Samuel Johnson Quote

The hostility perpetually exercised between one man and another, is caused by the desire of many for that which only few can possess. Every man would be rich, powerful, and famous; yet fame, power, and riches, are only the names of relative conditions, which imply the obscurity, dependence, and poverty of greater numbers.


The Rambler: In Four Volumes (ed. 1756)


The hostility perpetually exercised between one man and another, is caused by the desire of many for that which only few can possess. Every man would ...

The hostility perpetually exercised between one man and another, is caused by the desire of many for that which only few can possess. Every man would ...

The hostility perpetually exercised between one man and another, is caused by the desire of many for that which only few can possess. Every man would ...

The hostility perpetually exercised between one man and another, is caused by the desire of many for that which only few can possess. Every man would ...