The Annotated The Tales of John Oliver Hobbes/A Study in Temptations/Epigraph
Appearance
"In order to judge whether what is said or done by any
character be well or ill, we are not to consider that speech
or action alone, whether in itself it be good or bad, but
also by whom it is spoken or done, to whom, at what
time, in what manner, or for what end. . . .
"To opinion, or what is commonly said to be, may be referred even such things as are improbable and absurd; and it may also be said that events of that kind are, sometimes, not really improbable; since, 'it is probable that many things should happen contrary to probability.'"—Aristot., Poet.