Thomas Day quotes:

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  • The trifle now inscribed with your name. was occasioned by a particular fact; but to the disgrace of human nature, the subject is sufficiently general to interest every heart not totally impenetrable.

  • I wil not compare the education of an ancient Spartan with that of a British nobleman.

  • But let us not too hastily triumph in the shame of Sparta, lest we aggravate our own condemnation.

  • When a benevolent mind contemplates the republic of Lycurgus, its admiration is mixed with a degree of horror.

  • In the western part of England lived a gentleman of large fortune, whose name was Merton.

  • But let her remember, that it is in Britain alone, that laws are equally favourable to liberty and humanity; that it is in Britain the sacred rights of nature have received their most awful ratification.

  • We have no right to luxuries while the poor want bread.

  • But what has America to boast? What are the graces or the virtues which distinguish its inhabitants? What are their triumphs in war, or their inventions in peace?

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