| Edward M. Curtis, John J. Brugaletta - 244 str.
...rule of thumb in the eighteenth century for those wondering when to adopt a new fashion or trend: "Be not the first by whom the new is tried, Nor yet the last to lay the old aside." Although this advice does not recognize the possibility that the old might be superior... | |
| William Meninger - 2004 - 164 str.
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| K. D. Rainsford - 2005 - 454 str.
...after newer ones (eg, coxibs) arrived. The dictum of Alexander Pope (Essay on Criticism, 1711) "Be not the first by whom the new is tried nor yet the last to lay the old aside" may not fully describe the life cycle of NSAIDs. Some very successful NSAIDs, reaching the... | |
| James McKarns - 2005 - 173 str.
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| William David Shaw, Professor W David Shaw - 2005 - 316 str.
...enough to assimilate new developments in the field. Alexander Pope's warning is always timely: 'Be not the first by whom the new is tried / Nor yet the last to lay the old aside' (An Essay on Criticism, 2:335-6). Taking part in Oakeshott's 'conversation of mankind' is... | |
| 许渊冲 - 2005 - 400 str.
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| Davis W. Houck, David E. Dixon - 2006 - 1013 str.
...surpassed our understanding. Human beings change slowly. Some of us still recite the age old adage: "Be not the first by whom the new is tried Nor yet the last to lay the old aside." But in the words of a newer philosophy, "Time makes ancient good uncouth." We must be upward... | |
| Edmund Shaftesbury - 2006 - 520 str.
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