“Why, Sir, it is difficult to settle the proportion of iniquity between them.”
Samuel Johnson (1709–1784) English writer
Feb. 15, 1766, p. 145
Said of Rousseau and Voltaire
Life of Samuel Johnson (1791), Vol II
When asked by Maurice Morgann whom he considered to be the better poet — Smart or Derrick, 1783, p. 504
Life of Samuel Johnson (1791), Vol IV
“Why, Sir, it is difficult to settle the proportion of iniquity between them.”
Samuel Johnson (1709–1784) English writer
Feb. 15, 1766, p. 145
Said of Rousseau and Voltaire
Life of Samuel Johnson (1791), Vol II
Jim Geraghty (1975) American journalist
Ten Reasons We Can't, and Shouldn't, Be Nordic (2018)
Bernard Cornwell (1944) British writer
Colonel Claud Runciman, Captain Richard Sharpe, and Sergeant Patrick Harper, p. 331
Sharpe (Novel Series), Sharpe's Battle (1995)
“The preceding merely defines a way of thinking. But the point is to live.”
Albert Camus book The Myth of Sisyphus
The Myth of Sisyphus (1942), An Absurd Reasoning
“It is much easier to settle a point than to act on it.”
Richard Cecil (clergyman) (1748–1810) British Evangelical Anglican priest and social reformer
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), p. 4.
Benjamin Disraeli (1804–1881) British Conservative politician, writer, aristocrat and Prime Minister
Speech http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1845/apr/11/maynooth-college in the House of Commons (11 April 1845). <br class="br">1840s
Mark Twain (1835–1910) American author and humorist
New England Weather, speech to the New England Society (December 22, 1876)
Thomas Denison (1699–1765) British judge (1699–1765)
Rex v. Jarvis (1756), 1 Burr. Part IV. 154.
Benjamin N. Cardozo (1870–1938) United States federal judge
Other writings, The Paradoxes of Legal Science (1928)