Quotes and Images From Motley s History of the Netherlands
61 pages
English

Quotes and Images From Motley's History of the Netherlands

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61 pages
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QUOTES AND IMAGES FROM JOHN LOTHROP MOTLEY
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Quotes and Images From Motley's History of the Netherlands, by John Lothrop Motley This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net Title: Quotes and Images From Motley's History of the Netherlands Author: John Lothrop Motley Release Date: September 3, 2004 [EBook #7552] [Last updated on February 19, 2007] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUOTES FROM MOTLEY ***
Produced by David Widger
HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS
By John Lothrop Motley
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Motley's History of the Netherlands Title Page The Siege of Antwerp Prince William of Orange-Nassau (William the Silent) The Earl of Leichester Alexander Farnese, Prince of Parma John of Barneveld Bookcover The Hague
1566, the last year of peace A pleasantry called voluntary contributions or benevolences A good lawyer is a bad Christian A terrible animal, indeed, is an unbridled woman A common hatred united them, for a time at least
A penal offence in the republic to talk of peace or of truce A most fatal success A country disinherited by nature of its rights A free commonwealth—was thought an absurdity A hard bargain when both parties are losers A burnt cat fears the fire A ...

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Publié le 08 décembre 2010
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QUOTES AND IMAGES FROM JOHN LOTHROPMOTLEYThe Project Gutenberg EBook of Quotes and Images From Motley's History ofthe Netherlands, by John Lothrop MotleyThis eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and withalmost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away orre-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License includedwith this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.netTitle: Quotes and Images From Motley's History of the NetherlandsAuthor: John Lothrop MotleyRelease Date: September 3, 2004 [EBook #7552][Last updated on February 19, 2007]Language: EnglishCharacter set encoding: ISO-8859-1*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUOTES FROM MOTLEY ***Produced by David WidgerHISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDSBy John Lothrop Motley
 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONSMotley's History of the NetherlandsTitle PageThe Siege of AntwerpPrince William of Orange-Nassau (William the Silent)The Earl of LeichesterAlexander Farnese, Prince of ParmaJohn of BarneveldBookcoverThe Hague1566, the last year of peaceA pleasantry called voluntarycontributions or benevolences
A good lawyer is a bad ChristianA terrible animal, indeed, is anunbridled womanA common hatred united them, for a timeat leastA penal offence in the republic to talkof peace or of truceA most fatal successA country disinherited by nature of itsrightsA free commonwealth—was thought anabsurdityA hard bargain when both parties arelosersA burnt cat fears the fireA despot really keeps no accounts, norneed to do soA sovereign remedy for the disease oflibertyA pusillanimous peace, always possibleat any periodA man incapable of fatigue, ofperplexity, or of fearA truce he honestly considered apitfall of destructionA great historian is almost a statesmanAble men should be by design and ofpurpose suppressedAbout equal to that of England at thesame periodAbsolution for incest was afforded atthirty-six livresAbstinence from unproductiveconsumptionAbstinence from inquisition intoconsciences and private parlourAbsurd affectation of candorAccepting a new tyrant in place of theone so long ago deposedAccustomed to the faded gallantries
Achieved the greatness to which theyhad not been bornAct of Uniformity required Papists toassistActs of violence which under pretext ofreligionAdmired or despised, as if he or shewere our contemporaryAdulation for inferiors whom theydespiseAdvanced orthodox party-PuritansAdvancing age diminished his tendencyto other carnal pleasuresAdvised his Majesty to bestow an annualbribe upon Lord BurleighAffecting to discredit themAffection of his friends and the wrathof his enemiesAge when toleration was a viceAgreements were valid only until heshould repentAlas! the benighted victims ofsuperstition hugged their chainsAlas! we must always have something topersecuteAlas! one never knows when one becomesa boreAlexander's exuberant discretionAll Italy was in his handsAll fellow-worms togetherAll business has been transacted withopen doorsAll reading of the scriptures(forbidden)All the majesty which decoration couldimpartAll denounced the image-breakingAll claimed the privilege ofpersecutingAll his disciples and converts are to
