
“Fool that I was to trust a Frenchman!”
"Rattle of Bones" (1929)
Source: The Task (1785), Book IV, The Winter Evening, Line 765.
“Fool that I was to trust a Frenchman!”
"Rattle of Bones" (1929)
“We all dream of being the darling of everybody's darling.”
The Complete Neurotic's Notebook (1981), Unclassified
To the Daisy.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
Narrator, p. 184
Sharpe (Novel Series), Sharpe's Sword (1983)
Part I, CH 2: Chamberlain, p. 29
The Killer Angels (1974)
Context: But he was fighting for the dignity of man and in that way he was fighting for himself. If men were equal in America, all these former Poles and English and Czechs and lacks, then they were equal everywhere, and there was really no such thing as a foreigner; there were only free men and slaves. And so it was not even patriotism but a new faith. The Frenchman may fight for France, but the American fights for mankind, for freedom; for the people, not the land.