“Many sensible things banished from high life find an asylum among the mob.”
Source: White-Jacket (1850), Ch. 7
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Herman Melville 144
American novelist, short story writer, essayist, and poet 1818–1891Related quotes
Source: Where There's a Will: Thoughts on the Good Life (2003), Ch. 21 : Family Values

“I find Cambridge an asylum, in every sense of the word.”
A remark made in conversation, according to Grant Richards Housman 1897-1936 (1942) p. 100.
Attributed
Chap. IV.
The Philosophical and Mathematical Commentaries of Proclus on the First Book of Euclid's Elements Vol. 1 (1788)


First Inaugural Address (March 4, 1897).
1890s

His perception of modern science is explicitly stated in ‘An enlightened and princely patron of true science".

“From this amphibious ill-born mob began
That vain, ill-natured thing, an Englishman.”
Pt. I, l. 132.
The True-Born Englishman http://www.luminarium.org/editions/trueborn.htm (1701)

“There can be no free speech in a mob: free speech is one thing a mob can't stand.”
"Quotes", The Educated Imagination (1963), Talk 6: The Vocation of Eloquence