436 Quotes by Edward Gibbon

  • Author Edward Gibbon
  • Quote

    In the various states of society, armies are recruited from very different motives. Barbarians are urged by the love of war; the citizens of a free republic may be prompted by a principle of duty; the subjects, or at least the nobles, of a monarchy, are animated by a sentiment of honor; but the timid and luxurious inhabitants of a declining empire must be allured into the service by the hopes of profit, or compelled by the dread of punishment.

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  • Author Edward Gibbon
  • Quote

    Man has much more to fear from the passions of his fellow-creatures, than from the convulsions of the elements.

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  • Author Edward Gibbon
  • Quote

    There exists in human nature a strong propensity to depreciate the advantages, and to magnify the evils, of the present times.

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  • Author Edward Gibbon
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    Many a sober Christian would rather admit that a wafer is God than that God is a cruel and capricious tyrant.

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  • Author Edward Gibbon
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    At that time the archiepiscopal throne of Alexandria was filled by Theophilus, the perpetual enemy of peace and virtue; a bold, bad man, whose hands were alternately polluted with gold and with blood.

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  • Author Edward Gibbon
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    In everyage and country, the wiser, or at least the stronger, ofthetwosexes, hasusurped thepowers ofthe state, and confined the other to the cares and pleasures of domestic life.

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  • Author Edward Gibbon
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    In this primitive and abject state [of hunters and gatherers], which ill deserves the name of society, the human brute, without arts or laws, almost without sense or language, is poorly distinguished from the rest of the animal creation.

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  • Author Edward Gibbon
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    To the University of Oxford I acknowledge no obligation; and she will as cheerfully renounce me for a son, as I am willing to disclaim her for a mother. I spent fourteen months at Magdalen College: they proved the fourteen months the most idle and unprofitable of my whole life.

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  • Author Edward Gibbon
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    A small number of temples was protected by the fears, the venality, the taste, or the prudence of the civil and ecclesiastical governors. The temple of the Celestial Venus at Carthage, whose sacred precincts formed a circumference of two miles, was judiciously converted into a Christian church; and a similar consecration has preserved inviolate the majestic dome of the Pantheon at Rome.

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