Mention277188
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so:description | ;Preface (en) |
so:description | Chapter VIII Diplomacy (en) |
so:description | Chapter III Washington (en) |
so:description | Chapter XII Eccentricity (en) |
so:description | Chapter XI The Battle of the Rams (en) |
so:description | Chapter VI Rome (en) |
so:description | Chapter VII Treason (en) |
so:description | Capter IV Harvard College (en) |
so:description | Chapter XIV Dilettantism (en) |
so:description | Chapter XVI The Press (en) |
so:description | Chapter I Quincy (en) |
so:description | Chapter V Berlin (en) |
so:description | Chapter II Boston (en) |
so:description | Chapter IX Foes or Friends (en) |
so:description | Chapter XVII President Grant (en) |
so:description | The Education of Henry Adams (1907) (en) |
so:isPartOf | https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Henry_Adams |
so:description | Chapter XV Darwinism (en) |
so:description | Chapter X Political Morality (en) |
so:description | Chapter XIII The Perfection of Human Society (en) |
so:text | In time one came to recognize the type in other men, with differences and variations, as normal; men whose energies were the greater, the less they wasted on thought; men who sprang from the soil to power; apt to be distrustful of themselves and of others; shy; jealous; sometimes vindictive; more or less dull in outward appearance; always needing stimulants, but for whom action was the highest stimulant — the instinct of fight. (en) |
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qkg:Quotation261328 | qkg:hasMention |
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