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I am always nearest to myself, says the Latin proverb.
Thomas B. Macaulay
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Thomas B. Macaulay
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More quotes by Thomas B. Macaulay
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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The upper current of society presents no pertain criterion by which we can judge of the direction in which the under current flows.
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There is no country in Europe which is so easy to over-run as Spain there is no country which it is more difficult to conquer.
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Language is the machine of the poet.
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Free trade, one of the greatest blessings which a government can confer on a people, is in almost every country unpopular.
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Every political sect has its esoteric and its exoteric school--its abstract doctrines for the initiated its visible symbols, its imposing forms, its mythological fables, for the vulgar.
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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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Perhaps no person can be a poet, or can even enjoy poetry, without a certain unsoundness of mind.
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Turn where we may, within, around, the voice of great events is proclaiming to us, Reform, that you may preserve!
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Grief, which disposes gentle natures to retirement, to inaction, and to meditation, only makes restless spirits more restless.
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We know no spectacle so ridiculous as the British public in one of its periodical fits of morality.
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Thus, then, stands the case. It is good, that authors should be remunerated and the least exceptionable way of remunerating them is by a monopoly. Yet monopoly is an evil. For the sake of the good we must submit to the evil but the evil ought not to last a day longer than is necessary for the purpose of securing the good.
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The opinion of the great body of the reading public is very materially influenced even by the unsupported assertions of those who assume a right to criticize.
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We do not think it necessary to prove that a quack medicine is poison let the vender prove it to be sanative.
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Was none who would be foremost To lead such dire attack But those behind cried Forward! And those before cried Back!
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He who, in an enlightened and literary society, aspires to be a great poet, must first become a little child.
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No man in the world acts up to his own standard of right.
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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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We must succumb to the general influence of the times. No man can be of the tenth century, if he would be must be a man of the nineteenth century.
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It has often been found that profuse expenditures, heavy taxation, absurd commercial restrictions, corrupt tribunals, disastrous wars, seditions, persecutions, conflagrations, inundation, have not been able to destroy capital so fast as the exertions of private citizens have been able to create it.
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