123 Quotes by Nathaniel Philbrick

  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    The act of self-expression – through writing a journal or letters – often enables a survivor to distance himself from his fears.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    This mortal life decays apace How soon the bubble’s broke Adam and all his numerous race Are Vanity and Smoke.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    In a letter hastily written to a friend in London, Cushman saw only doom and disaster ahead. “Friend, if ever we make a plantation God works a miracle, especially considering how scant we shall be of victuals, and most of all un-united amongst ourselves and devoid of good tutors and regiment. Violence will break all. Where is the meek and humble spirit of Moses?

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    By doing their best to destroy the Native people who had welcomed and sustained their forefathers, New Englanders had destroyed their forefathers’ way of life.

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    It is painful to witness the death of the smallest of God’s created beings, much more, one in which life is so vigorously maintained as the Whale! And when I saw this, the largest and most terrible of all created animals bleeding, quivering, dying a victim to the cunning of man, my feelings were indeed peculiar!

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    When a group of frontiersmen camped on the middle fork of Elkhorn Creek heard about the militiamen’s deaths in Massachusetts, they decided to name their outpost for the historic event. That is why what was then a part of Virginia is known today as Lexington, Kentucky.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    It may have been true that from a strictly legal standpoint there was nothing wrong with how Winslow and the other Plymouth officials acquired large amounts of Pokanoket land. And yet, from a practical and moral standpoint, the process removed the Indians from their territory as effectively – and as cheaply – as driving them off at gunpoint.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    The whaleman’s rule of thumb was that, before diving, a whale blew once for each minute it would spend underwater. Whalemen also knew that while underwater the whale continued at the same speed and in the same direction as it had been traveling before the dive. Thus, an experienced whaleman could calculate with remarkable precision where a submerged whale was likely to reappear.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    The future is never more important than to a people on the verge of a cataclysm.

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