
WEIGHT: 60 kg
Bust: 3
1 HOUR:100$
NIGHT: +70$
Services: Striptease, Spanking, Face Sitting, Facial, Massage Thai
By using our site, you agree to our collection of information through the use of cookies. To learn more, view our Privacy Policy. To browse Academia. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc.
As for Smith, at the end of his life, he insisted to his faithful friends that all his papers be burned. Thus only letters written by him and addressed to him remain.
The majority of them date from the latter part of his life, after the publication of the Wealth of Nations, and only a few date from the period of the journey.
One may wonder why this destruction took place-was he afraid that the revelation of certain letters might have been embarrassing? In any case, we find this aversion to "lives" in the letter addressed to David Hume's editor, who was preparing to publish his friend's correspondence.
Smith deplored the fact that unscrupulous booksellers "would immediately set about rummaging through the cabinets of all those who had ever received a scrap of paper from him. Many things would be published not fit to see the light, to the great mortification of all those who wish his memory well" Letter of December 2, This destruction of Smith's papers and the absence of a travel diary from his student explain why Smith's biographies do not abound with information about his private life, such as can be found in the first, written in shortly after his death by Dugald Stewart, who had the advantage of having been close to both Smith and witnesses to his life Smith-Stewart In the twentieth century, the second centenary of the Wealth of Nations saw the launch of a new edition of the Complete Works and multiple studies of Smith's writings.