be punished with deathAll Protestants were beheaded, burned,or buried aliveAll classes are conservative bynecessityAll the ministers and greatfunctionaries received presentsAll offices were sold to the highestbidderAllow her to seek a profit from hismisfortuneAllowed the demon of religious hatredto enter into its bodyAlmost infinite power of the meanest ofpassionsAlready looking forward to the revoltof the slave StatesAltercation between Luther and Erasmus,upon predestinationAlways less apt to complain ofirrevocable eventsAmerican Unholy InquisitionAmuse them with this peace negotiationAn inspiring and delightful recreation(auto-da-fe)An hereditary papacy, a perpetualpope-emperorAn age when to think was a crimeAn unjust God, himself the origin ofnisAn order of things in which mediocrityis at a premiumAnarchy which was deemed inseparablefrom a non-regal formAnatomical study of what has ceased totsixeAnd give advice. Of that, althoughalways a spendthriftAnd now the knife of another priest-ledfanaticAnd thus this gentle and heroic spirit
took its flightAngle with their dissimulation as witha hookAnnounced his approaching marriage withthe Virgin MaryAnnual harvest of iniquity by which hisrevenue was increasedAnxiety to do nothing wrong, thesenators did nothing at allAre apt to discharge such obligations—(by) ingratitudeAre wont to hang their piety on thebell-ropeArgument in a circleArgument is exhausted and either actionor compromise beginsAristocracy of God's electArminianismArrested on suspicion, tortured tillconfessionArrive at their end by fraud, whenviolence will not avail themArtilleryAs logical as men in their cups areprone to beAs the old woman had told the EmperorAdrianAs if they were free will not make themeerfAs lieve see the Spanish as theCalvinistic inquisitionAs ready as papists, with age, fagot,and excommunicationAs with his own people, keeping noback-door openAs neat a deception by telling thehturtAt a blow decapitated FranceAt length the twig was becoming theeert
Atheist, a tyrant, because he resisteddictation from the clergyAttachment to a half-drowned land andto a despised religionAttacked by the poetic maniaAttacking the authority of the popeAttempting to swim in two watersAuction sales of judicial ermineBaiting his hook a little to hisappetiteBarbara Blomberg, washerwoman ofRatisbonBatavian legion was the imperial bodydraugBeacons in the upward path of mankindBeating the Netherlanders intoChristianityBeautiful damsel, who certainly did notlack suitorsBecause he had been successful (hated)Becoming more learned, and thereforemore ignorantBeen already crimination andrecrimination more than enoughBefore morning they had sacked thirtychurchesBegan to scatter golden arguments witha lavish handBeggars of the sea, as theseprivateersmen designated themselvesBehead, torture, burn alive, and buryalive all hereticsBeing the true religion, proved by somany testimoniesBelieved in the blessed advent ofecaepBeneficent and charitable purposes)raW(best defence in this case is littlebetter than an impeachment
Bestowing upon others what was not hispropertyBetter to be governed by magistratesthan mobsBetter is the restlessness of a nobleambitionBeware of a truce even more than of aecaepBigotry which was the prevailingcharacteristic of the ageBishop is a consecrated pirateBlessed freedom from speech-makingBlessing of God upon the Devil's workBold reformer had only a new dogma inplace of the old onesBomb-shells were not often usedalthough known for a centuryBreath, time, and paper were profuselywasted and nothing gainedBrethren, parents, and children, havingwives in commonBribed the DeityBungling diplomatists and credulousdotardsBurned, strangled, beheaded, or buriedalive (100,000)Burned alive if they objected totransubstantiationBurning with bitter revenge for all thefavours he had receivedBurning of Servetus at GenevaBusiness of an officer to fight, of ageneral to conquerBut the habit of dissimulation wasinveterateBut after all this isn't a war It is arevolutionBut not thoughtlessly indulgent to theyobButchery in the name of Christ wassuspended
By turns, we all govern and aregovernedCalling a peace perpetual can nevermake it soCalumny is often a stronger and morelasting power than disdainCan never be repaired and neversufficiently regrettedCanker of a long peaceCare neither for words nor menaces inany matterCargo of imaginary gold dust wasexported from the James RiverCasting up the matter "as pinchingly aspossibly might be"Casual outbursts of eternal friendshipCertain number of powers, almostexactly equal to each otherCertainly it was worth an eighty years'rawChanged his positions and contradictedhimself day by dayCharacter of brave men to act, not toexpectCharles the Fifth autocrat of half thedlrowChief seafaring nations of the worldwere already protestantChieftains are dwarfed in theestimation of followersChildren who had never set foot on theerohsChristian sympathy and a smallassistance not being sufficientChronicle of events must not beanticipatedClaimed the praise of moderation thattheir demands were so fewCold water of conventional andcommonplace encouragementCollege of "peace-makers," who wrangled
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