Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations. 1989.
NUMBER: | 1928 |
AUTHOR: | Livy (59 |
QUOTATION: | Thus, if there is anyone who is confident that he can advise me as to the best advantage of the state in this campaign which I am about to conduct, let him not refuse his services to the state, but come with me into Macedonia. I will furnish him with his sea-passage, with a horse, a tent, and even travel-funds. If anyone is reluctant to do this and prefers the leisure of the city to the hardships of campaigning, let him not steer the ship from on shore. |
ATTRIBUTION: | Lucius Aemilius Paulus is addressing the people at a public meeting. President Franklin Roosevelt attacked armchair generals by citing this and preceding passages at his press conference, March 17, 1942: Being of an historical turn of mind, [I figured] that probably some poor devil had gone through this process of annoyance in past years, some previous time in history, so I went quite far back and I found [Lucius Aemilius] it sounds as if it were written in 1942.The Public Papers and Addresses of Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1942, p. 166 (1950). See also No. 1941. |
SUBJECTS: | War |