
It takes a real man to subordinate himself.
On the public record
Every politician on the site, every statement on file. Search, filter, and read the public record.
35,700+·quotes on file

It takes a real man to subordinate himself.

You can not trade with men who suspect you.

Good will is the forerunner of trade, and trade is the great amicable instrument of the world on that account.

There is nothing so hampering and nothing so demeaning as jealousy.

The whisper of grief that has blown all through the world is now silent, and the sun of hope seems to spread its rays and to change the earth with a new prospect of happiness.

I am perfectly aware that I have in me all the insurgent elements of the human race.

It wars perfectly natural to break this precedent, natural because the demand for intimate conference took precedence over every other duty.

The men who have fought in this war have been the men from free nations who were determined that that sort of thing should end now and forever.

The stern covenanter tradition that is behind me sends many an echo down the years.

I do not believe that it was fancy on my part that I heard in the voice of welcome uttered in the streets of this great city and in the streets of Paris something more than a personal welcome.

That sturdy, serene soldier stood and uttered, not the words of triumph, but the simple words of affection for his soldiers, and the conviction which he summed up, in a sentence which I will not try accurately to quote but reproduce in its…

The peoples of the world want peace and they want it now, not merely by conquest of arms but by agreement of mind.

When we know one another we can not hate one another.

The harness of precedent is sometimes a very sad and harassing trammel.

Yet, after I have uttered the word 'courage,' it comes into my mind that it would take more courage to resist the great moral tide now running in the world than to yield to it, than to obey it.

Nothing less than this would have justified me in leaving the important tasks which fall upon me upon the other side of the sea.

The welcome which you have given me and Mrs. Wilson has been so warm, so natural, so evidently from the heart that we have been more than pleased; we have been touched by it.

We have used great words, all of us, we have used the great words 'right' and 'justice', and now we are to prove whether or not we understand those words and how they are to be applied to the particular settlements which must conclude this…