
“A tendancy to melancholy… let it be observed, is a misfortune, not a fault.”
The Lady's New Year's Gift: or Advice to a Daughter (1688)
“A tendancy to melancholy… let it be observed, is a misfortune, not a fault.”
“That dangerous but too commonly received notion, that a reformed rake makes the best husband.”
Vol. 1, p. 5; Preface.
Clarissa (1747–1748)
“Is it possible to observe without the observer?”
1st Public Talk, Bombay (Mumbai), India (7 February 1971)
1970s
Source: The Revival of Aristocracy (1906), pp. 86-97.
“Trust no friend without faults, and love a maiden, but no angel.”
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, as quoted in Dictionary of Quotations from Ancient and Modern English and Foreign Sources (1899) by James Wood, p. 499
Misattributed
“Trust no friend without faults, and love a maiden, but no angel.”
As quoted in Dictionary of Quotations from Ancient and Modern English and Foreign Sources (1899) by James Wood, p. 499
“The gap between our feelings and our social observation is dangerously wide.”
Realism and the Contemporary Novel (1961): The Long Revolution