A plate is distasteful to a cat, a newspaper still worse; they like to eat sticky pieces of meat sitting on a cushioned chair or a nice Persian rug.
A plate is distasteful to a cat, a newspaper still worse; they like to eat sticky pieces of meat sitting on a cushioned chair or a nice Persian rug. - Margaret Benson
- Margaret Benson
Dogs have owners, cats have staff. - Margaret Benson
Dogs have owners, cats have staff.
The spiritual is not the emotional; we may receive spiritual things emotionally, but to receive them rationally we must receive them with the mind an… - Margaret Benson
The spiritual is not the emotional; we may receive spiritual things emotionally, but to receive them rationally we must receive them with the mind an…
... all progress in knowledge takes place through the correction of that which has been received on authority ... without the huge body of traditiona… - Margaret Benson
... all progress in knowledge takes place through the correction of that which has been received on authority ... without the huge body of traditiona…
apparent contradiction ... is often the opportunity for new discovery in science; and it even may be said that the absence of apparent contradiction … - Margaret Benson
apparent contradiction ... is often the opportunity for new discovery in science; and it even may be said that the absence of apparent contradiction …
The cat is, above all things, a dramatist. - Margaret Benson
The cat is, above all things, a dramatist.
But none of us wants to be average. That we are so is a melancholy fact borne in upon us in middle life, and we do not always relish it. - Margaret Benson
But none of us wants to be average. That we are so is a melancholy fact borne in upon us in middle life, and we do not always relish it.
All progress in knowledge takes place through the correction of that which has been received on authority. - Margaret Benson
All progress in knowledge takes place through the correction of that which has been received on authority.
He lives in the halflights in secret places, free and alone, this mysterious little great being whom his mistress calls, My cat. - Margaret Benson
He lives in the halflights in secret places, free and alone, this mysterious little great being whom his mistress calls, My cat.
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