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A kind of semi-Solomon, half-knowing everything, from the cedar to the hyssop.
Thomas B. Macaulay
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Thomas B. Macaulay
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More quotes by Thomas B. Macaulay
We must judge of a form of government by it's general tendency, not by happy accidents
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Generalization is necessary to the advancement of knowledge but particularity is indispensable to the creations of the imagination.
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With the dead there is no rivalry, with the dead there is no change.
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Man is so inconsistent a creature that it is impossible to reason from his beliefs to his conduct, or from one part of his belief to another.
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There is only one cure for the evils which newly acquired freedom produces, and that cure is freedom.
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Satire is, indeed, the only sort of composition in which the Latin poets whose works have come down to us were not mere imitators of foreign models and it is therefore the sort of composition in which they have never been excelled.
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A few more years will destroy whatever yet remains of that magical potency which once belonged to the name of Byron.
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Byron owed the vast influence which he exercised over his contemporaries at least as much to his gloomy egotism as to the real power of his poetry.
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All the walks of literature are infested with mendicants for fame, who attempt to excite our interest by exhibiting all the distortions of their intellects and stripping the covering from all the putrid sores of their feelings.
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The English Bible - a book which, if everything else in our language should perish, would alone suffice to show the whole extent of its beauty and power.
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Both in individuals and in masses violent excitement is always followed by remission, and often by reaction. We are all inclined to depreciate whatever we have overpraised, and, on the other hand, to show undue indulgence where we have shown undue rigor.
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Half-knowledge is worse than ignorance.
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The measure of a man's real character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.
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What society wants is a new motive, not a new cant.
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I am always nearest to myself, says the Latin proverb.
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Western literature has been more influenced by the Bible than any other book.
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The temple of silence and reconciliation.
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The chief-justice was rich, quiet, and infamous.
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We hardly know an instance of the strength and weakness of human nature so striking and so grotesque as the character of this haughty, vigilant, resolute, sagacious blue-stocking, half Mithridates and half Trissotin, bearing up against a world in arms, with an ounce of poison in one pocket and a quire of bad verses in the other.
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This is the best book ever written by any man on the wrong side of a question of which he is profoundly ignorant.
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