Henry Mayhew Quotes (18 Quotes)


    Facts, according to my ideas, are merely the elements of truths, and not the truths themselves; of all matters there are none so utterly useless by themselves as your mere matters of fact.

    We may either proceed from principles to facts, or recede from facts to principles.

    I was conducted in the evening to a tavern where several of the weavers who advocate the principles of the People's Charter were in the habit of assembling.

    The deductive method is the mode of using knowledge, and the inductive method the mode of acquiring it.

    The attainment of the truth, then, will be my primary aim but by the truth. I wish it to be understood, I mean something more than the bare facts.


    The city of London, within the walls, occupies a space of only 370 acres, and is but the hundred and fortieth part of the extent covered by the whole metropolis.

    We then journeyed on to London Street, down which the tidal ditch continues its course.

    In No. 1 of this street the cholera first appeared seventeen years ago, and spread up it with fearful virulence; but this year it appeared at the opposite end, and ran down it with like severity.


    It is easy enough to be moral after a good dinner beside a snug coal fire, and with our hearts well warmed with fine old port.

    There is a tone of morality throughout the rural districts of England, which is unhappily wanting in the large towns and the centres of particular manufactures.

    The essential quality of an animal is that it seeks its own living, whereas a vegetable has its living brought to it.

    But the branches of industry are so multifarious, the divisions of labour so minutes and manifold, that it seems at first almost impossible to reduce them to any system.

    I heard on all hands that the costers never steal from one another, and never wink at any one stealing from a neighbouring stall.

    A fact must be assimilated with, or discriminated fromm, some other fact or facts, in order to be raised to the dignity of a truth, and made to convey the least knowledge to the mind.

    Ballet-girls have a bad reputation, which is in most cases well deserved.

    The costermongers' boys will, I am informed, cheat their employers, but they do not steal from them.

    Park women, properly so called, are those degraded creatures, utterly lost to all sense of shame, who wander about the paths most frequented after nightfall in the Parks, and consent to any species of humiliation for the sake of acquiring a few shillings.


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