What do you think?
Rate this book
78 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 432
"Never enemy yet fell into the hands of our whole forces at once; both because we apply ourselves much to navigation, and by land also send many of our men into divers countries abroad. But, when fighting with a part of it, they chance to get the better, they boast they have beaten the whole; and when they get the worse, they say they are beaten by the whole."
"And we use riches rather for opportunities of action, than for verbal ostentation."
"For both with present and future ages we shall be in admiration, for a power not without testimony, but made evident by great arguments; and which needeth not either a Homer to praise it, or any other..."
"...the stakes between us and them, whose city is not such, are not equal;"
"...choosing rather to fight and die, than to shrink and be saved..."
"but with their bodies they stood out the battle; and so in a moment, whilst fortune inclineth neither way, left their lives not in fear, but in opinion of victory."
"For to famous men all the earth is a sepulchre: and their virtues shall be testified, not only by the inscription in stone at home, but by an unwritten record of the mind..."