
As quoted in Plain Mr. Jinnah : Selections from Quaid-e-Azam's Correspondence (1976)
1970s, First Vice-Presidential address (1973)
As quoted in Plain Mr. Jinnah : Selections from Quaid-e-Azam's Correspondence (1976)
Diary (20 November 1872)
Diary and Letters of Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1922 - 1926)
Context: I have a talent for silence and brevity. I can keep silent when it seems best to do so, and when I speak I can, and do usually, quit when I am done. This talent, or these two talents, I have cultivated. Silence and concise, brief speaking have got me some laurels, and, I suspect, lost me some. No odds. Do what is natural to you, and you are sure to get all the recognition you are entitled to.
1990s, An Exchange With a Civil War Historian (June 1995)
Writing for the court, Gray v. Sanders, 372 U.S. 368, 381 (1963)
Judicial opinions
1990s, An Exchange With a Civil War Historian (June 1995)
Brooks D. Simpson. "What Lincoln Said at Charleston: In Context, Part Two" https://cwcrossroads.wordpress.com/2011/02/11/what-lincoln-said-at-charleston-in-context-part-two/ (11 February 2011), Crossroads, WordPress
2010s
2000s, Is Diversity Good? (2003)
Context: To allow slavery to be introduced into free territories, where it had not hitherto existed, was, Abraham Lincoln held, a very bad thing. His opponent, Stephen A. Douglas, held that it was a sacred right, belonging to the people of each territory, to decide for themselves whether or not to have slavery among their domestic institutions. According to Douglas, Lincoln wanted to destroy the diversity upon which the union had subsisted, by insisting that all the states ought to be free. But for Douglas himself, the principle of 'popular sovereignty' did not admit of exceptions. There was to be no diversity, no deviation from the right of the people to decide. For Lincoln the wrongness of slavery meant that no one, and no people, had the right to decide in its favor. For Lincoln, the principle of human equality, "that all men are created equal", did not admit exceptions.
2000s, The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate (2002), The Lincoln-Douglas Debates
“Thank you. How-DY! Whoops, wrong opera house. How do you like the play, Mr. Lincoln? Duck!”
A Night at the Met (1986)
1990s, Defending the Cause of Human Freedom (1994)