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Seventeenth Century Quotes by Alice Morse Earle
- We should have scant notion of the gardens of these New England colonists in the seventeenth century were it not for a cheerful traveller named…
- In the seventeenth century, the science of medicine had not wholly cut asunder from astrology and necromancy; and the trusting Christian still believed in some…
- The seventeenth-century baby slept, as his nineteenth-century descendant does, in a cradle. Nothing could be prettier than the old cradles that have survived successive years…
- The men in those old days of the seventeenth century, when in constant dread of attacks by Indians, always rose when the services were ended…
More Seventeenth Century Quotes
- What a lesson, indeed, is all history and all life to the folly and fruitlessness of pride! The Egyptian kings had their… — Edwin Percy Whipple
- How strange it would be if the final theory were to be discovered in our lifetimes! The discovery of the final laws… — Steven Weinberg
- Civilization is an active deposit which is formed by the combustion of the present with the past. Neither in countries without a… — Cyril Connolly
- The Arabs understandably did everything they could to protect their monopoly. Coffee beans were treated before being shipped to ensure they were… — Tom Standage
- Starting in the seventeenth century, the general theory of extreme values - maxima and minima - has become one of the systematic… — Richard Courant
- And it’d be very hard to make up something as strange as the Dutch tulipmania in the seventeenth century, for example. Or… — Unknown Author
- The seventeenth century is everywhere a time in which the state's power over everything individual increases, whether that power be in absolutist… — Jacob Burckhardt
- A weekday edition of The New York Times contains more information than the average person was likely to come across in a… — Richard Saul Wurman
- It is astonishing to realize that until Galileo performed his experiments on the acceleration of gravity in the early seventeenth century, nobody… — Neil deGrasse Tyson
- The seventeenth century witnessed the birth of modern science as we know it today. This science was something new, based on a… — I. Bernard Cohen
- The poetry from the eighteenth century was prose; the prose from the seventeenth century was poetry. — David Hare
- Scottish operative lodges began in the seventeenth century to admit non-operative members as accepted or gentleman masons and that by the early… — John Hamill