Letter 2
Letters Written in Sweden (1796)
Context: The more I see of the world, the more I am convinced that civilisation is a blessing not sufficiently estimated by those who have not traced its progress; for it not only refines our enjoyments, but produces a variety which enables us to retain the primitive delicacy of our sensations. Without the aid of the imagination all the pleasures of the senses must sink into grossness, unless continual novelty serve as a substitute for the imagination, which, being impossible, it was to this weariness, I suppose, that Solomon alluded when he declared that there was nothing new under the sun!
“Those who look forward to a period of continuous and, so to speak, inevitable progress, are bound to assign some more solid reason for their convictions than a merely empirical survey of the surface lessons of history. …Humanity, civilisation, progress itself, must have a tendency to mitigate the harsh methods by which Nature has wrought out the variety and the perfection of organic life.”
A Fragment on Progress (1891)
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Arthur James Balfour 48
British Conservative politician and statesman 1848–1930Related quotes
Speech at the Philip Scott College (27 September 1923), quoted in On England, and Other Addresses (1926), pp. 150-151.
1923
“Humanity, in the aggregate, is progressing, and philanthropy looks forward hopefully.”
Reported in Edge-Tools of Speech (1886) by Maturin M. Ballou, p. 397.
Speech in Hyde Park (24 May 1929), published in This Torch of Freedom (1935), p. 26.
1929
Speech delivered at Nagpur University Convocation on 5th December 1936.
Source: The Life of a Painter - autobiography', 1946, Letters of the great artists', 1963, p. 247
“Progress is man’s indifference to the lessons of history.”
An Expensive Place to Die, Jonathan Cape (1967) Ch. 39
Some Characteristics of the American Ethical Movement (1925)