Tolerance should really be only a temporary attitude; it must lead to recognition. To tolerate means to offend.
Tolerance comes of age. I see no fault committed that I myself could not have committed at some time or other.
I let everyone follow his own bent, that I may be free to follow mine.
Tolerance should, strictly speaking, be only a passing mood; it ought to lead to acknowledgment and appreciation. To tolerate a person is to affront him.
A state of true and universal tolerance is best ensured by leaving alone the peculiarities of men and peoples.
Tolerance should really only be a passing attitude: it should lead to appreciation. To tolerate is to offend.
We can most safely achieve truly universal tolerance when we respect that which is characteristic in the individual and in nations, clinging, though, to the conviction that the truly meritorious is unique by belonging to all of mankind.
Toleration ought in reality to be merely a transitory mood. It must lead to recognition. To tolerate is to affront.
One criticizes the English for carrying their teapots wherever they go, even lugging them up Mount Etna. But doesn't every nationhave its teapot, in which, even when traveling, it brews the dried bundles of herbs brought from home?