those who escape attain the age of manhood without possessing its vigour, and waste away during the rest of their lives.
 Montesquieu, Persian Letters (1721). copy citation

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Author Montesquieu
Source Persian Letters
Topic age escape
Date 1721
Language English
Reference
Note Translated by John Davidson
Weblink https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Persian_Letters

Context

“They perish almost as rapidly as they are born: they never thrive: feeble and impotent, they die retail in a thousand ways, or are carried off wholesale by those frequent epidemics which poverty and bad diet always produce: those who escape attain the age of manhood without possessing its vigour, and waste away during the rest of their lives. Men are like plants which never flourish if they are not well cultivated: among poor people, the race declines and sometimes even degenerates. France supplies a great proof of all this. During the late wars, the dread which all the youths had of being enrolled in the militia forced them to marry, and that at too tender an age and in the bosom of poverty.” source