Among the grievances of modern days, much complained of, but with little hope of redress, is the matter of receiving and paying visits, the number of… - George Horne

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Among the grievances of modern days, much complained of, but with little hope of redress, is the matter of receiving and paying visits, the number of which, it is generally agreed, “has been increasing, is increased, and ought to be diminished.”… Nor is this complaint by any means peculiar to the times in which we have the honour to live. Cowley was out of all patience on the subject above a hundred years ago. “If we engage,” says he, “in a large acquaintance, and various familiarities, we set open our gates to the invaders of most of our time; we expose our life to a ‘quotidian ague of frigid impertinencies,’ which would make a wise man tremble to think of.”

English
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About George Horne

George Horne D.D. (1 November 1730 – 27 January 1792) was an English churchman, writer, and university administrator.

Also Known As

Alternative Names: Rt. Rev. George Horne
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Young trees in a thick forest are found to incline themselves towards that part through which the light penetrates, as plants are observed to do in I darkened chamber towards a stream of light let in through an orifice, and as the ears of corn do towards the south.

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