Rufus Choate idézet

Rufus Choate az Amerikai Egyesült Államok szenátora .

✵ 1. október 1799 – 13. július 1859
Rufus Choate fénykép
Rufus Choate: 11   idézetek 0   Kedvelés

Rufus Choate: Idézetek angolul

“All that happens in the world of Nature or Man, — every war; every peace; every hour of prosperity; every hour of adversity; every election; every death; every life; every success and every failure, — all change, — all permanence, — the perished leaf; the unutterable glory of stars, — all things speak truth to the thoughtful spirit.”

"The Power of a State Developed by Mental Culture", an address to the Mercantile Library Association (18 November 1844), published in The Works of Rufus Choate : Memoir, Lectures and Addresses (1862), edited by Samuel Gilman Brown.

“A book is the only immortality.”

As quoted in Part of a Man's Life (1905) by Thomas Wentworth Higginson.

“Happy is he who has laid up in his youth, and held fast in all fortune, a genuine and passionate love of reading.”

Speech at the dedication of the Peabody Institute (29 September 1854).

“Neither irony nor sarcasm is argument.”

As quoted in Dictionary of American Maxims‎ (1955) by David George Plotkin
As quoted in Lifetime Speaker's Encyclopedia (1962) edited by Jacob Morton Braude, p. 50.
Változat: Neither irony or sarcasm is argument.

“We have built no national temples but the Capitol; we consult no common oracle but the Constitution.”

"The Importance of Illustrating New-England History by a Series of Romances like the Waverley Novels", a lecture delivered at Salem, Massachusetts (1833).

“There was a state without king or nobles; there was a church without a bishop; there was a people governed by grave magistrates which it had selected, and by equal laws which it had framed.”

Speech before the New England Society (22 December 1843)
Possibly related to :
The Americans equally detest the pageantry of a king and the supercilious hypocrisy of a bishop.
Junius, Letter xxxv (19 December 1769)
It established a religion without a prelate, a government without a king.
George Bancroft on Calvinism, in History of the United States (1834), Vol. III, Ch. vi.
Oh, we are weary pilgrims; to this wilderness we bring
A Church without a bishop, a State without a King
Anonymous poem "The Puritans' Mistake", published by Oliver Ditson (1844).

“Its constitution the glittering and sounding generalities of natural right which make up the Declaration of Independence.”

Letter to the Maine Whig Committee (1856). Six years earlier, Choate gave a lecture in Providence which was reviewed by Franklin J. Dickman in the Journal of December 14, 1849. Unless Choate used the words "glittering generalities", and Dickman made reference to them, it would seem as if Dickman must have the credit of originating the catchword. Dickman wrote: "We fear that the glittering generalities of the speaker have left an impression more delightful than permanent". Reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).

“The courage of New England was the "courage of conscience."”

It did not rise to that insane and awful passion, the love of war for itself.
Address at Ipswich Centennial (1834).

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