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The force of selfishness is as inevitable and as calculable as the force of gravitation.
George Stillman Hillard
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George Stillman Hillard
Age: 70 †
Born: 1808
Born: September 22
Died: 1879
Died: January 21
Biographer
Lawyer
Politician
Writer
George Hillard
G. S. Hillard
George S. Hillard
Selfish
Force
Calculable
Gravitation
Selfishness
Inevitable
More quotes by George Stillman Hillard
There are no eyes so sharp as the eyes of hatred.
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The ruin of most men dates from some idle moment.
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It may be too much to expect that nations should be governed in their relations towards each other by the precepts of Christian morality, but surely it is not too much to ask that they should conform to the code of courtesy and good breeding recognized among gentlemen in the intercourse of social life.
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Ambition is not a weakness unless it be disproportioned to the capacity. To have more ambition than ability is to be at once weak and unhappy.
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For my boyhood's friend hath fallen, the pillar of my trust, The true, the wise, the beautiful, is sleeping in the dust.
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If liberty with law is fire on the hearth, liberty without law is fire on the floor.
George Stillman Hillard
A sluggish, dawdling, and dilatory man may have spasms of activity, but he never acts continuously and consecutively with energetic quickness.
George Stillman Hillard
Great men are among the best gifts which God bestows upon a people.
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There are pictures by Titian so steeped in golden splendors, that they look as if they would light up a dark room like a solar lamp.
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Strategy is the most important department of the art of war, and strategical skill is the highest and rarest function of military genius.
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The malignity that never forgets or forgives is found only in base and ignoble natures, whose aims are selfish, and whose means are indirect, cowardly, and treacherous.
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Artists will sometimes speak of Rome with disparagement or indifference while it is before them but no artist ewer lived in Rome and then left it, without sighing to return.
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The instinctive and universal taste of mankind selects flowers for the expression of its finest sympathies, their beauty and their fleetingness serving to make them the most fitting symbols of those delicate sentiments for which language itself seems almost too gross a medium.
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A vacant mind invites dangerous inmates, as a deserted mansion tempts wandering outcasts to enter and take up their abode in its desolate apartments.
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A statesman makes the occasion, but the occasion makes the politician.
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