The New Criterion is probably more consistently worth reading than any other magazine in English.
FeaturesMarch 1996 Adam Smith, the sensible philosopher Of all the great teachers of mankind, can any have lived a duller life than Adam Smith? Between his birth in 1723 and his death in 1790, he seems to have done nothing but read, lecture, travel once to Europe as tutor to a young duke, work as a customs commissioner, and (of course) write. Nor did he leave behind a record of a particularly interesting personality. His books occasionally glint with wry wit, but Smith himself seems to have been a singularly unamusing man. As a young schoolteacher in Smiths home village of Kirkcaldy, Thomas Carlylenot exactly a barrel of laughs himselfcomplained of a dinner given in honor of the birthday of the wife of Smiths aristocratic pupil: The Fare was Sumptuous, but the Company was formal and Dull. Adam Smith their only Familiar at Table, was but ill qualifid to promote the Jollity of a Birthday Carlyles assessment was echoed even b ... This article is available to subscribers and for individual purchaseSubscribe to TNC (Print and Online editions) Subscribe to TNC (Online only) This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 14 March 1996, on page 14 Copyright © 2008 The New Criterion | www.newcriterion.com http://www.newcriterion.com/articles.cfm/adamsmithsensible-frum-3613
rate this article for your user profile
E-mail to friend
|
Subscriber login
Subscribe today
Print & Online packages Available
Already a print subscriber? click for online access On David Lebedoff's The Same Man: George Orwell and Evelyn Waugh in Love and War. The busybody: the Duc de Saint-Simon remembers On the memoirs of Louis de Rouvroy, Duc de Saint-Simon, newly translated by Lucy Norton. by Brian C. Anderson, Adam D. Thierer On the lurking threat to the freedom of the airwaves. New from The New Criterion: ‘Free speech in
EventsOctober 22 2008 GALA EVENT: The New Criterion Benefit Art Auction January 25 2009 TRAVEL EVENT: The New Criterion Cruise Webcasts
The Milt Rosenberg Show: Free Speech in an age of Jihad
Roger Kimball on liberalism's response to Islam
Encounter Books at 10, an interview with Roger Simon |
add a comment
you must be a new criterion subscriber to post a comment. {subscribe now}