William Hazlitt Quote

They [universities] may be said to resemble antiquated coquettes of the last age, who think everything ridiculous and intolerable but what was in fashion when they were young, and yet are standing proofs of the progress of taste and the vanity of human pretensions. Our universities are, in a great measure, become cisterns to hold, not conduits to disperse knowledge. … they can only be of service as a check-weight on the too hasty and rapid career of innovation. … The unavoidable aim of all corporate bodies of learning is not to grow wise, or teach others wisdom, but to prevent any one else from being or seeming wiser than themselves.


"On Corporate Bodies". - Table Talk: Essays On Men And Manners (1821-1822)


They [universities] may be said to resemble antiquated coquettes of the last age, who think everything ridiculous and intolerable but what was in...

They [universities] may be said to resemble antiquated coquettes of the last age, who think everything ridiculous and intolerable but what was in...

They [universities] may be said to resemble antiquated coquettes of the last age, who think everything ridiculous and intolerable but what was in...

They [universities] may be said to resemble antiquated coquettes of the last age, who think everything ridiculous and intolerable but what was in...