Lord Chesterfield's Letters Quotes
Lord Chesterfield's Letters
by
Philip Dormer Stanhope297 ratings, 4.12 average rating, 32 reviews
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Lord Chesterfield's Letters Quotes
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“I come now to another part of your letter, which is the orthography, if I may call bad spelling orthography. You spell induce, enduce; and grandeur, you spell grandure; two faults, of which few of my house-maids would have been guilty. I must tell you, that orthography, in the true sense of the word, is so absolutely necessary for a man of letters, or a gentleman, that one false spelling may fix a ridicule upon him for the rest of his life; and I know a man of quality, who never recovered the ridicule of having spelled wholesome without the w.”
― Lord Chesterfield's Letters
― Lord Chesterfield's Letters
“I give my vote for Mr. Johnson to fill that great and arduous post. And I hereby declare that I make a total surrender of all my rights and privileges in the English language, as a freeborn British subject, to the said Mr. Johnson, during the term of his dictatorship. Nay more; I will not only obey him, like an old Roman, as my dictator, but, like a modern Roman, I will implicitly believe in him as my pope, and hold him to be infallible while in the chair; but no longer.”
― Lord Chesterfield's Letters
― Lord Chesterfield's Letters
“All malt liquors fatten, or at least bloat; and I hope you do not deal much in them.”
― Lord Chesterfield's Letters
― Lord Chesterfield's Letters
