“We tend quite rightly to associate an age with its newest and most original ideas, and there is no harm in this as long as we remember that only a few men, at that time, may have actually held those ideas, and that many decades, often amounting to centuries, may pass before those ideas have seeped down to wider and commoner levels of belief, thought, and feeling.”

Source: Man and Time (1964), Ch. 6, p. 140

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J.B. Priestley 35
English writer 1894–1984

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