“You are now a famous champion, that has crowned with victory a righteous cause for which many stalwart knights and gallant gentlemen have made the supreme sacrifice, because they knew that in the end the right must conquer. Your success thus represents the working out of a great moral principle, and to explain the practical minutiae of these august processes is not always quite respectable.”

Miramon, in Ch. IV : In the Doubtful Palace
Figures of Earth (1921)

Adopted from Wikiquote. Last update June 3, 2021. History

Help us to complete the source, original and additional information

Do you have more details about the quote "You are now a famous champion, that has crowned with victory a righteous cause for which many stalwart knights and gall…" by James Branch Cabell?
James Branch Cabell photo
James Branch Cabell 130
American author 1879–1958

Related quotes

John Bright photo
Nathan Bedford Forrest photo
Maneka Gandhi photo
John Marshall photo

“This great principle is that the Constitution and the laws made in pursuance thereof are supreme; that they control the Constitution and laws of the respective States, and cannot be controlled by them. From this”

John Marshall (1755–1835) fourth Chief Justice of the United States

17 U.S. (4 Wheaton) 316, 426
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
Context: This great principle is that the Constitution and the laws made in pursuance thereof are supreme; that they control the Constitution and laws of the respective States, and cannot be controlled by them. From this, which may be almost termed an axiom, other propositions are deduced as corollaries, on the truth or error of which, and on their application to this case, the cause has been supposed to depend. These are, 1st. That a power to create implies a power to preserve; 2d. That a power to destroy, if wielded by a different hand, is hostile to, and incompatible with these powers to create and to preserve; 3d. That, where this repugnancy exists, that authority which is supreme must control, not yield to that over which it is supreme.

Benjamin Disraeli photo

“And now, gentlemen, what is the condition of the great body of the people? In the first place, gentlemen, they have for centuries been in the full enjoyment of that which no other country in Europe has ever completely attained—complete rights of personal freedom.”

Benjamin Disraeli (1804–1881) British Conservative politician, writer, aristocrat and Prime Minister

Source: Speech to the Conservatives of Manchester (3 April 1872), quoted in Selected Speeches of the Late Right Honourable the Earl of Beaconsfield, Volume II, ed. T. E. Kebbel (1882), p. 507

Ernest Hemingway photo

“If you have a success, you have it for the wrong reasons. If you become popular it is always because of the worst aspects of your work.”

Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961) American author and journalist

As quoted in That Summer in Paris (1963) by Morley Callaghan

Thorstein Veblen photo
Immanuel Kant photo
Ayrton Senna photo

Related topics