
“Marriage is god's way to ensure there are few great men”
page 55
Dark Rooms (2002)
Source: Growing Up Absurd (1956), p. 153.
“Marriage is god's way to ensure there are few great men”
page 55
Dark Rooms (2002)
“Great things have been effected by a few men well conducted.”
Letter to Virginia Governor Patrick Henry (1779-02-03), from William Hayden English, Conquest of the Country Northwest of the River Ohio, 1778–1783, and Life of Gen. George Rogers Clark (Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill, 1896) vol. 1, pp. 262-263
Context: I know the case is desperate, but, sire, we must either quit the country or attack Mr. Hamilton. No time is to be lost. Was I sure of a re-enforcement I should not attempt it. Who knows what fortune will do for us? Great things have been effected by a few men well conducted. Perhaps we may be fortunate. We have this consolation that our case is just, and that our country will be grateful and not condemn our conduct, in case we fall through; if so, this country as well as Kentucky, I believe, is lost.
Charles Dickens: The Pickwick Papers (p. 102)
More Classics Revisited (1989)
“Men are we, and must grieve when even the Shade
Of that which once was great, is passed away.”
On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic, l. 13 (1807).
Page 168
Other writings, The Nature of the Judicial Process (1921)
“How could this great land of plenty produce too few people in the last 30 years?”
Miller asked in March 2007 during a fund-raiser in Macon, Georgia, for Sav-A-Life Care Center, a crisis pregnancy center. Sav A Life Care Center > Home http://www.salmacon.com/
Private notes, quoted in Herbert Butterfield, ‘Acton: His Training, Methods and Intellectual System’, in A. O. Sarkissian (ed.), Studies in Diplomatic History and Historiography in honour of G. P. Gooch, C.H. (1961), p. 194
Undated
Un Art de Vivre (The Art of Living) (1939), The Art of Friendship