
“The most radical revolutionary will become a conservative the day after the revolution.”
The New Yorker (12 September 1970).
As quoted in The Modern Handbook of Humor (1967) by Ralph Louis Woods
Variants:
A conservative is someone who admires radicals a century after they're dead.
A conservative is one who admires radicals centuries after they're dead.
“The most radical revolutionary will become a conservative the day after the revolution.”
The New Yorker (12 September 1970).
Speech to Kansas Society of New York (23 January 1911) — Wilson's definition of different groups, PWW 22:389
1910s
1840s, Essays: Second Series (1844), New England Reformers
July 19, 1995, p. 159
A Year With Swollen Appendices (1996)
Source: 'English Politics and Parties', Bentley's Quarterly Review, 1, (1859), p. 12
The Economist as Preacher and Other Essays (1982), p.61
“You can't murder a man who's been dead for five centuries.”
Prof. Von Helsing, defending himself against the charge of having murdered Count Dracula
Dracula's Daughter (1936)
Context: For four hundred years the human race has not made a step but what has left its plain vestige behind. We enter now upon great centuries. The sixteenth century will be known as the age of painters, the seventeenth will be termed the age of writers, the eighteenth the age of philosophers, the nineteenth the age of apostles and prophets. To satisfy the nineteenth century, it is necessary to be the painter of the sixteenth, the writer of the seventeenth, the philosopher of the eighteenth; and it is also necessary, like Louis Blane, to have the innate and holy love of humanity which constitutes an apostolate, and opens up a prophetic vista into the future. In the twentieth century war will be dead, the scaffold will be dead, animosity will be dead, royalty will be dead, and dogmas will be dead; but Man will live. For all there will be but one country—that country the whole earth; for all there will be but one hope—that hope the whole heaven.
Address to the Workman's Congress at Marseille http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Victor_Hugo%27s_Address_to_the_Workman%27s_Congress_at_Marseille (1879)
Pages 107-108
2000s, (2008)