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To be prejudiced is always to be weak; yet there are prejudices so near to laudable that they have been often praised and are always pardoned.

Samuel Johnson, Arthur Murphy, Francis Pearson Walesby (1825). “Reviews, political tracts, and Lives of eminent persons”, p.225
To be prejudiced is always to be weak; yet there are prejudices so near to laudable that they have been often praised and are always pardoned.