
“Pride had kept her running when love had betrayed her.”
Source: Kiss an Angel
Sharpe (Novel Series), Sharpe's Escape (2003)
Context: They were thieves and murderers and fools and rapists and drunkards. Not one had joined for love of country, and certainly not for love of their King [... ] They were paid pitifully, fined for every item they lost, and the few pennies they managed to keep they usually gambled away. They were feckless rogues, as violent as hounds and as coarse as swine, but they had two things. They had pride. And they had the precious ability to fire platoon volleys. They could fire those half company volleys faster than any other army in the world. Stand in front of these recoats and the balls came thick as hail. It was death to be in their way and seven French battlions were now in death's forecourt and the South Essex was tearing them to ribbons.
Narrator, p. 101
“Pride had kept her running when love had betrayed her.”
Source: Kiss an Angel
Odes, Book iv, Ode 9, reported in William Warburton, The Works of Alexander Pope, Esq (1751) p. 31.
“There never was a bad man that had ability for good service.”
15 February 1788, Third Day, volume x, p. 54
On the Impeachment of Warren Hastings (1788-1794)
“The politician has no more use for pride than Falstaff had for honour.”
Source: In Defence Of Politics (Second Edition) – 1981, Chapter 7, In Praise Of Politics, p. 159.
“We had our pride shattered, and without humility there can be no humanity.”
"A University's Bequest to Youth" (10 October 1936)
Canadian Occasions (1940)
“Never let fear and stupid pride make you lose someone who's precious to you.”
Source: Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage
“He had forgotten the Cause. When the guns began firing he had forgotten it completely.”
Part IV, CH 6: Chamberlain, p. 365
The Killer Angels (1974)
“Historically, the developement of machines had amplified man's ability to destroy.”
The cloud walker (1973)
“Wouldn't it be conceited to suggest that I had the abilities to describe the deity?”
The Quotable Sir John
Context: We may find the Divine to be 3,000 times what we think it is now. It's like asking the tulip there to explain you. The tulip is a beautiful creation, with millions of atoms cooperating with each other to produce great beauty, but ask that tulip to talk about you, and it can't do it. It doesn't have those perceptive abilities. Wouldn't it be conceited to suggest that I had the abilities to describe the deity?