As quoted in Beverley Male (1982) Revolutionary Afghanistan: A Reappraisal, page 167
“Imagine that leader of all the enemy, in that great plain of Babylon, sitting on a sort of throne of smoking flame, a horrible and terrifying sight. Watch him calling together countless devils, to despatch them into different cities till the whole world is covered, forgetting no province or locality, no class or single individual.”
No. 140-141.
Spiritual Exercises (1548)
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Ignatius of Loyola 9
Catholic Saint, founder of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuit… 1491–1556Related quotes
No. 138.
Spiritual Exercises (1548)
Source: Stamping Butterflies (2004), Chapter 39 (pp. 246-247)
Speech delivered at Barisal on 14th October 1917. Source: Collected Works of Deshbandhu.
1917
Unmasking the False Religion of Evolution (1996)
"The Hue and Cry," The Writing on the Wall (1970)
Context: Calling someone a monster does not make him more guilty; it makes him less so by classing him with beasts and devils (“a person of inhuman and horrible cruelty or wickedness,” OED, Sense 4). Such an unnatural being is more horrible to contemplate than an Eichmann — that is, aesthetically worse — but morally an Ilse Koch was surely less culpable than Eichmann since she seems to have had no trace of human feeling and therefore was impassable to conscience.
Address to the Legislative Body (December 1813) https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Napoleon%27s_Addresses/Part_V#Address_to_the_Legislative_Body,_December,_1813.; he here echoes the remark attributed to Louis XIV L'état c'est moi ( "The State is I" or more commonly: "I am the State.")
“Superstition sets the whole world in flames; philosophy quenches them.”
La superstition met le monde entier en flammes; la philosophie les éteint.
Dictionnaire philosophique http://www17.us.archive.org/stream/dictionnairephil08volt/dictionnairephil08volt_djvu.txt (1822), "Superstition"
Citas