Joseph Arch (1826–1919) British politician
Source: The Story of his Life Told by Himself (1898), p. 25
Source: The Diary of Anaïs Nin, Vol. 1: 1931-1934
Joseph Arch (1826–1919) British politician
Source: The Story of his Life Told by Himself (1898), p. 25
William Penn (1644–1718) English real estate entrepreneur, philosopher, early Quaker and founder of the Province of Pennsylvania
Frame of Government (1682)
Context: When the great and wise God had made the world, of all his creatures, it pleased him to chuse man his Deputy to rule it: and to fit him for so great a charge and trust, he did not only qualify him with skill and power, but with integrity to use them justly. This native goodness was equally his honour and his happiness; and whilst he stood here, all went well; there was no need of coercive or compulsive means; the precept of divine love and truth, in his bosom, was the guide and keeper of his innocency. But lust prevailing against duty, made a lamentable breach upon it; and the law, that before had no power over him, took place upon him, and his disobedient posterity, that such as would not live comformable to the holy law within, should fall under the reproof and correction of the just law without, in a judicial administration.
Bernard Groethuysen (1880–1946) French literary historian, translator and writer
Source: The Bourgeois: Catholicism vs. Capitalism in Eighteenth-Century France (1927), p. 160
“A Man is to go about his own Business as if he had not a Friend in the World to help him in it.”
George Savile, 1st Marquess of Halifax (1633–1695) English politician
Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Reflections (1750), Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections
Francis Bacon book The Advancement of Learning
And the coming of this Holy Spirit was chiefly figured and expressed in the similitude and gift of tongues, which are but vehicula scientiæ.
The Advancement of Learning (1605)
Gabriel García Márquez book One Hundred Years of Solitude
Source: One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967), p. 119