
“A man's enemies have no power to harm him, if he is true to himself and loyal to God.”
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 208.
Source: Testimony to the Invisible: Essays on Swedenborg
“A man's enemies have no power to harm him, if he is true to himself and loyal to God.”
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 208.
“A general is not easily overcome who can form a true judgment of his own and the enemy's forces. Valour is superior to numbers. The nature of the ground is often of more consequence than courage. (General Maxims)”
Amplius iuuat uirtus quam multitudo.
De Re Militari (also Epitoma Rei Militaris), Book III, "Dispositions for Action"
“Fear is the true enemy, the only enemy.”
Attributed implicitly to Sun Tzu by "William Riker" in the episode The Last Outpost of the TV program Star Trek: The Next Generation, but no source for this quote predates the episode's airing in 1987.
Misattributed
This Business of Living (1935-1950)
"On the Uses of a Landed Gentry" address in Edinburgh (6 November 1876), published in Short Studies on Great Subjects, Vol. III (1893), p. 406
Context: The landlord may become a direct oppressor. He may care nothing for the people, and have no object but to squeeze the most that he can out of them fairly or unfairly. The Russian government has been called despotism tempered with assassination. In Ireland landlordism was tempered by assassination.
Unfortunately the wrong man was generally assassinated. The true criminal was an absentee, and his agent was shot instead of him. A noble lord living in England, two of whose agents had lost their lives already in his service, ordered the next to post a notice in his Barony that he intended to persevere in what he was doing, and if the tenants thought they would intimidate him by shooting his agents, they would find themselves mistaken.
“Our true enemies are: ignorance and limitation.”
The Impact of Space Activities Upon Society (ESA Br) European Space Agency (2005)
“In baseball, the true class enemy is not the boss, but the fan.”
“What the enemy believed of you was probably true, or else why were you enemies in the first place?”
Part Eight “The Return”, Chapter v “Nonesuch”, Section 2 (p. 353)
(1987), BOOK TWO: THE FUGUE