His Excellency Quotes
His Excellency: George Washington
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Joseph J. Ellis43,216 ratings, 3.96 average rating, 1,508 reviews
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His Excellency Quotes
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“Because he could not afford to fail, he could not afford to trust.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“Washington's task was to transform the improbable into the inevitable.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“The old adage applied: if God were in the details, Colonel Washington would have been there to greet him upon arrival.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“Some models of self-control are able to achieve their serenity easily because the soul fires never burn brightly to begin with.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“p. 274 ...his trademark decision to surrender power as commander in chief and then president, was not...a sign that he had conquered his ambitions, but rather that he fully realized that all ambitions were inherently insatiable and unconquerable. He knew himself well enough to resist the illusion that he transcended human nature. Unlike Julius Caesar and Oliver Cromwell before him, and Napoleon, Lenin, and Mao after him, he understood that the greater glory resided in posterity's judgment. If you aspire to live forever in the memory of future generations, you must demonstrate the ultimate self-confidence to leave the final judgment to them. And he did.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“It is well known, that when one side only of a story is heard, and often repeated, the human mind becomes impressed with it, insensibly.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“As far as his contemporaries were concerned, there was no question about his stature in American history. In the extravaganza of mourning that occurred in more than four hundred towns and hamlets throughout the land, he was described as the only indisputable hero of the age, the one and only “His Excellency.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“Having now finished the work assigned me," Washington solemnly said, "I retire from the great theatre of Action....I here offer my Commission, and take leave of all the enjoyments of public life." The man who had known how to stay the course now showed that he also understood how to leave it. Horses were waiting at the door immediately after Washington read his statement. The crowd gathered at the doorway to wave him off. It was the greatest exit in American history.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“This decision produced a scene that provides the most graphic and dramatic illustration of the two competing versions of what the American Revolution had come to mean in the 1790s. On one side stood the rebels, a defiant collection of aggrieved farmers emboldened by their conviction that the excise tax levied by Congress was every bit as illegitimate as the taxes levied by the British ministry. On the other side stood Washington and his federalized troops, an updated version of the Continental army, marching west to enforce the authority of the constitutionally elected government that claimed to represent all the American people. It was “the spirit of ’76” against “the spirit of ’87,” one historic embodiment of “the people” against another.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“Eventually Washington ordered his doctors to cease their barbarisms and let him go in peace. “Doctor, I die hard,” he muttered, “but I am not afraid to go.” Then he gave an intriguing final instruction to Lear: “I am just going. Have me decently buried, and do not let my body be put into the Vault in less than two days after I am dead. . . . Do you understand me?” Washington believed that several apparently dead people, perhaps including Jesus, had really been buried alive, a fate he wished to avoid. His statement also calls attention to a missing presence at the deathbed scene: there were no ministers in the room, no prayers uttered, no Christian rituals offering the solace of everlasting life. The inevitable renderings of Washington’s death by nineteenth-century artists often added religious symbols to the scene, frequently depicting his body ascending into heaven surrounded by a chorus of angels. The historical evidence suggests that Washington did not think much about heaven or angels; the only place he knew his body was going was into the ground, and as for his soul, its ultimate location was unknowable. He died as a Roman stoic rather than a Christian saint.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“Having now finished the work assigned me,” Washington solemnly said, “I retire from the great theatre of Action. . . . I here offer my Commission, and take my leave of all the enjoyments of public life.” The man who had known how to stay the course now showed that he also understood how to leave it. Horses were waiting at the door immediately after Washington read his statement. The crowd gathered at the doorway to wave him off. It was the greatest exit in American history.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“(Asked to explain the defeat, Adams put it succinctly: “In general, our Generals were out generalled.”) Washington”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
“He found himself in the ironic position of being the indispensable man in a political world that regarded all leaders as disposable.”
― His Excellency: George Washington
― His Excellency: George Washington
