“An army's bravest men are its cowards. The death which they would not meet at the hands of the enemy they will meet at the hands of their officers, with never a flinching.”
Source: What I Saw At Shiloh (1881), V
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Ambrose Bierce204
American editorialist, journalist, short story writer, fabu… 1842–1914Related quotes
Letitia Elizabeth Landon (1802–1838) English poet and novelist
The Golden Violet - The Falcon
The Golden Violet (1827)
Josephine Bakhita (1868–1947) Italian saint and former slave
Quoted in "St. Josephine Bakhita, Virgin", Vatican News https://www.vaticannews.va/en/saints/02/08/st--josephine-bakhita--virgin.html.
“There is work in plenty for all hands- officers and men.”
Ernest King (1878–1956) United States Navy admiral, Chief of Naval Operations
Excerpt from Atlantic Fleet Confidential Memorandum 2CM-41, sent on 24 March 1941. As quoted in History of United States Naval Operations in World War II, Volume One: The Battle of the Atlantic, September 1939-May 1943 (1948) by Samuel Eliot Morison, p. 52
Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862) 1817-1862 American poet, essayist, naturalist, and abolitionist
A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext03/7cncd10.txt (1849), Friday
J. G. Ballard (1930–2009) British writer
As quoted in ‘Interview with J. G. Ballard’, Munich Round Up, 100 (1968), with translation by Dan O’Hara http://www.ballardian.com/munich-round-up-interview-with-jg-ballard <br class="br">Context: I define Inner Space as an imaginary realm in which on the one hand the outer world of reality, and on the other the inner world of the mind meet and merge. Now, in the landscapes of the surrealist painters, for example, one sees the regions of Inner Space; and increasingly I believe that we will encounter in film and literature scenes which are neither solely realistic nor fantastic. In a sense, it will be a movement in the interzone between both spheres.
Bernard Cornwell (1944) British writer
Colonel Jean Gudin, p. 353
Sharpe (Novel Series), Sharpe's Tiger (1997)
“[T]here was never an army that did not accuse its enemies of barbarity.”
John Buchan book Witch Wood
Source: Witch Wood (1927), Ch. XIII "White Magic"