Robert G. Ingersoll (1833–1899) Union United States Army officer
The trial of Charles B. Reynolds for blasphemy (1887)
To Leon Goldensohn, 6/6/46, from "The Nuremberg Interviews" by Leon Goldensohn, Robert Gellately - Page 151 - History - 2004
Robert G. Ingersoll (1833–1899) Union United States Army officer
The trial of Charles B. Reynolds for blasphemy (1887)
Jan Hus (1369–1415) Czech linguist, religion writer, theologist, university educator and science writer
Source: A Companion to Jan Hus (2015), p. 231.
Edmund Burke (1729–1797) Anglo-Irish statesman
28 May 1794
On the Impeachment of Warren Hastings (1788-1794)
Robert Sheckley book The Status Civilization
Source: The Status Civilization (1960), Chapter 15 (p. 65)
Pierre Trudeau (1919–2000) 15th Prime Minister of Canada
Part 4, 1979 - 1984 "Welcome to the 1980's", p. 322
Memoirs (1993)
“The mouse that always trusts to one poor hole
Can never be a mouse of any soul.”
Alexander Pope (1688–1744) eighteenth century English poet
"The Wife of Bath her Prologue, from Chaucer" (c.1704, published 1713), lines 298-299. Compare: "I hold a mouses wit not worth a leke, That hath but on hole for to sterten to", Geoffrey Chaucer, Canterbury Tales, "The Wif of Bathes Prologue", line 6154; "The mouse that hath but one hole is quickly taken", George Herbert, Jacula Prudentum.
Agatha Christie (1890–1976) English mystery and detective writer
Curtain - Poirot's Last Case (1975)
Context: I have no more now to say. I do not know, Hastings, if what I have done is justified or not justified. No — I do not know. I do not believe that a man should take the law into his own hands... But on the other hand, I am the law! As a young man in the Belgian police force I shot down a desperate criminal who sat on a roof and fired at people below. In a state of emergency martial law is proclaimed.
Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929–1968) American clergyman, activist, and leader in the American Civil Rights Movement
1960s, (1963)
Calvin Coolidge (1872–1933) American politician, 30th president of the United States (in office from 1923 to 1929)
Speech to the Massachusetts State Senate http://friesian.com/ross/ca40/2002.htm#war (7 January 1914). <br class="br">1910s, Speech to the Massachusetts State Senate (1914)
“The true laws of God are the laws of our own well-being.”
Samuel Butler (1835–1902) novelist
God's Laws
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part II - Elementary Morality