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Quotes

Revolutions are always verbose.

—Leon Trotsky, 1933

An oppressed people are authorized, whenever they can, to rise and break their fetters.

—Henry Clay, 1842

Insurgents are like conquerors: they must go forward; the moment they are stopped, they are lost.

—Duke of Wellington, c. 1819

All civilization has from time to time become a thin crust over a volcano of revolution.

—Havelock Ellis, 1921

The brutalities of progress are called revolutions. When they are over we realize this: that the human has been roughly handled, but that it has advanced.

—Victor Hugo, 1862

Revolutionaries are greater sticklers for formality than conservatives.

—Italo Calvino, 1957

This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government, they can exercise their constitutional right of amending it, or their revolutionary right to dismember or overthrow it.

—Abraham Lincoln, 1861

The peasants alone are revolutionary, for they have nothing to lose and everything to gain. The starving peasant, outside the class system, is the first among the exploited to discover that only violence pays. For him there is no compromise, no possible coming to terms. 

—Frantz Fanon, 1961

It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees.

—Dolores Ibárruri, 1936

Who draws his sword against his prince must throw away the scabbard.

—James Howell, 1659

Make the revolution a parent of settlement and not a nursery of future revolutions.

—Edmund Burke, 1790

Disobedience, in the eyes of anyone who has read history, is man’s original virtue. It is through disobedience that progress has been made—through disobedience and through rebellion.

—Oscar Wilde, 1891

Revolutions have never lightened the burden of tyranny, they have only shifted it to another shoulder.

—George Bernard Shaw, 1903