Wendell Phillips

Wendell Phillips born in Boston, Massachusetts, was an American abolitionist, Native American advocate and orator.

Sourced

  • Revolutions are not made; they come. A revolution is as natural a growth as an oak. It comes out of the past. Its foundations are laid far back.
    • Speech (January 8, 1852)

  • The best use of laws is to teach men to trample bad laws under their feet.
    • Speech (April 12, 1852)

  • Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.
    • Speech (January 28, 1852) (often misappropriated to Thomas Jefferson)

  • What the Puritans gave the world was not thought, but action.
    • Speech (December 21, 1855)

  • One on God's side is a majority.
    • Lecture in Brooklyn (November 1, 1859)

  • Every man meets his Waterloo at last.
    • Lecture in Brooklyn (November 1, 1859)

  • Whether in chains or in laurels, Liberty knows nothing but victories.
    • Lecture in Brooklyn (November 1, 1859)

  • Truth is one forever absolute, but opinion is truth filtered through the moods, the blood, the disposition of the spectator.
    • Idols (October 4, 1859)

  • Difference of religion breeds more quarrels than difference of politics.
    • Speech (November 7, 1860)

  • Revolutions never go backward.
    • Speech (February 17, 1861)

  • Aristocracy is always cruel.
    • Address on Toussaint L'Ouverture (1861)

  • Take the whole range of imaginative literature, and we are all wholesale borrowers. In every matter that relates to invention, to use, or beauty or form, we are borrowers.
    • Lecture: The Lost Arts, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).

Unsourced

  • Christianity is a battle not a dream.

  • Governments exist to protect the rights of minorities. The loved and the rich need no protection: they have many friends and few enemies.

  • If you want to be an orator, first get your great cause.

  • Insurrection of thought always precedes insurrection of arms.

  • It is only liquid currents of thought that move men and the world.

  • Many know how to flatter, few know how to praise.

  • Politics is but the common pulse-beat, of which revolution is the fever-spasm.

  • Seldom ever was any knowledge given to keep, but to impart; the grace of this rich jewel is lost in concealment.

  • The best education in the world is that got by struggling to get a living.

  • The heart is the best reflective thinker.

  • To be as good as our fathers we must be better, imitation is not discipleship.

  • To hear some men talk of the government, you would suppose that Congress was the law of gravitation, and kept the planets in their places.

  • Today it is not big business that we have to fear. It is big government.

  • Two kinds of men generally best succeed in political life; men of no principle, but of great talent; and men of no talent, but of one principle - that of obedience to their superiors.

  • We live under a government of men and morning newspapers.

  • What gunpowder did for war the printing press has done for the mind.

  • What is defeat? Nothing but education. Nothing but the first step to something better.

  • Write on my gravestone: "Infidel, Traitor.", infidel to every church that compromises with wrong; traitor to every government that oppresses the people.

  • "It's just what Wendell Phillips said," she declared. "'The Puritan's idea of hell is a place where everybody has to mind his own business.'" Mrs. Ware in Chapter II of the novel The Damnation of Theron Ware by Harold Frederic, 1896.
 
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