F. W. Robertson

Cited as F. W. Robertson. — 24 quotations

Bribe

Neither is he worthy who bribes a man to vote against his conscience.

Cajole

I am not about to cajole or flatter you into a reception of my views.

Calculate

The strong passions, whether good or bad, never calculate.

Conventionalism

They gaze on all with dead, dim eyes, -- wrapped in conventionalisms, . . . simulating feelings according to a received standard.

Delicate

There are some things too delicate and too sacred to be handled rudely without injury to truth.

Derogation

He counted it no derogation of his manhood to be seen to weep.

Finery

Her mistress' cast-off finery.

Idiocy

I will undertake to convict a man of idiocy, if he can not see the proof that three angles of a triangle are equal to two right angles.

Immeasurableness

Eternity and immeasurableness belong to thought alone.

Incarnation

The very incarnation of selfishness.

Intact

When all external differences have passed away, one element remains intact, unchanged, -- the everlasting basis of our common nature, the human soul.

Intensity

If you would deepen the intensity of light, you must be content to bring into deeper blackness and more distinct and definite outline the shade that accompanies it.

Laugh

That man is a bad man who has not within him the power of a hearty laugh.

Level

When merit shall find its level.

Politics

When we say that two men are talking politics, we often mean that they are wrangling about some mere party question.

Radicalism

Radicalism means root work; the uprooting of all falsehoods and abuses.

Recoil

The recoil from formalism is skepticism.

Rhetorician

The understanding is that by which a man becomes a mere logician and a mere rhetorician.

Spectral

He that feels timid at the spectral form of evil is not the man to spread light.

Uniform

There are many things which, a soldier will do in his plain clothes which he scorns to do in his uniform.

Ventilation

Insuring, for the laboring man, better ventilation.

Vote

To vote on large principles, to vote honestly, requires a great amount of information.

War

Men will ever distinguish war from mere bloodshed.

Weather

You will weather the difficulties yet.