“Indian believes they ain't but two sins… bein a coward… and turnin agin yer own kind.”
Source: The Outlaw Josey Wales
No. 3
The Biglow Papers (1848–1866), Series I (1848)
“Indian believes they ain't but two sins… bein a coward… and turnin agin yer own kind.”
Source: The Outlaw Josey Wales
“We too should be about our father's business —
O Christ, hear us!”
Poems (1866), Our Father's Business
Context: All that we know of Thee, or knowing not
Love only, waiting till the perfect time
When we shall know even as we are known —
O Thou Child Jesus, Thou dost seem to say
By the soft silence of these heavenly eyes
(That rose out of the depths of nothingness
Upon this limner's reverent soul and hand)
We too should be about our father's business —
O Christ, hear us!
Der Kampf, den wir heute ausfechten bis zum Sieg oder bis zum bitteren Ende, ist im tiefsten Sinne ein Kampf zwischen Christus und Marx.
Christus: das Prinzip der Liebe.
Marx: das Prinzip des Hasses.
Michael: a German fate in diary notes (1926)
Speaking at an Indianapolis war-bond rally, 15 January 1942
Quoted in Carole Lombard, The Hoosier Tornado by Wes D. Gehring, p. 1
“O what fine thought we had because we thought
That the worst rogues and rascals had died out.”
I, st. 2
The Tower (1928), Nineteen Hundred And Nineteen http://poetry.poetryx.com/poems/1547/
“Let my soul calm itself, O Christ, in Thee. This is true”
"Life's Mystery", reported in Charlotte Fiske Rogé, The Cambridge Book of Poetry and Song (1832), p. 544.
“Either Christ is a liar or war is never necessary”
A Critique of Just War Doctrine http://archive.org/details/JustWarTheoryCritique (1921) by Ben Salmon, pp.86–87
Context: Either Christ is a liar or war is never necessary, and very properly assuming that Christ told the truth, it follows that the State is without [in the words of Father Macksey] ‘judicial authority to determine when war is necessary,’ because it is never necessary.