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Quotes from Edmund Burke

If all the absurd theories of lawyers and divines were to vitiate the objects in which they are conversant, we should have no law and no religion left in the world. But an absurd theory on one side of a question forms no justification for alleging a false fact or promulgating mischievous maxims on the other.
- Edmund Burke
It only needs a good man to do nothing for evil to triumph.
- Edmund Burke
Before the Christian religion had, as it were, humanized the idea of the divinity, and brought it somewhat nearer to us, there was very little said of the love of God.
- Edmund Burke
What is the use of discussing a man's abstract right to food or medicine? The question is upon the method of procuring and administering them. In that deliberation I shall always advise to call in the aid of the farmer and the physician, rather than the professor of metaphysics.
- Edmund Burke
The very idea of the fabrication of a new government is enough to fill us with disgust and horror.
- Edmund Burke
People will not look forward to posterity, who never look backward to their ancestors.
- Edmund Burke
The restraints on men, as well as their liberties, are both to be reckoned among their rights.
- Edmund Burke
Such sanguine declarations tend to lull authority asleep,—to encourage it rashly to engage in perilous adventures of untried policy,—to neglect those provisions, preparations, and precautions which distinguish benevolence from imbecility, and without which no man can answer for the salutary effect of any abstract plan of government or of freedom. For want of these, they have seen the medicine of the state corrupted into its poison.
- Edmund Burke
When they smile, I see blood trickling down their faces; I see their insidious purposes; I see that the object of all their cajoling is—blood! I now warn my countrymen to beware of these execrable philosophers, whose only object it is to destroy every thing that is good here, and to establish immorality and murder by precept and example—'Hic niger est hunc tu Romane caveto' ['Such a man is evil; beware of him, Roman'. Horace, Satires I. 4. 85.].
- Edmund Burke
All general privations are great, because they are all terrible; vacuity, darkness, solitude, and silence .
- Edmund Burke
This is the reason of an appearance very frequent in madmen; that they remain whole days and nights, sometimes whole years, in the constant repetition of some remark, some complaint, or song; which having struck powerfully on their disordered imagination, in the beginning of their frenzy, every repetition reinforces it with new strength, and the hurry of their spirits, unrestrained by the curb of reason, continues it to the end of their lives.
- Edmund Burke
There is no qualification for government but virtue and wisdom, actual or presumptive.
- Edmund Burke