Browse through our collection of quotes tagged with Honor.
Integrity is crucial for business success - once you can fake that, you've got it made.
Henry Ford
Get it straight. Your boy you lose. Love you lose. Honor has been gone for a long time. Duty you do. Sure and what's your duty? What I said I'd do. And all the other things you said you'd do?
Ernest Hemingway
For every one pupil who needs to be guarded from a weak excess of sensibility there are three who need to be awakened from the slumber of cold vulgarity
C.S. Lewis
Honor is simply the morality of superior men.
H. L. Mencken
Honor lies in honest toil.
Grover Cleveland
Why should honor outlive honestly? Orthello
William Shakespeare
Better to die ten thousand deaths than wound my honor.
Joseph Addison
The post of honor is a private station.
A prophet is not without honor, save in his own country.
Bible
'You come of the Lord Adam and the Lady Eve,' said Aslan. 'And that is both honor enough to erect the head of the poorest beggar, and shame enough to bow the shoulders of the greatest emperor on earth. Be content.'
Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison... the only house in a slave State in which a free man can abide with honor.
Henry David Thoreau
But if it be a sin to covet honour,I am the most offending soul alive.
Show me the man you honor, and I will know what kind of man you are.
Thomas Carlyle
It's certainly my honor to be able to, hopefully, change the world a tiny bit, one mind at a time.
Jodi Picoult
Honor to a Spaniard, no matter how dishonest, is as real a thing as water, wine, or olive oil. There is honor among pickpockets and honor among whores. It is simply that the standards differ.
The higher the culture the more honorable the work.
Roucher
Let honor be to us as strong an obligation as necessity is to others.
Pliny the Elder
Woman's honor is nice as ermine; it will not bear a soil.
John Dryden
Honor is the reward of virtue.
Marcus Tullius Cicero
Since an intelligence common to us all makes things known to us and formulates them in our minds, honorable actions are ascribed by us to virtue, and dishonorable actions to vice; and only a madman would conclude that these judgments are matters of opinion, and not fixed by nature.