Barbara W Tuchman Quotes
Collection of top 100 famous quotes about Barbara W Tuchman
Barbara W Tuchman Quotes & Sayings
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Hubert Humphrey advised new members, If you feel an urge to stand up and make a speech attacking Vietnamese policy, don't make it.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
They resented the patronage they depended upon.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
War is the unfolding of miscalculations.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Policy was not reconsidered because the governing group had no habit of purposeful consultation.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Even his own speeches bored him.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Only the Church offered an organizing principle, which was the reason for its success, for society cannot bear anarchy.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
What other country has had the privilege of making the world's heart beat faster?
— Barbara W. Tuchman
That he survived, and indeed returned to government, was one of man's occasional triumphs over medicine.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Every incident in the Old Testament was considered to pre-figure in allegory what was to come in the New.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Society's revenge matched its fright.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Everything one has a right to do is not best to be done. Benjamin Franklin
— Barbara W. Tuchman
[Books} are the bankers of the treasures of the mind.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The boy would learn to ride, to fight, and to hawk, the three chief physical elements of noble life,
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Enormity of the stakes became the new self-hypnosis.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Connection was the cement of the governing class.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The hypothetical has its charm, but actual government is history.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Inventive rhetoric is characteristic of true believers.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The English patrician bloomed in his natural climate.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Human beings of any age need to approve of themselves; the bad times in history come when they cannot.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Books are ... companions, teachers, magicians, bankers of the treasures of mind. Books are humanity in print.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Oversimplified perhaps, this in essence is the problem known to nineteenth-century diplomacy as the Eastern Question.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Let us retreat when we can, not when we must. Lord Chatham
— Barbara W. Tuchman
He said, McKinley was going around the country shouting prosperity when there was no prosperity for the poor man.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Whenever a man has cast a longing eye on [office]," he wrote to a friend, "a rottenness begins in his conduct.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The fact of being reported multiplies the apparent extent of any deplorable development by five- to tenfold.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Of England's patrician class, the author writes: It was easy to be agreeable when everything was done to keep them in comfort and ease.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
History never repeats itself," said Voltaire; "man always does." Thucydides,
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Devout or not, all owned and carried Books of Hours, the characteristic fashionable religious possession of the 14th century noble.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
If they are afraid of revision in the laboratory, truth will never be released except by accident.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
How much does a man's effort depend upon the age in which his work is cast? Pope Clement VII
— Barbara W. Tuchman
His decision suggests that an absence of overriding personal ambition together with shrewd common sense are among the essential components of wisdom.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Strong prejudices in an ill-formed mind are hazardous to government.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
He believed that rank without power was a sham.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The Empire had no political cohesion, no capital city, no common laws, common finances, or common officials. It was the relic of a dead ideal.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Humanizing war?! You may as well talk of humanizing Hell. Sir John Fisher
— Barbara W. Tuchman
No one is is sure of his premise as the man who knows too little.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The utility of perseverance in absurdity is more than I could ever discern. Edmund Burke
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Each one of us is serious individually, but together we become frivolous.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Why, since folly or perversity is expected of individuals, should we expect anything else from government?
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Can the military art be learned in the games and hunts in which you pass your youth?" The
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Disorder is the least tolerable up sinful conditions.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The clergy were to pray for all men, the knight to fight for them, and the commoner to work that all might eat.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Canada was regarded as a hostage to restrain Britain,
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Revolutions produce other men, not new men. Halfway between truth and endless error, the mold of the species is permanent. That is Earth's burden.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Nevertheless, Schlieffen decided, in the event of war, to attack France by way of Belgium.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
I want the reader to turn the page and keep on turning until the end.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
To be right and overruled is not forgiven to persons in responsible positions, and Michel duly paid for his clairvoyance.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
He was always acting, always enveloping himself in artificiality, perhaps to conceal the volcano within.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Folly is a child of power.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
England's traditional tolerance was outraged at last.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Preconceived, fixed notions can be more damaging than cannon.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Arguments can always be found to turn desire into policy.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The cracking of old and famous structures is slow and internal, while the facade holds.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Diplomacy's primary law: LEAVE ROOM FOR NEGOTIATION.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
One Cardinal entered his cathedral for the first time at his funeral.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Marco Polo dictated his Travels in French,
— Barbara W. Tuchman
If it was bliss to be alive, to hunt was rapture.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Proper society did not think about MAKING money, only about spending it.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Little attention was paid, because the German people, no matter how hungry, remained obedient.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Fine dressing could not be suppressed despite ever-renewed sumptuary laws which tried especially and repeatedly to outlaw the pointed shoes.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Advice to young Samuel Gompers that might apply in many other areas: Learn from socialism, but don't join it.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Though surnamed the Wise, he was not immune from the occupational disease of rulers: overestimation of their capacity to control events. No
— Barbara W. Tuchman
If he had a little more brains he would be a half-wit.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Pessimism is a primary source of passivity,
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The tribal pull of patriotism could have no better testimony.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The art of oratory was considered part of the equipment of a statesman.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Anything that protracted a campaign Clausewitz condemned. "Gradual reduction" of the enemy, or a war of attrition, he feared like the pit of hell.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Women were considered the snare of the Devil, while at the same time the cult of the Virgin made one woman the central object of love and adoration.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
[T]he obverse of facile emotion in the 14th century was a general insensitivity to the spectacle of pain and death.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Mankind's tragedy is that he can draw up blueprints for a better life but he cannot live up to them.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Malignant phenomena do not come out of a golden age.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
No single characteristic ever overtakes an entire society.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Now according to German logic, a declaration of war was found to be unnecessary because of imaginary bombings
— Barbara W. Tuchman
If I had taken a doctoral degree, it would have stifled any writing capacity.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Liberality in gifts and expenditure which, since his followers lived off it, was extolled as the most admired attribute of a noble.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
These cumbersome vehicles were as convenient as if dinosaurs had survived to be used by cowboys for driving cattle
— Barbara W. Tuchman
One English nobleman and statesman read and reread a particular work of literature because it was the only book which allowed him to forget politics.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
When the gap between ideal and real becomes too wide, the system breaks down.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The greatness of the object enabled my mind to support what my strengths of body was scarce equal to.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Fate represents the fulfillment of man's expectations of himself.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The affair made men feel larger than life.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
That conflict between the reach for the divine and the lure of earthly things was to be the central problem of the Middle Ages.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
He had been present in their minds not as a man but as an idea.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
I command, or I keep quiet." Napoleon
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Once the divinity of doctrine has been questioned there is no return to perfect faith.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Civilians who volunteer generally wish to escape, not to share, privatizations worse than their own.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
The Republic cured me of the Republic.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Theology being the work of males, original sin was traced to the female.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Party animosity was concealed under a veil of studied courtesy.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Chief among the forces affecting political folly is lust for power, named by Tacitus as the most flagrant of all passions.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Learning from experience is a faculty almost never practiced
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Every repetition of the choice only hardened the issue.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Believing themselves superior in soul, in strength, in energy, industry, and national virtue, Germans felt they deserved the dominion of Europe.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Impunity in such affairs was no longer a matter of course, for the King was Louis IX, a sovereign whose sense of rulership was equal to his piety.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
reproaches himself for recoiling from the stench of the poor and the sick,
— Barbara W. Tuchman
In individuals as in nations, contentment is silent, which tends to unbalance the historical record.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
Talent for oratory can simulate the need for action and even thought.
— Barbara W. Tuchman
In the midst of war and crisis nothing is as clear or as certain as it appears in hindsight
— Barbara W. Tuchman