Late Nineteenth Century

Famous quotes containing the words nineteenth century, late, nineteenth and/or century:

    Detachment is the prerogative of an elite; and as the dandy is the nineteenth century’s surrogate for the aristocrat in matters of culture, so Camp is the modern dandyism. Camp is the answer to the problem: how to be a dandy in the age of mass culture.
    Susan Sontag (b. 1933)

    I have seen in this revolution a circular motion of the sovereign power through two usurpers, father and son, to the late King to this his son. For ... it moved from King Charles I to the Long Parliament; from thence to the Rump; from the Rump to Oliver Cromwell; and then back again from Richard Cromwell to the Rump; then to the Long Parliament; and thence to King Charles, where long may it remain.
    Thomas Hobbes (1579–1688)

    Posterity—the forlorn child of nineteenth century optimism—grows ever harder to conceive.
    Mason Cooley (b. 1927)

    Speak not of my debts unless you mean to pay them.
    —17th century English proverb, collected in George Herbert, Outlandish Proverbs (1640)