you ask. "Well, I'll get more," he says. Just as at cricket, you get more runs. There's no use in the runs, but to get more of them than other people is the game. So all that great foul city of London there, — rattling, growling, smoking, stinking, — a ghastly heap of fermenting brickwork, pouring out poison at every pore, — you fancy it is a city of work? Not a street of it! It is a great city of play; very nasty play and very hard play, but still play.
The Crown of Wild Olive, lecture I: Work, sections 23-24 (1866)
“We, as lawyers, as men of business, as men of experience, know perfectly well what evils necessarily result from handing over a great family estate to a mortgagee in possession, whose only chance of getting his money is to sacrifice the interests of everybody to money-getting.”
In re Marquis of Ailesbury's Settled Estates (1891), L. J. Rep. 61 C. D. 123.
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Nathaniel Lindley, Baron Lindley 19
English judge 1828–1921Related quotes
“Economic Myths and Public Opinion” https://miltonfriedman.hoover.org/friedman_images/Collections/2016c21/AmSpectator_01_1976.pdf, The Alternative: An American Spectator, vol. 9, no. 4, (January 1976) pp. 5-9
“Send lawyers, guns and money.
Dad, get me out of this!”
"Lawyers, Guns And Money"
Excitable Boy (1978)
“It is difficult to get a hearing from busy men for even a great new truth.”
[408247, October 1927, Listerian Oration: 1927 (delivered at the annual meeting of the Canadian Medical Association, Toronto, June 18, 1927), Canadian Medical Association Journal, 17, 10 Pt 2, 1255–1263, 20316567, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC408247/] quote from p. 1261; This oration sponsored by the Lister Club of the Canadian Medical Association should not be confused with the Lister Oration sponsored by the Royal College of Surgeons of England.
“Money hath too great a Preference given to it by States, as well as by particular Men.”
Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Reflections (1750), Moral Thoughts and Reflections
“The great affair, we always find, is to get money.”
Source: (1776), Book IV, Chapter I, p. 460.
“Get money; still get money, boy,
No matter by what means.”
Act ii, Scene 3. Compare: "Get place and wealth,—if possible, with grace; If not, by any means get wealth and place", Alexander Pope, Horace, book i. epistle i. line 103
Every Man in His Humour (1598)