Famous quotes containing the words seventeenth century, late, seventeenth and/or century:
“It is as if, to every period of history, there corresponded a privileged age and a particular division of human life: youth is the privileged age of the seventeenth century, childhood of the nineteenth, adolescence of the twentieth.”
—Philippe Ariés (20th century)
“Ah! late I spoke to silent throngs,
And now their hour is come.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“The general feeling was, and for a long time remained, that one had several children in order to keep just a few. As late as the seventeenth century . . . people could not allow themselves to become too attached to something that was regarded as a probable loss. This is the reason for certain remarks which shock our present-day sensibility, such as Montaignes observation, I have lost two or three children in their infancy, not without regret, but without great sorrow.”
—Philippe Ariés (20th century)
“There was never a century nor a country that was short of experts who knew the Deitys mind and were willing to reveal it.”
—Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens] (18351910)