“If royalty did not exist, the storm of strife would never subside, nor selfish ambition disappear. Mankind (is) under the burden of lawlessness and lust…”
Ain-i-Akbari by Abul Fazl. trans. by H. Blochmann, quoted from Lal, K. S. (1992). The legacy of Muslim rule in India. New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan.
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Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak 11
vizier 1551–1602Related quotes

“Anything that exists will never be destroyed; its disappearance is simply a transformation.”
Source: Fire without Fuel - The Aphorisms of Baba Hari Dass, 1986, p.18

“[W]e must never allow the future to collapse under the burden of memory.”
Source: The Book of Laughter and Forgetting

The History of Freedom in Christianity (1877)
Context: The way was paved for absolute monarchy to triumph over the spirit and institutions of a better age, not by isolated acts of wickedness, but by a studied philosophy of crime, and so thorough a perversion of the moral sense that the like of it had not been since the Stoics reformed the morality of paganism.
The clergy who had in so many ways served the cause of freedom during the prolonged strife against feudalism and slavery, were associated now with the interest of royalty.

“Gratitude looks to the past and love to the present; fear, avarice, lust, and ambition look ahead.”
Letter XVI
The Screwtape Letters (1942)

Source: 1930s, Power: A New Social Analysis (1938), Ch. 15: Power and moral codes
“Whether we fall by ambition, blood, or lust,
Like diamonds, we are cut with our own dust.”
Act V, scene v.
Duchess of Malfi (1623)