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It's wisest always to be so clad that our friends need not ask us for our names.
James F. Cooper
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James F. Cooper
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More quotes by James F. Cooper
Systems are to be appreciated by their general effects, and not by particular exceptions.
James F. Cooper
The tendency of democracies is, in all things, to mediocrity, since the tastes, knowledge, and principles of the majority form the tribunal of appeal.
James F. Cooper
Party leads to vicious, corrupt and unprofitable legislation, for the sole purpose of defeating party.
James F. Cooper
Individuality is the aim of political liberty.
James F. Cooper
There is a pleasure in the pathless woods, There is a rapture on the lonely shore.
James F. Cooper
Contact with the affairs of state is one of the most corrupting of the influences to which men are exposed.
James F. Cooper
If we would have civilization and the exertion indispensable to its success, we must have property if we have property, we must have its rights if we have the rights of property, we must take those consequences of the rights of property which are inseparable from the rights themselves.
James F. Cooper
Liberty is not a matter of words, but a positive and important condition of society. Its greatest safeguard after placing its foundations on a popular base, is in the checks and balances imposed on the public servants.
James F. Cooper
I can't see no great difference atween givin' up territory afore a war, out of a dread of war, and givin' it up after a war, because we can't help it-unless it be that the last is the most manful and honourable.
James F. Cooper
All greatness of character is dependent on individuality.
James F. Cooper
The affairs of life embrace a multitude of interests, and he who reasons in any one of them, without consulting the rest, is a visionary unsuited to control the business of the world.
James F. Cooper
It is a misfortune that necessity has induced men to accord greater license to this formidable engine, in order to obtain liberty, than can be borne with less important objects in view for the press, like fire, is an excellent servant, but a terrible master.
James F. Cooper
Death is appalling to those of the most iron nerves, when it comes quietly and in the stillness and solitude of night.
James F. Cooper
No one, who is familiar with the bustle and activity of an American commercial town, would recognise, in the repose which now reigns in the ancient mart of Rhode Island, a place that, in its day, has been ranked amongst the most important ports along the whole line of our extended coast.
James F. Cooper
It is the fate of all things to ripen, and then to decay.
James F. Cooper
A soul,--a spark of the never-dying flame that separates man from all the other beings of earth.
James F. Cooper
There is a destiny in war, to which a brave man knows how to submit with the same courage that he faces his foes.
James F. Cooper
Near the centre of that State of New York lies an extensive district of country, whose surface is a succession of hills and dales, or, to speak with greater deference to geographical definitions, of mountains and valleys.
James F. Cooper
If the newspapers are useful in overthrowing tyrants, it is only to establish a tyranny of their own.
James F. Cooper
All that a good government aims at... is to add no unnecessary and artificial aid to the force of its own unavoidable consequences, and to abstain from fortifying and accumulating social inequality as a means of increasing political inequalities.
James F. Cooper