id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 18300 L'Estrange, A. G. K. (Alfred Guy Kingan) History of English Humour, Vol. 1 With an Introduction upon Ancient Humour .txt text/plain 85018 5650 79 Humour is the offspring of man--it comes forth like Minerva fully armed writing, and thus humour comes to be often regarded as a kind of that his friends laughed on hearing of some good fortune having come to man being above the humour of the day, (which, no doubt, consisted records a saying of his grandfather that "the men of our time are like The humour which has come to us from classic times, brings the life of The man who showed at this time the greatest judgment in humour and tell his wife all he knows." Speaking of children, he says that a man we with a man who imitates him, although Cicero says that humour for the first time, hear of "wits"--men of good birth and position, who was celebrated at that day as a man of humour, though at present we see ./cache/18300.txt ./txt/18300.txt