| James Paterson - 1880 - 612 pages
...universal benefit ; they must not be niggards to the world or hoard np for themselves the common stock. Glory is the reward of science, and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views. I speuk not of the scribblers for bread, who tease the press with their wretched productions ; fourteen... | |
| Edward Marston - 1887 - 98 pages
...world, or hoard up for themselves the common stock. . . . Knowledge to be enjoyed must be communicated. Glory is the reward of science, and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views. I speak not of the scribblers for bread, who tease the press with their wretched productions : fourteen... | |
| Edward Marston - 1887 - 106 pages
...world, or hoard up for themselves the common stock. . . . Knowledge to be enjoyed must be communicated. Glory is the reward of science, and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views. I speak not of the scribblers for bread, who tease the press with their wretched productions : fourteen... | |
| Illinois State Bar Association - 1887 - 414 pages
...said : . "Knowledge line no value or use to the solitary owner; tobe enjoyed, it must be communicated. Glory is the reward of science, and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views. It was not for gain that Bacon, Newton, Milton and Locke instructed and enlightened the world. It would... | |
| David Hume - 1888 - 486 pages
...reckoned at £13,000 a year1, took a very lofty view of the position of authors. ' Glory (he said) is the reward of science, and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views. I speak not of the scribblers for bread, who teaze the press with their wretched productions ; fourteen... | |
| American Pharmaceutical Association - 1889 - 886 pages
...conscience, neither can it purchase the regard of our fellow men in the higher sense. Lord Camden once said, "Glory is the reward of science, and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views. * * * It was not for gain that Bacon, Milton, Newton, and Locke instructed and delighted the world.... | |
| John Forster - 1871 - 544 pages
...means, nobody contributed who wns not willing ; and though a good book might be run down, and a * " Glory is the reward of science ; and those who deserve it scorn all mennrr •" views. I speak not of the scribblers for bread, who tease the world with their " wretched... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1892 - 592 pages
...owner : to be enjoyed it must be communicated. " Scire tuum nihil est, nisi te scire hoc sciat alter." Glory is the reward of science, and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views : I speak not of the scribblers for bread, who tease the press with their wretched productions ; fourteen... | |
| Oliver Goldsmith - 1900 - 334 pages
...that he held it to be wise in every state to encourage men of letters, without precise regard to 1 " Glory is the reward of science ; and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views. I speak not of the scribblers for bread, who tease the world with their wretched productions ; fourteen... | |
| William Blackstone - 1902 - 540 pages
...which lord Camden splendidly describes in the conclusion of his argument against literary property. "Glory is the reward of science, and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views. I speak not of the scribblers for bread, who tease the press with their wretched productions. Fourteen... | |
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