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Finesse is the best adaptation of means to circumstances.
Thomas B. Macaulay
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Thomas B. Macaulay
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More quotes by Thomas B. Macaulay
In employing fiction to make truth clear and goodness attractive, we are only following the example which every Christian ought to propose to himself.
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The chief-justice was rich, quiet, and infamous.
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The English doctrine that all power is a trust for the public good.
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To sum up the whole, we should say that the aim of the Platonic philosophy was to exalt man into a god.
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That is the best government which desires to make the people happy, and knows how to make them happy.
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Logicians may reason about abstractions. But the great mass of men must have images. The strong tendency of the multitude in all ages and nations to idolatry can be explained on no other principle.
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Parent of sweetest sounds, yet mute forever.
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Language is the machine of the poet.
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He had done that which could never be forgiven he was in the grasp of one who never forgave.
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The real object of the drama is the exhibition of human character.
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We must judge a government by its general tendencies and not by its happy accidents.
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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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Shakespeare has had neither equal nor second.
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Generalization is necessary to the advancement of knowledge but particularly is indispensable to the creations of the imagination. In proportion as men know more and think more they look less at individuals and more at classes. They therefore make better theories and worse poems.
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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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As freedom is the only safeguard of governments, so are order and moderation generally necessary to preserve freedom.
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In every age the vilest specimens of human nature are to be found among demagogues.
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Only imagine a man acting for one single day on the supposition that all his neighbors believe all that they profess, and act up to all that they believe!
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The Orientals have another word for accident it is kismet,--fate.
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The perfect disinterestedness and self-devotion of which men seem incapable, but which is sometimes found in women.
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