With much we surfeit; plenty makes us poor.
The phases of fire are craving and satiety.
Satiety is a mongrel that barks at the heels of plenty.
However gnawing a deficiency, satiety is worse. . . We are meant to be hungry.
It would be good to live in a perpetual state of leave-taking, never to go nor to stay, but to remain suspended in that golden emotion of love and longing; to be loved without satiety.
All surfeit is the father of much fast.
Love has both its gall and honey in abundance: it has sweetness to the taste, but it presents bitterness also to satiety.
Wealth breeds satiety, satiety outrage.
SATIETY, n. The feeling that one has for the plate after he has eaten its contents, madam.
Inconstancy is the child of satiety.
If I had a lover who wanted to hear from me every day, I would break with him.
The silent treasuring up of knowledge; learning without satiety; and instructing others without being wearied: which one of these things belongs to me?
Expectation is contentment - Gain satiety.
Everything is good. . . as long as it is unpossessed. Satiety and possession are Death's horses they run in span.
There is satiety in all things, in sleep, and love-making, in the loveliness of singing and the innocent dance.
A merry life and a short one shall be my motto.
The delights of lust terminate in languishment and dejection; the object thou burnest for nauseates with satiety, and no sooner hadst thou possessed it, but thou wert weary of its presence.
Note that the eating of flesh is not only physically against nature, but it also makes us spiritually coarse and gross by reason of satiety and surfeit.
Satiety comes of riches and contumaciousness of satiety.
FICKLENESS, n. The iterated satiety of an enterprising affection.