs, fear the religion and avoid the people, you might better stay home.
JAMES A. MICHENER
attributed, Reader's Digest, 1975
The interrogation of custom at all points is an inevitable stage in the growth of every superior mind.
RALPH WALDO EMERSON
Representative Men
The life history of the individual is first and foremost an accomodation to the patterns and standards traditionally handed in his community. From the moment of his birth the customs into which he is born shape his experience and behavior.
RUTH BENEDICT
Patterns of Culture
Great things astonish us, and small dishearten us. Custom makes both familiar.
LA BRUYERE
Les Caracteres
Custom, that unwritten law,
By which the people keep even kings in awe.
WILLIAM D'AVENANT
Circe
The customs of the world are so many conventional follies.
EDGAR ALLAN POE
"The Spectacles"
Man is made of the wholly common, and custom is his nurse; woe then to them who lay irreverent hands on his old house-furniture, the dear inheritance from his forefathers: For time consecrates, and what is gray with age becomes religion.
FRIEDRICH SCHILLER
The Death of Wallenstein
The slaves of custom and established mode,
With pack-horse constancy we keep the road
Crooked or straight, through quags or thorny dells,
True to the jingling of our leader's bells.
WILLIAM COWPER
The Task