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Quotes About Statesman

A great statesman thinks several times, and acts; a young lady acts, and thinks several times.
~ Thomas Hardy
Benjamin Franklin, the American statesman and polymath, knew that a balanced, liberal education for all was essential for the proper flourishing of the American dream.
~ Ken Robinson
A statesman of the school of sound common sense, and a philanthropist of the most practical type, a patriot without a superior - his monument is a country preserved.
~ C. S. Harrington
Of course a man has to take advantage of his opportunities, but the opportunities have to come," he told an audience in Cambridge, England, in the spring of 1910. "If there is not the war, you don't get the great general; if there is not the great occasion, you don't get the great statesman; if Lincoln had lived in times of peace, no one would know his name now.
~ Candice Millard
The difference between being an elder statesman And posing successfully as an elder statesman Is practically negligible.
~ T. S. Eliot
You can always get the truth from an American statesman after he has turned 70, or given up all hope of the Presidency.
~ Wendell Phillips
A statesman who is enamored of existing evils, as distin-quished from the Liberal, who wishes to replace them with others.
~ Ambrose Bierce
Now he is a statesman, when what he really wants is to be what most reporters are, adult delinquents.
~ Peggy Noonan
To delight in war is a merit in the soldier, a dangerous quality in the captain, and a positive crime in the statesman.
~ George Santayana
it is a maxim founded on the universal experience of mankind that no nation is to be trusted farther than it is bound by its interest, and no prudent statesman or politician will venture to depart from it.
~ Nathaniel Philbrick
Henry Kissinger once said of this former World War II Marine, "If I had to entrust the United States to one man, George Shultz would be my choice." Schlesinger
~ Tom Brokaw
The first, the supreme, the most far-reaching act of judgment that the statesman and commander have to make is to establish by that test the kind of war on which they are embarking; neither mistaking it for, nor trying to turn it into, something that is alien to its nature.
~ Carl von Clausewitz
The Statesman who, knowing his instrument to be ready, and seeing War inevitable, hesitates to strike first is guilty of a crime against his country.
~ Carl von Clausewitz
Von der Goltz in excuse for the action of the late President Kruger in 1899: "The Statesman who, knowing his instrument to be ready, and seeing War inevitable, hesitates to strike first is guilty of a crime against his country.
~ Carl von Clausewitz
To delight in war is a merit in the soldier, a dangerous quality in the captain, and a positive crime in the statesman.
~ George Santayana
A statesman is a politician who places himself at the service of the nation. A politician is a statesman who places the nation at his service.
~ Georges Pompidou
A ginooine statesman should be on his guard, if he must hev beliefs, not to b'lieve 'em too hard.
~ James Russell Lowell
There is a difference between the typical politician and the statesman. A typical politician is that person who tells people what people want to hear, while the statesman tells people what people need to know.
~ Óscar Arias
The statesman who yields to war fever must realise that once the signal is given, he is no longer the master of policy but the slave of unforeseeable and uncontrollable events.
~ Winston Churchill
If there is not the war, you don't get the great general; if there is not a great occasion, you don't get a great statesman; if Lincoln had lived in a time of peace, no one would have known his name.
~ Theodore Roosevelt
A politician is a man who understands government, and it takes a politician to run a government. A statesman is a politician who's been dead 10 or 15 years.
~ Harry S. Truman
Education and morals make the good man, the good statesman, the good ruler.
~ Aristotle
The German Chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, was one of the few authentic geniuses among nineteenth-century statesmen.
~ Niall Ferguson
The statesman is therefore like one of the heroes in classical drama who has had a vision of the future but who cannot transmit it directly to his fellow-men and who cannot validate its truth. Nations learn only by experience; they 'know' only when it is too late to act. But statesmen must act as if their intuition were already experience, as if their aspiration were truth.
~ Niall Ferguson