Elihu Root Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Elihu Root's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Former U.S. Senator Elihu Root's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 38 quotes on this page collected since February 15, 1845! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
All quotes by Elihu Root: Duty Exercise Human Nature Justice Opinions War more...
  • The limitation upon this mode of promoting peace lies in the fact that it consists in an appeal to the civilized side of man, while war is the product of forces proceeding from man's original savage nature.

    War   Lying   Men  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • Prejudice and passion and suspicion are more dangerous than the incitement of self-interest or the most stubborn adherence to real differences of opinion regarding rights.

    Real   Passion   Self  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • The point of departure of the process to which we wish to contribute is the fact that war is the natural reaction of human nature in the savage state, while peace is the result of acquired characteristics.

    War   Wish   Facts  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • The framers of the Constitution realized that . . . there needed to be some guardian of the sober second thought, and so they created the Senate to fulfill that high and vitally important duty.

  • Honest people, mistakenly believing in the justice of their cause, are led to support injustice.

    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • The line of least resistance in the progress of civilization is to make that theoretical postulate real by the continually increasing force of the world's public opinion.

    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • Human nature must have come much nearer perfection than it is now, or will be in many generations, to exclude from such a control prejudice, selfishness, ambition, and injustice.

    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • I observe that there are two entirely different theories according to which individual men seek to get on in the world. One theory leads a man to pull down everybody around him in order to climb up on them to a higher place. The other leads a man to help everybody around him in order that he may go up with them.

    Men   Order   Two  
  • Secretary of War Stanton used to get out of patience with Lincoln because he was all the time pardoning men who ought to be shot.

    Patience   War   Men  
  • It is only through the power of association that those of any calling exercise due influence in their communities.

  • It is not uncommon in modern times to see governments straining every nerve to keep the peace, and the people whom they represent, with patriotic enthusiasm and resentment over real or fancied wrongs, urging them forward to war.

    Real   War   Patriotic  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • It is to be observed that every case of war averted is a gain in general, for it helps to form a habit of peace, and community habits long continued become standards of conduct.

    War   Long   Community  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • Claims of right and insistence upon obligations may depend upon treaty stipulations, or upon the rules of international law, or upon the sense of natural justice applied to the circumstances of a particular case, or upon disputed facts.

    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • The law of the survival of the fittest led inevitably to the survival and predominance of the men who were effective in war and who loved it because they were effective.

    War   Men   Law  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • The growth of modern constitutional government compels for its successful practice the exercise of reason and considerate judgment by the individual citizens who constitute the electorate.

    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • Cruelty to men and to the lower animals as well, which would have passed unnoticed a century ago, now shocks the sensibilities and is regarded as wicked and degrading.

    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • Politics is the practical exercise of the art of self-government, and somebody must attend to it if we are to have self-government; somebody must study it, and learn the art, and exercise patience and sympathy and skill to bring the multitude of opinions and wishes of self-governing people into such order that some prevailing opinion may be expressed and peaceably accepted. Otherwise, confusion will result either in dictatorship or anarchy. The principal ground of reproach against any American citizen should be that he is not a politician. Everyone ought to be, as Lincoln was.

    Art   Exercise   Self  
    "Men and Policies: Addresses". Book by Elihu Root, ed. Robert Bacon and James B. Scott, p. 75, "Lincoln as a Leader of Men", 1924.
  • The wolf always charges the lamb with muddying the stream.

    Lambs   Streams  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • Gradually, everything that happens in the world is coming to be of interest everywhere in the world, and, gradually, thoughtful men and women everywhere are sitting in judgment upon the conduct of all nations.

    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • The mere assemblage of peace loving people to interchange convincing reasons for their common faith, mere exhortation and argument to the public in favor of peace in general fall short of the mark.

    Faith   Fall   People  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • War was forced upon mankind in his original civil and social condition.

    War   Social   Mankind  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • The theoretical postulate of all diplomatic discussion between nations is the assumed willingness of every nation to do justice.

    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • Moral disarmament is to safeguard the future; material disarmament is to save for the present, that there may be a future to safeguard.

    May   Moral   Disarmament  
  • No nation now sets forth to despoil another upon the avowed ground that it desires the spoils.

    Desire   Spoil   Nations  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • Nothing is more important in the preservation of peace than to secure among the great mass of the people living under constitutional government a just conception of the rights which their nation has against others and of the duties their nation owes to others.

  • The attractive idea that we can now have a parliament of man with authority to control the conduct of nations by legislation or an international police force with power to enforce national conformity to rules of right conduct is a counsel of perfection.

    Men   Ideas   Perfection  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • To deal with the true causes of war one must begin by recognizing as of prime relevancy to the solution of the problem the familiar fact that civilization is a partial, incomplete, and, to a great extent, superficial modification of barbarism.

    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • There is so much of good in human nature that men grow to like each other upon better acquaintance, and this points to another way in which we may strive to promote the peace of the world.

    Men   World   May  
    Elihu Root (1916). “Addresses on International Subjects”
  • When a teacher of the future comes to point out to the youth of America how the highest rewards of intellect and devotion can be gained, he may say to them, not by subtlety and intrigue; not by wire pulling and demagoguery; not by the arts of popularity; not by skill and shiftiness in following expediency; but by being firm in devotion to the principles of manhood and the application of morals and the courage of righteousness in the public life of our country; by being a man without guile and without fear, without selfishness, and with devotion to duty, devotion to his country.

  • Men do not fail; they give up trying.

    Giving Up   Failure   Men  
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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 38 quotes from the Former U.S. Senator Elihu Root, starting from February 15, 1845! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
    Elihu Root quotes about: Duty Exercise Human Nature Justice Opinions War

    Elihu Root

    • Born: February 15, 1845
    • Died: February 7, 1937
    • Occupation: Former U.S. Senator