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thomas fuller

271quotes
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The seventeenth century in England was a period of intellectual ferment, when writers and historians labored to make sense of a nation caught between tradition and transformation. It was within this charged atmosphere that Thomas Fuller pursued his work as a historian and writer.

Born in Northamptonshire in 1608, Fuller was educated at Queens' College and Sidney Sussex College, grounding himself in the scholarly life that would define his career. He worked as both a historian and a writer, occupying a place in an era that placed high value on learning, documentation, and the written examination of the past. His dual vocation — recording history while practicing the craft of writing — situated him among those who treated the English past as worthy of sustained, careful attention.

Fuller died in London in 1661, having spent his life between the scholarly formation he received at two colleges and the historical and literary work that followed. The facts of his education and his occupations as historian and writer remain the clearest markers of a career lived in full engagement with the intellectual currents of his time. That his life ended in London, far from the Northamptonshire of his birth, suggests a trajectory shaped by the demands of a writing and scholarly life conducted at the center of English affairs.

Quotes by thomas fuller

thomas fuller's insights on:

He does not believe, that does not live according to his Belief.
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He does not believe, that does not live according to his Belief.
A good edge is good for nothing, if it has nothing to cut.
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A good edge is good for nothing, if it has nothing to cut.
That which was bitter to endure may be sweet to remember.
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That which was bitter to endure may be sweet to remember.
Contentment consists not in adding more fuel, but in taking away some fire.
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Contentment consists not in adding more fuel, but in taking away some fire.
He is a good time-server that finds out the fittest opportunity of every action.
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He is a good time-server that finds out the fittest opportunity of every action.
He spits out secrets like hot custard.
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He spits out secrets like hot custard.
Fame sometimes hath created something of nothing.
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Fame sometimes hath created something of nothing.
Trust not in him that seems a saint.
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Trust not in him that seems a saint.
Curiosity is a kernel of the forbidden fruit which still sticketh in the throat of a natural man, sometimes to the clanger of his choking.
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Curiosity is a kernel of the forbidden fruit which still sticketh in the throat of a natural man, sometimes to the clanger of his choking.
Let him who expects one class of society to prosper in the highest degree, while the other is in distress, try whether one side of the face can smile while the other is pinched.
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Let him who expects one class of society to prosper in the highest degree, while the other is in distress, try whether one side of the face can smile while the other is pinched.
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