Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations. 1989.
Impeach to Israel
Either i. him [Nixon] or get off his back, 888
power to i. and remove the President, 894
[if] i., a regular and peaceful inquiry would have taken place, 890
offense is whatever a majority of the House of Representatives considers [it] to be, 889
is scarcely a scare-crow, 941
power of i., 893
subject him to i. himself, 1500
your presumptuous i., 72
which are the groans of the people, 892
categorical i., 1010
man, 1348
We are all i., 1351
principles, 535
American i., 1657
may obstruct the paths to international peace, 910
struggles waged by the different peoples against U.S. i., 1927
U.S. i. has stepped into the shoes of German, Japanese, and Italian fascism, 2040
See also Capitalism
all we have left is i., 1681
nothing shall be i. unto you, 592
readiness to attempt the i., 1448
takes a bit longer, 1183
takes a little longer, 1183
we do at once, 1183
constitutional i., 1512
harm’s way, 848
wise and masterly i., 1038
endowed by their creator with certain i. rights, 397
right to make their own mistakes, 1618
rights inherent & i., 396
rights of the individual, 776
Cleveland, Grover (1885), 796; (1893), 777
Coolidge, Calvin (1925), 798
Davis, Jefferson (1861), 760
Harding, Warren G. (1921), 1999
Harrison, William Henry (1841), 763
Hayes, Rutherford B. (1877), 1380
Jefferson, Thomas (1801), 619, 1267, 1596
Kennedy, John F. (1961), 7, 77, 516, 598, 623, 661, 769–770, 1066; reading by Robert Frost, 475
Lincoln, Abraham (1861), 735, 944; (1865), 1325
Nixon, Richard M. (1973), 771
Reagan, Ronald (1985), official invitation quoting Madison, 82
Roosevelt, Franklin Delano (1933), 599
Washington, George (1789), 1344
annual i. twenty pounds, 380
have gone down the most, 144
historian should be fearless and i., 1748
and diffusion of knowledge among men, 1710
epoch of i., 1818
courage which is nourished by the love of i., 1647
of the will of the nation is a solecism, 943
preserve their i., 381
too much attached to savage i., 742
always be drastically i., 1249
country shall be i., 1621
rather starve than sell our national honor, 1303
revolution in I., 202
young man in I., 1768
their lands and property shall never be taken, 55
white man took our lands, 1545
of private life, 1647
to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men, 565
to be young and to be i., can be no longer synonymous, 2090
no i. man, 1153
enlargement of liberty for i. human beings, 901
feels he should do those things which only can and should be done by the many, 912
inalienable rights of the i., 776
increase respect for the creative i., 98
independence, 652
is naturally entitled to do as he pleases with himself, 1761
is not accountable to society for his actions, 649
is sovereign, 651
spoiled and eventually a very weak i., 83
submergence of the i. in the impersonal corporation, 141
too much i. privilege … was selfish license, 759
free development of i., 904
society has now fairly got the better of i., 903
They [creative ideas] spring from i., 898
worth of a state … is the worth of the i. composing it, 1760
incapable of being divided, 1364
from i. … they are unequal to the exertions necessary for preserving it [free government], 741
fate of the i., 1054
encouragement to i. and enterprize, 1547
no greater i. than equal treatment of unequals, 551
in life, 1092
[being drafted] is i. if you don’t [enlist], 1186
change … is i., 176
comes to pass is through effort, 1842
fall of Europe is i., 247
date which will live in i., 2066
attacks exactly as if it [mine field] were not there, 2070
he [Napoleon] forgot his i., 1154
of our economic army, 1154
first by i., 1204
hurt by i., 144
and not authority, 1443
good i. of our conduct, 451
guard against the acquisition of unwarranted i., 1177
high i. to protect them, 467
under the i. of none, 619
imaginative artist willy-nilly i. his time, 2082
how to use the i. you get, 486
I have no disposition to withhold any i. which the duty of my station will permit, 792
popular Government, without popular i.,… [is] … a Farce or a Tragedy, 969
youth must i. the tribulation,… and the triumphs … of war, 1923
all but squandered this i., 1605
all the I. I can give, 207
gift of a common tongue is a priceless i., 537
noble i., 63
We i. freedom, 666
What you have i. from your fathers, earn over again, 666
concentration of power … precedes the destruction of human i., 1458
and frustration, 1894
any i., 225
He [God] hates i., 907
quicksand of racial i., 1693
