WAR QUOTES XIII

quotations about war

I know but little of the customs of war, and wish to know less.

JAMES FENIMORE COOPER

The Spy

Tags: James Fenimore Cooper


This is also a war followed in real time by anyone with a smart device, a technology that delivers instant updates, and oftentimes partial truths, to smart screens across the globe.

ROBERT MAKROS

"'Clean war' is the unicorn of armed conflict", The Hill, March 31, 2017


Ares ever loves to pluck all the fairest flower of an armed host.

AESCHYLUS

fragment, Europe

Tags: Aeschylus


A righteous war is a legacy from heaven--oftentimes the handmaid of a nation's liberty.

EDWARD COUNSEL

Maxims


Armies are not bad things in themselves; it's war that's evil.

JUAN GOMEZ-JURADO

God's Spy


We have had over-much of war: I have seen too many of the noble, young, and gallant, fall by the sword. Brute force has had its day; now let us try what policy can do.

MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT SHELLEY

The Fortunes of Perkin Warbeck

Tags: Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley


One day History will pass judgment on each of the nations at war; she will weigh their measure of errors, lies, and heinous follies. Let us try to make ours light before her!

ROMAIN ROLLAND

preface, Above the Battle


O young men that shed your blood with so generous a joy for the starving earth! O heroism of the world! What a harvest for destruction to reap under this splendid summer sun! Young men of all nations, brought into conflict by a common ideal, making enemies of those who should be brothers; all of you, marching to your death, are dear to me.

ROMAIN ROLLAND

Above the Battle


Since war has ceased to be the moving force in the world, men have become more tender one to another, and shrink from what they used to inflict without caring; and this is not so much because men are improved (which may or may not be in various cases), but because they have no longer the daily habit of war--have no longer formed their notions upon war, and therefore are guided by thoughts and feelings which soldiers as such--soldiers educated simply by their trade--are too hard to understand.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Physics and Politics

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Always remember, however sure you are that you could easily win, that there would not be a war if the other man did not think he also had a chance.

WINSTON CHURCHILL

My Early Life: A Roving Commission

Tags: Winston Churchill


War is a brutal and fierce means of pacification; it means the suppression of resistance by the destruction or enslavement of the conquered.

HENRI-FREDERIC AMIEL

Journal Intime

Tags: Henri-Frederic Amiel


Man kills without ceasing, to nourish himself; but since in addition he needs to kill for pleasure, he has invented the chase! The child kills the insects he finds, the little birds, all the little animals that come in his way. But this does not suffice for the irresistible need of massacre that is in us. It is not enough to kill beasts; we must kill man too. Long ago this need was satisfied by human sacrifice. Now, the necessity of living in society has made murder a crime. We condemn and punish the assassin! But as we cannot live without yielding to this natural and imperious instinct of death, we relieve ourselves from time to time, by wars. Then a whole nation slaughters another nation. It is a feast of blood, a feast that maddens armies and intoxicates the civilians, women and children, who read, by lamplight at night, the feverish story of massacre.

GUY DE MAUPASSANT

"The Diary of a Madman"

Tags: Guy de Maupassant


No matter how young, weak or vulnerable their victims, the killers wanted no survivors. By the time they had finished their work, at least 27 people including six children and a heavily-pregnant woman, lay clubbed or stabbed to death. This was no spontaneous massacre. At least four of the dead, including the mother-to-be, were positioned as if their hands or feet had been bound while their heads, knees and limbs were smashed. There were no burials -- the bodies of some were thrown into an adjoining lagoon while others were seemingly left to die where they fell. It may sound like an act of medieval barbarity or even an atrocity from the current killing fields of Syria. But this act of indiscriminate slaughter dates back some 10,000 years and as such may represent the earliest evidence of humans at war.

CAHAL MILMO

"War is as old as time: Cambridge University researchers unveil massacred bodies dating back 10,000 years", The Independent, January 20, 2016


In war it is necessary to kill as many people as possible -- such is the cynical logic of war. Brutality in a fight is unavoidable; have you seen how cruelly children fight in the streets?

MAXIM GORKY

Untimely Thoughts

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I don't reject the concept of preemptive war. I'm a mother of five. I have five grandchildren. And I always say: Think of a lioness. Think of a mother bear. You come anywhere near our cubs, you're dead. And so, in terms of any threat to our country, people have to know we'll be there to preemptively strike. But what the president [Bush] did was, on the basis of no real intelligence for an imminent threat to our country, chose to go into a war for reasons that are still unknown to us.

NANCY PELOSI

Online NewsHour, March 30, 2006

Tags: Nancy Pelosi


The second best thing about space travel is that the distances involved make war very difficult, usually impractical, and almost always unnecessary. This is probably a loss for most people, since war is our race's most popular diversion, one which gives purpose and color to dull and stupid lives. But it is a great boon to the intelligent man who fights only when he must--never for sport.

ROBERT A. HEINLEIN

Time Enough For Love

Tags: Robert A. Heinlein


War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things: the decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks nothing worth a war, is worse.... A war to protect other human beings against tyrannical injustice; a war to give victory to their own ideas of right and good, and which is their own war, carried on for an honest purpose by their own free choice--is often the means of their regeneration.

JOHN STUART MILL

"The Contest in America", Dissertations and Discussions

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War makes men barbarous because, to take part in it, one must harden oneself against all regret, all appreciation of delicacy and sensitive values. One must live as if those values did not exist, and when the war is over one has lost the resilience to return to those values.

CESARE PAVESE

This Business of Living, September 9, 1939

Tags: Cesare Pavese


War should be carried on like a monsoon; one changeless determination of every particle towards the one unalterable aim.

HERMAN MELVILLE

Israel Potter


It is a much easier thing to unloose the demon war than to chain him up again.

M. D. CONWAY

attributed, Platt's Essays