It consigns the individual to his private mind, and cannot provide for the validity of knowledge enough even to maintain itself.
"The Approach to Philosophy"
Ralph Barton Perry
And as that old Earl, who in the time of Charles the First was the reigning wit of the court, in the time of Charles the Second was considered too dull even for a butt, so every age has its own literary stamp and coinage, and consigns the old circulation to its shelves and cabinets as neglected curiosities.
"Ernest Maltravers, Complete"
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
She died in less than two years after the flight of Frederic, a victim to a disorder that has no place in the catalogue of nosologists, and is not recognised as a malady; though it is as incurable and consigns almost as many victims to an untimely grave as consumption, with which it is very frequently confounded-I mean a broken heart.
"An Old Sailor's Yarns"
Nathaniel Ames