Source: Speech https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1871/feb/09/address-to-her-majesty-on-her-most in the House of Commons (9 February 1871) on the Franco-Prussian War which led to German unification.
“I was remarking that we are passing through one of the greatest revolutions in the annals of the world. Seven States have within the last three months thrown off an old government and formed a new. This revolution has been signally marked, up to this time, by the fact of its having been accomplished without the loss of a single drop of blood.”
The Cornerstone Speech (1861)
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Alexander H. Stephens 29
Vice President of the Confederate States (in office from 18… 1812–1883Related quotes
Quarterly Review, 130, 1871, pp. 279-280
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“I have been through a revolution, and I am convinced that I am no revolutionist.”
Diary entry (28 June 1921).
The Diary and Letters of Käthe Kollwitz (1955)
Context: I have been through a revolution, and I am convinced that I am no revolutionist. My childhood dreams of dying on the barricades will hardly be fulfilled, because I should hardly mount a barricade now that I know what they were like in reality. And so I know now what an illusion I lived in for so many years. I thought I was a revolutionary and was only an evolutionary. Yes, sometimes I do not know whether I am a socialist at all, whether I am not rather a democrat instead. How good it is when reality tests you to the guts and pins you relentlessly to the very position you always thought, so long as you clung to your illusion, was unspeakably wrong.
"Fooling the People as a Fine Art", La Follette's Magazine (April 1918)
Floor Statement on President's Decision to Increase Troops in Iraq (19 January 2007)
2007
As quoted in The Cheka : Lenin's Political Police (1981) by George Leggett, p. 54
Pre-Presidency, First Presidential Nomination Acceptance Speech (1976)
Source: The Limits of State Action (1792), Ch. 16
Source: State and Revolution