a single i., 958
strikes out against i., 8
if i., restored to the confidence of the public, 890
six sentences written by the most i. of men, 908
than that one i. Person should suffer, 953
young men … care not to i., 2084
numerous i. displayed on the American theatre, 82
land of sly i., 62
to act you must be somewhat i., 3
Alamo, 32
Appomattox Court House, 223
Arlington National Cemetery
Kennedy, John Fitzgerald, 7, 77, 516, 661, 769–770, 1066
Kennedy, Robert Francis, 8, 1864, 1995
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, 1734
Boone County Court House, Missouri, 955
Capitol Building, Washington, D.C., 13, 56, 225, 310, 490, 674, 763, 1048, 1827
Folger Shakespeare Library, 1686
Jefferson Memorial, 178, 397, 667, 1062, 1844
John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, 96–98, 104, 1632, 1753
John F. Kennedy International Airport, 1770
Kean College of New Jersey, 1799
Lexington Green marker, Massachusetts, 1940
Liberty Bell, Philadelphia, 1046
Library of Congress, 1251
James Madison Memorial Building, Madison Memorial Hall, 496, 552, 738, 782, 1450, 1548, 1854, 1932
main entrance, 497, 969
Lincoln Memorial, 1107
National Archives Building, 1296
National Museum of American History, 972, 1663, 1710
New York University, Hall of Fame, Robert E. Lee’s bust, 469
Newark State College, 1799
Normandy Chapel, 1733
Oise-Aisne Cemetery, 1733
Old South Meeting House, Boston, 1630
Post Office Building, New York City, 1439
Post Office Building, Washington, D.C., 1438
Seabees Memorial, Arlington Virginia, 1183
Statue of Liberty, 641, 655, 779, 1046, 1056, 1069, 1081, 1770
Union Station, Washington, D.C., 1252
U.S. Department of Justice Building, 963
U.S. Military Academy, West Point, 1874
University of Virginia, 238
Veterans Administration Building, Washington, D.C., 1325
White House, State Dining Room, 1462
World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago (1893), Transportation Building, 815, 1536
See also Epitaphs
want to get out, 1426
which proposes the ideal, 1456
all such i. must be sacrificed, 782
Learned I., 496
model i. and constitutions, 45
must advance also to keep pace with the times, 178
political i. aim, 782
purely democratic must, sooner or later, destroy liberty, 420
will be fairly brought to the test, 1847
will provide it [the state] with great men, 1151
of doing, 1679
of thy peace, 1466
If we desire to avoid i., 410
and the beautiful shrink, 50
of my heart, 1626
were we truly men of i., 1604
awakens the human i., 1663
no i. comparable to my own, 1680
and moral progress, 1663
superior to all men, 1349
snobs who characterize themselves as i., 1876
best human i. is still decidedly barbarous, 1156
man known to history flourishes within a dullard, 1156
rightful i., 1909
good i., 291, 297
One never expected from a Congressman more than good i., 297
peaceful i., 440
plea of good i., 1231
citizens themselves display in the affairs of state, 772
maintained your i., against your opinions, 1028
Means devoured by i., 386
pays the best i., 967
public good and the national i., 1604
public i., 1511
serve the national i., 1381
to pay i. on it [the national debt] they will pay that i. to themselves, 388
views of private i., 1551
are eternal and perpetual, 42
of men, 1456
special i., 1567
vigilant protection of all their varied i., 1670
graver threats today are i., 1896
capacity to keep peace, 1324
order, 624
organizations for peacekeeping, 1326
war’s … a medium for the practical settlement of i. differences, 1258
horse-and-buggy definition of i. c., 1763
in which the instinct for domination cloaked itself, 2039
eternal truths of the past are threatened by i., 654
with unbroken success, 53
Young men are fitter to i., than to judge, 2084
are wont to be pretty toys, 1540
which abridge distance have done most for civilization, 1536
had no special advantage from his own invention, 1535
in knowledge, 967
conduct of England towards I., 530
lawyers for Irish, 1015
curtain has descended, 234
curtain is drawn down, 234
he’s got i. teeth, 1708
ties which though light as air, are as strong as links of i., 694
of this involvement with size, 50
principles of a free constitution are i. lost, 324
national preoccupation with the i., 50
no man is an i., 134
wouldn’t be sweeping the Continent of Europe, 2046
does not answer … in politics for nations, 911
retreat to i., 910
whimpering i. in foreign policy, 1042
no confidence in the system of i., 911
was planning to proclaim a Jewish state at midnight that day, 914