
“We owe to the Middle Ages the two worst inventions of humanity - romantic love and gunpowder.”
Les silences du colonel Bramble (The Silence of Colonel Bramble)
The History of English Poetry (1774-81) vol. 1, p. 431.
“We owe to the Middle Ages the two worst inventions of humanity - romantic love and gunpowder.”
Les silences du colonel Bramble (The Silence of Colonel Bramble)
Letter X
The Nemesis of Faith (1849)
Context: I know that in early ages men did form degraded notions of the Almighty, painting Him like themselves, extreme only in all their passions : they thought He could he as lightly irritated as themselves, and that they could appease His anger by wretched offerings of innocent animals. From such a feeling as this to the sense of the value of a holy and spotless life and death — from the sacrifice of an animal to that of a saint — is a step forward out of superstition quite immeasurable. That between the earnest conviction of partial sight, and the strong metaphors of vehement minds, the sacrificial language should have been transferred onwards from one to the other, seems natural to me; perhaps inevitable. On the other hand, through all history we find the bitter fact that mankind can only be persuaded to accept the best gifts which Heaven sends them, in persecuting and destroying those who are charged to be their bearers.
“Our age is an age of moderate virtue
And moderate vice”
Choruses from The Rock (1934)
11 How. St. Tr. 1204.
Trial of Sir Edward Hales (1686)
"Haunted by Halloween", in the New York Times (31 October 1990).
"The Rise".
The Long-Legged House (1969)
Context: We haven't accepted — we can't really believe — that the most characteristic product of our age of scientific miracles is junk, but that is so. And we still think and behave as though we face an unspoiled continent, with thousands of acres of living space for every man. We still sing "America the Beautiful" as though we had not created in it, by strenuous effort, at great expense, and with dauntless self-praise, an unprecedented ugliness.