Next Quotes - Page 68
The knowledge of one generation is the ignorance of the next.
Frances Wright (1850). “A few days in Athens: being the translation of a Greek manuscript discovered in Herculaneum”, p.204
1852 'Cassandra' pt.4, part of an unpublished work Suggestions for Thought to Searchers after Religious Truth (revised and privately printed1859). Published as an appendix in Ray Strachey The Cause: A Short History of theWomen'sMovement in Great Britain (1928).
Eoin Colfer (2002). “Artemis fowl: the Arctic incident”
Elie Wiesel (2006). “Dawn: A Novel”, p.61, Macmillan
Eckhart Tolle (2003). “Stillness Speaks”, p.20, New World Library
Earl Paulk (1985). “Held in the heavens until--”
Djuna Barnes (1928). “Ladies Almanack: Showing Their Signs and Their Tides, Their Moons and Their Changes, the Seasons as it is with Them, Their Eclipses and Equinoxes, as Well as a Full Record of Diurnal and Nocturnal Distempers”, Carcanet Press Limited
Beware of assumptions that seem "obvious" in one decade. They may become quaint in the next.
David Brin (1990). “Earth”, Spectra