William Randolph Hearst (1863–1951) American newspaper publisher
Advertisement, N.Y. Herald Tribune (August 19, 1946)
Source: The Statesman (1836), Ch. 29. p. 219
William Randolph Hearst (1863–1951) American newspaper publisher
Advertisement, N.Y. Herald Tribune (August 19, 1946)
“The greater the man, the less is he opinionative, he depends upon events and circumstances.”
Napoleon I of France (1769–1821) French general, First Consul and later Emperor of the French
Source: Political Aphorisms, Moral and Philosophical Thoughts (1848), p. 146
Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882–1945) 32nd President of the United States
1930s, Address at the Dedication of the Memorial on the Gettysburg Battlefield (1938)
Context: It seldom helps to wonder how a statesman of one generation would surmount the crisis of another. A statesman deals with concrete difficulties — with things which must be done from day to day. Not often can he frame conscious patterns for the far off future. But the fullness of the stature of Lincoln's nature and the fundamental conflict which events forced upon his Presidency invite us ever to turn to him for help. For the issue which he restated here at Gettysburg seventy five years ago will be the continuing issue before this Nation so long as we cling to the purposes for which the Nation was founded — to preserve under the changing conditions of each generation a people's government for the people's good.
“Without a party a statesman is nothing. He sometimes forgets that awkward fact.”
Ronald Syme book The Roman Revolution
Source: The Roman Revolution (1939), Ch. 4.
Benjamin Disraeli (1804–1881) British Conservative politician, writer, aristocrat and Prime Minister
Source: Letter to Lord John Manners, referring to the tactics of Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel (17 December 1846), cited in William Flavelle Monypenny and George Earle Buckle, The Life of Benjamin Disraeli, Earl of Beaconsfield (Vol. 2) (1913), p. 337-338.
John Kenneth Galbraith book The New Industrial State
Source: The New Industrial State (1967), Chapter XXV, Section 2, p. 293 (1985)
Mandell Creighton (1843–1901) English historian and ecclesiastic
Persecution and Tolerance, Hulsean Lectures, University of Cambridge (Winter 1893–94)
Carl L. Becker (1873–1945) American historian
The Heavenly City of the Eighteenth-century Philosophers (1932)
Bernard Groethuysen (1880–1946) French literary historian, translator and writer
Source: The Bourgeois: Catholicism vs. Capitalism in Eighteenth-Century France (1927), p. 120