107 Quotes by Margaret MacMillan
- Author Margaret MacMillan
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As the American historian John Lewis Gaddis put it, it is like looking in a rearview mirror: if you only look back, you will land in the ditch, but it helps to know where you have come from and who else is on the road.
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- Author Margaret MacMillan
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Louvain was a dull place, said a guidebook in 1910, but when the time came it made a spectacular fire.
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- Author Margaret MacMillan
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The delegates to the peace conference after World War I “tried to impose a rational order on an irrational world.
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- Author Margaret MacMillan
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His older compatriot Friedrich Nietzsche had entertained no such hopes: “For long now our entire European culture has been moving with a tormenting tension that grows greater from decade to decade, as if towards a catastrophe: restless, violent, precipitate, like a river that wants to reach its end.”23.
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- Author Margaret MacMillan
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Wilson agreed reluctantly to their attempts: “I don’t much like to make a compromise with people who aren’t reasonable. They will always believe that, by persisting in their claims, they will be able to obtain more.
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- Author Margaret MacMillan
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The failure of the talks between Chamberlain and the German ambassador in London, the public and private outbursts of the Kaiser, the well-reported anti-British and pro-Boer sentiment among the German public, even the silly controversy over whether Chamberlain had insulted the Prussian army, all left their residue of mistrust and resentments in Britain as well as in Germany.
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- Author Margaret MacMillan
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What may seem like a reasonable way of protecting oneself can look very different from the other side of the border.
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- Author Margaret MacMillan
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The French would do whatever it took to get Britain to commit itself. In 1909 they produced a carefully faked document, said to have been discovered when a French commercial traveler picked up the wrong bag on a train, which purported to show Germany’s invasion plans for Britain.
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- Author Margaret MacMillan
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Passionate and forcefully argued, Tar Sands is a wake-up call not just to Canadians but to the wider world to take a serious look at what is happening in northern Alberta. To call this book a polemic is a compliment.
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