It is not so much the being exempt from faults as the having overcome them that is an advantage to us; it being with the follies of the mind as with weeds of a field, which if destroyed and consumed upon the place where they grow, enrich and improve it more than if none had ever sprung there.


The Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D. Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin (ed. 1755)


It is not so much the being exempt from faults as the having overcome them that is an advantage to us; it being with the follies of the mind as with...

It is not so much the being exempt from faults as the having overcome them that is an advantage to us; it being with the follies of the mind as with...

It is not so much the being exempt from faults as the having overcome them that is an advantage to us; it being with the follies of the mind as with...

It is not so much the being exempt from faults as the having overcome them that is an advantage to us; it being with the follies of the mind as with...