60 Quotes by Bruce Catton

  • Author Bruce Catton
  • Quote

    Say this for big league baseball - it is beyond any question the greatest conversation piece ever invented in America.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Bruce Catton
  • Quote

    To learn to get along without, to realize that what the world is going to demand of us may be a good deal more important than what we are entitled to demand of it - this is a hard lesson.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Bruce Catton
  • Quote

    The present moment is nice but it does not last. Living in it is like waiting in a junction town for the morning limited; the junction may be interesting but some day you will have to leave it and you do not know where the limited will take you.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Bruce Catton
  • Quote

    I think I was always subconsciously driven by an attempt to restate that faith and to show where it was properly grounded, how it grew out of what a great many young men on both sides felt and believed and were brave enough to do

  • Tags
  • Share


  • Author Bruce Catton
  • Quote

    Beneath everything else, North and West, there ran a profound, unvoiced, almost subconscious conviction that the [American] nation was going to go on growing-in size, in power, in everything a man could think of-and in that belief there was a might and a fury that would take form instantly at the moment of shock.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Bruce Catton
  • Quote

    Soldiers who had been in the army long enough to know what a bloody swindle war really is would begin to feel that army life was really kind of fun, as long as [General Philip] Sheridan was up front.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Bruce Catton
  • Quote

    Here was the greatest and most moving chapter in American history, a blending of meanness and greatness, an ending and a beginning. It came out of what men were, but it did not go as men had planned.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Bruce Catton
  • Quote

    Nathan Bedford Forrest ... used his horsemen as a modern general would use motorized infantry. He liked horses because he liked fast movement, and his mounted men could get from here to there much faster than any infantry could; but when they reached the field they usually tied their horses to trees and fought on foot, and they were as good as the very best infantry. Not for nothing did Forrest say the essence of strategy was to git thar fust with the most men.

  • Tags
  • Share