77 Quotes by Stephen E. Ambrose

  • Author Stephen E. Ambrose
  • Quote

    Within Easy Company they had made the best friends they had ever had, or would ever have. They were prepared to die for each other; more important, they were prepared to kill for each other.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Stephen E. Ambrose
  • Quote

    I read about a number of generals and colonels who are said to have wandered about exhorting the troops to advance. That must have been very inspirational! I suspect, however, that the men were more interested and more impressed by junior officers and NCOs who were willing to lead them rather than having some general pointing out the direction in which they should go.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Stephen E. Ambrose
  • Quote

    Nothing is inevitable in life. People make choices, and those choices have results, and we all live with the results.

  • Share

  • Author Stephen E. Ambrose
  • Quote

    Winters and Welsh simply walked toward the man, who took off. The Americans split the silverware between them. Forty-five years later, both men were still using the Berchtesgaden Hof’s silverware in their homes. After getting what he most wanted out of the place, Winters then.

  • Share

  • Author Stephen E. Ambrose
  • Quote

    The past is a source of knowledge, and the future is a source of hope. Love of the past implies faith in the future.

  • Share

  • Author Stephen E. Ambrose
  • Quote

    The Canadians have managed to live peacefully with their Indians. It is disgrace that the United States has not done the same.

  • Share

  • Author Stephen E. Ambrose
  • Quote

    In one of his last newsletters, Mike Ranney wrote: “In thinking back on the days of Easy Company, I’m treasuring my remark to a grandson who asked, ‘Grandpa, were you a hero in the war?’ No,‘” I answered, ’but I served in a company of heroes.

  • Share

  • Author Stephen E. Ambrose
  • Quote

    It is perhaps the consummate irony,” Arthur Moore writes, “that at each step up from savagery the human race has regarded the fruits of progress with a degree of misgiving and often longed against reason for a return to a simpler condition.

  • Share

  • Author Stephen E. Ambrose
  • Quote

    When Hitler declared war on the United States, he was betting that German soldiers, raised up in the Hitler Youth, would always out fight American soldiers, brought up in the Boy Scouts. He lost that bet. The Boy Scouts had been taught how to figure their way out of their own problems.

  • Share