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704 pages, ebook
First published July 30, 2019
“During war, the laws are silent.”—Quintus Tullius Cicero
“With every new endeavor, there’s always the hope that you will find happiness, be less lonely.”
“I once thought the greatest sin of war was violence. It isn’t. The greatest sin is it requires good men to become practical.”
“No god listens. There are only men. And what one does, another may undo. That is my only religion. That of the hand and the lever.”
“How many do not know you. How many will soon forget you. How many praise you today to offer contempt tomorrow. Permanence of fame, power, dominion of the individual, are illusions. All that will be measured, all that will last, is your mastery of yourself.”
“You know I believe we all begin equal parts light and dark. I fear you think your strength lies in your darkness. But the measure of a man is not the fear he sows in his enemies. It is the hope he gives his friends.”
“But for all this new civilization’s love affair with technology, they’ve been seduced by their own cleverness and fail to understand the simple truth: lying is not a science, it is an art. And art will always be a human language.”