All James Bryce Quotes
- Patriotism consists not in waving the flag, but in striving that our country shall be righteous as well as strong. Anti War
- Our country is not the only thing to which we owe our allegiance. It is also owed to justice and to humanity. Allegiance
- The worth of a book is to be measured by what you can carry away from it. Book
- Individualism, the love of enterprise, and the pride in personal freedom, have been deemed by Americans not only as their choicest, but their peculiar and… Americans
- I have often asked Americans wherein they consider their freedom superior to that of the English, but have never found them able to indicate a… Able
- A political career brings out the basest qualities in human nature. Basest
- To most people, nothing is more troublesome than the effort of thinking. Effort
- There is in the American Government...a want of unity.... The Sailors, the helmsman, the engineer, do not seem to have one purpose or obey one… American
- Perhaps the most typically American place in America. America
- Life is too short for reading inferior books. Book
- Three-fourths of the mistakes a man makes are made because he does not really know the things he thinks he knows. Doe
- The People, though we think of a great entity when we use the word, means nothing more than so many millions of individual men. Entity
- California, more than any other part of the Union, is a country by itself, and San Francisco a capital. Any
- In Europe we have cities wealthier and more populous than yours and we are not happy. You dream of your posterity; but your posterity will… Age
- When you find that a book is poor ... waste no more time upon it. Book
- No wonder that, when a political career is so precarious, men of worth and capacity hesitate to embrace it. They cannot afford to be thrown… Accident
- There is a hearty Puritanism in the view of human nature which pervades the instrument of 1787. It is the work of men who believed… Believed
- The national park is the best idea America ever had. America
- An eminent American is reported to have said to friends who wished to put him forward, 'Gentlemen, let there be no mistake. I should make… American
- The chief practical use of history is to deliver us from plausible historical analogies. Analogies