The New World Quotes

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The New World (A History of the English Speaking Peoples, #2) The New World by Winston S. Churchill
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The New World Quotes Showing 1-7 of 7
“Here is the salient fact which distinguishes the English Revolution from all others: that those who wielded irresistible physical force were throughout convinced that it could give them no security. Nothing is more characteristic of the English people than their instinctive reverence even in rebellion for law and tradition. Deep in the nature of the men who had broken the King’s power was the conviction that law in his name was the sole foundation on which they could build.”
Winston Churchill, The New World
“In harsh or melancholy epochs free men may always take comfort from the grand lesson of history, that tyrannies cannot last except among servile races. The years which seem endless to those who endure them are but a flick of mischance in the journey. New and natural hopes leap from the human heart as every spring revives the cultivated soil and rewards the faithful, patient husbandmen.”
Winston S. Churchill, The New World
“a conspiracy of rich men procuring their own commodities under the name and title of a commonwealth” fitted England very accurately during these years.”
Winston S. Churchill, The New World
“all he wanted was toleration, and by the enlightened use of the dispensing power to be the true father of all his people.”
Winston S. Churchill, The New World
“Cromwell saw that the destruction of these men would not only ruin Ormonde’s military power, but spread a helpful terror throughout the island. He therefore resolved upon a deed of “frightfulness” deeply embarrassing to his nineteenth-century admirers and apologists. Having”
Winston S. Churchill, The New World
“On November 5 he landed at Torbay, on the coast of Devon. Reminded that it was the anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot, he remarked to Burnet, “What do you think of Predestination now?”
Winston S. Churchill, The New World
“But no parties could live under such labels as Petitioners and Abhorrers. Instead of naming themselves they named each other. The term “Whig” had described a sour, bigoted, canting, money-grubbing Scots Presbyterian. Irish Papist bandits ravaging estates and manor-houses had been called “Tories.” Neither”
Winston S. Churchill, The New World