Source: Daily life of the Etruscans (1964), p. 9
“Italy is, after France and perhaps in the same degree, the land in which love of country has the deepest roots in the hearts of its inhabitants. The fact is that perhaps nowhere else has nature been so prodigal with its enchantments and seductions. Therefore, although Italy has been, since the fall of the Caesars, the object of European covetousness, the eternal battlefield of powerful neighbors, and the theatre of the fiercest and most prolonged civil wars, her children have always refused to leave her. Save for some commercial colonies hastily thrown upon the shores of Asia by Genoa and Venice, history has not, in fact, recorded in Italy any important outward movement of population.”
Alfred Legoyt (1861) cited in: [Richard N. Juliani, Building Little Italy, http://books.google.com/books?id=IbB7AnIJ8fsC&pg=PA184, June 2005, Penn State Press, 978-0-271-02864-4, 184–]
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Alfred Legoyt 1
statistician and author 1812–1869Related quotes

Foreword in "Freemasonry: Ideology, Organization, and Policy," first published in 1944.

Source: The Strategic Stakes in Mattei's Flight, p. 23

The Tragic Sense of Life (1913), X : Religion, the Mythology of the Beyond and the Apocatastasis

GoodReads https://www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/5712889.Sitting_Bull
Attributed quotes

“Much of good science — and perhaps all of great science — has its roots in fantasy.”
Source: Letters to a Young Scientist (2013), chapter 5, "The Creative Process", page 69.

Speech to the Constitutional Club (20 November 1923), quoted in The Times (21 November 1923), p. 17