Vulgar words in The World's Greatest Books — Volume 14 — Philosophy and Economics (Page 1)

This book at a glance

ass x 1
bastard x 1
            

Page 1

~   ~   ~   Sentence 986   ~   ~   ~

If a man is not to lie on the hard ground, to endure the heat of the scorching sun, to feed hungrily on a horse or an ass, to see himself mangled and cut in pieces, to have a bullet plucked out of his bones, to suffer incisions, his flesh to be stitched up, cauterised, and searched--all incident to a martial man--how shall we purchase the advantage and pre-eminence we so greedily seek over the vulgar sort?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,290   ~   ~   ~

The professional teachers of philosophy live not by leading popular opinion, but by pandering to it; a bastard brood trick themselves out as philosophers, while the true philosopher withdraws himself from so gross a world.

Page 1