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" But the professed philanthropists, it is strange and horrible to say, are an altogether odious set of people, whom one would shun as the worst of bores and canters. "
Maffia and Omertà - Page 896
by Richard Bagot - 1901 - 13 pages
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Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society

Massachusetts Historical Society - 1899 - 574 pages
...one would have approved more heartily than he this remark of Emerson: "The professed philanthropists are an altogether odious set of people, whom one would shun as the worst of bores and canters." His interest in this Society the published Proceedings will in some measure show,...
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Works, Volume 14

Ralph Waldo Emerson - 1887 - 456 pages
...I like these; they never incommode us by exciting grief, pity, or perturbation of any sort. But tbe professed philanthropists, it is strange and horrible...set of people, whom one would shun as the worst of bores and canters. I have the same objection to dogmatism in Reform as to dogmatism in Conservatism....
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A Memoir of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume 2

James Elliot Cabot - 1887 - 446 pages
...like these ; they never incommode us by exciting grief, pity, or perturbation of any sort. But the professed philanthropists, it is strange and horrible...altogether odious set of people, whom one would shun at the worst of bores and canters. I have the same objection to dogmatism in Reform as to dogmatism...
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History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850: 1850-1854

James Ford Rhodes - 1892 - 526 pages
...them right. Emerson, with the abolitionists in his mind, said that " the professed philanthropists are an altogether odious set of people, whom one would shun as the worst of bores and canters." ' But his respect for Garrison grew with his knowledge, and he wittily said of...
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Studies of a Biographer, Volume 4

Leslie Stephen - 1902 - 326 pages
...truth, till even spontaneous wickedness seems to be better than compulsory goodness. Each man, he says, should 'plant himself indomitably upon his instincts.'...must be a product of, not dependent upon, a bond. The ' union is only perfect when all the unities are isolated.' When each man sees the truth for himself,...
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Emerson: And Other Essays

John Jay Chapman - 1898 - 270 pages
...I like these; they never incommode us by exciting grief, pity, or perturbation of any sort. But the professed philanthropists, it is strange and horrible...set of people, whom one would shun as the worst of bores and canters. But my conscience, my unhappy conscience respects that hapless class who see the...
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Emerson: And Other Essays

John Jay Chapman - 1898 - 264 pages
...I like these; they never incommode us by exciting grief, pity, or perturbation of any sort. But the professed philanthropists, it is strange and horrible...an altogether odious set of people, whom one would S 1 shun as the worst of bores and canters. But my conscience, my unhappy conscience respects that...
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Emerson: And Other Essays

John Jay Chapman - 1898 - 276 pages
...I like these; they never incommode us by exciting grief, pity, or perturbation of any sort. But the professed philanthropists, it is strange and horrible...an altogether odious set of people, whom one would Si shun as the worst of bores and canters. But my conscience, my unhappy conscience respects that hapless...
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The Living Age, Volume 229

1901 - 884 pages
...adviser" warned him against trusting his instincts against venerable traditions. Your impulses, be said, may be from below, not from above. Well, he...must be a product of, not dependent upon, a bond. The "union is only perfect when all the unities are isolated." When each man sees the truth for himself,...
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John Greenleaf Whittier

George Rice Carpenter - 1903 - 344 pages
...I like these; they never incommode us by exciting grief, pity, or perturbation of any sort. But the professed philanthropists, it is strange and horrible...set of people, whom one would shun as the worst of bores and canters. " l Like a philosopher, too, he saw below the surface of the agitation, and, realizing...
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