World War One Quotes

On this page you will find all the quotes on the topic "World War One". There are currently 32 quotes in our collection about World War One. Discover the TOP 10 sayings about World War One!
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  • All wars are follies, very expensive and very mischievous ones.

    Money   War   Battle  
    Benjamin Franklin, E. Sargent (1855). “The select works of Benjamin Franklin”, p.459
  • In World War One, they called it shell shock. Second time around, they called it battle fatigue. After 'Nam, it was post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Jan Karon (2007). “Home to Holly Springs”, p.289, Penguin
  • It was evident however that the lawyers would have to have their say....This also opened up a vista both lengthy and obscure.

    War   World   Lawyer  
    Winston Churchill (1987). “The Irrepressible Churchill: Stories, Sayings and Impressions of Sir Winston Churchill”, London : Robson Books
  • I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity.

    Peace   War   Hate  
    Speech in Ottawa on January 10, 1946. "Eisenhower Speaks: Dwight D. Eisenhower in His Messages and Speeches". Book edited by Rudolph L. Treuenfels, 1948.
  • The larks, still bravely singing, fly Scarce heard amid the guns below

    Gun   Singing   Poppies  
    'In Flanders Fields' (1915)
  • I wanted us to go to the Tories when we were strong...not in misfortune to be made an honest woman of.

    Winston Churchill (1987). “The Irrepressible Churchill: Stories, Sayings and Impressions of Sir Winston Churchill”, London : Robson Books
  • World War Two was a world war in space. It spread from Europe to Japan, to the Soviet Union, etc. World War Two was quite different from World War One which was geographically limited to Europe. But in the case of the Gulf War, we are dealing with a war which is extremely local in space, but global in time, since it is the first 'live' war.

    War   Europe   Two  
    Source: ctheory.net
  • At the beginning of this War megalomania was the only form of sanity.

    War   World   Sanity  
    Winston Churchill, Robert Rhodes James (1980). “Churchill speaks: Winston S. Churchill in peace and war : collected speeches, 1897-1963”, Atheneum
  • We sit in calm, airy, silent rooms opening upon sunlit and embowered lawns, not a sound except of summer and of husbandry disturbs the peace; but seven million men, any ten thousand of whom could have annihilated the ancient armies, are in ceaseless battle from the Alps to the Ocean.

    Summer   War   Ocean  
    Sir Winston Churchill (1954). “Sir Winston Churchill: a self-portrait”
  • It is remarkable that Lord Esher should be so much astray...We must conclude that an uncontrollable fondness for fiction forbade him to forsake it for fact. Such constancy is a defect in an historian.

    War   Fiction   World  
    Sir Winston Churchill (1954). “Sir Winston Churchill: a self-portrait”
  • One is left with the horrible feeling now that war settles nothing; that to win a war is as disastrous as to lose one.

    Peace   War   Winning  
    Autobiography (1977) pt. 10
  • The old wars were decided by their episodes rather than by their tendencies. In this war, the tendencies are far more important than the episodes.

    War   Important   World  
    Winston Churchill (2005). “The World Crisis, 1911-1918”, p.533, Simon and Schuster
  • ...every offensive lost its force as it proceeded. It was like throwing a bucket of water over the floor. It first rushed forward, then soaked forward, and finally stopped altogether until another bucket could be brought.

    War   Water   Buckets  
    Winston Churchill (2005). “The World Crisis, 1911-1918”, p.776, Simon and Schuster
  • How many have gone? How many more to go? The Admiralty is fast asleep and lethargy & inertia are the order of the day. However everybody seems delighted - so there is nothing to be said. No plans, no enterprise, no struggle to aid the general cause. Just sit still on the spacious throne and snooze.

    War   Struggle   Order  
  • In the time of my parents, before World War One, most people who came to New Zealand from Europe were the more enterprising people; the people who were stronger mentally. It takes a certain amount of imagination to make a life on the other side of the world, the same imagination it takes to climb the tallest mountain.

  • Wars always evolve over time, don't they? Iraq/Afghanistan is different than Vietnam, and Vietnam was different than Korea, and Korea was different than World War One, and so on. Some things remain the same, of course - one side fighting another over ideology or a patch of ground - but there are some aspects of combat life which differ radically than their predecessors.

    War   Fighting   Korea  
    Source: therumpus.net
  • The pioneer labor historian John Commons was not wrong when he wrote around World War One that exploiting and deepening such tensions as outpacing scientific management among U.S. innovations where bossing was concerned. Amidst the general miseries of proletarianization, workers also learned that one source of meager benefits and protections could lie in claiming a white skin.

    War   Lying   White  
    Source: www.counterpunch.org
  • The most important thing I would learn in school was that almost everything I would learn in school would be utterly useless. When I was fifteen I knew the principal industries of the Ruhr Valley, the underlying causes of World War One and what Peig Sayers had for her dinner every day...What I wanted to know when I was fifteen was the best way to chat up girls. That is what I still want to know.

    Girl   War   School  
    Joseph O'Connor (1994). “The secret world of the Irish male”
  • We have war when at least one of the parties to a conflict wants something more than it wants peace.

    Military   War   Party  
  • Ten thousand officers and men named Smith died in the First World War. One thousand four hundred Campbells died, six thousand Joneses, and one thousand Murphys. Smith, Campbell, Jones and Murphy: the names of the United Kingdom, whose presence in regiments from all four countries speaks of the ebb and flow of peoples within these islands, of a common sacrifice, and a shared agony that burned in so many million hearts down the decades.

    Country   Peace   War  
  • God for a month of power & a good shorthand writer.

    War   World   Months  
  • There is more blood than paint upon these hands. All those thousands of men killed. We thought it would be a little job, and so it might have been if it had begun in the right way.

    Jobs   War   Men  
  • More than 80 per cent of the British casualties of the Great War were English. More than 80 per cent of the taxation is paid by the English taxpayers. We are entitled to mention these facts, and to draw authority and courage from them.

    War   Facts   Taxation  
    Sir Winston S. Churchill (2013). “Never Give In!: Winston Churchill's Speeches”, p.84, A&C Black
  • We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow, Loved and were loved, and now we lie In Flanders fields.

    Lying   Sunset   Dawn  
    John McCrae (2015). “In Flanders Fields and Other Poems”, p.20, Dundurn
  • My prayer is that what we have gone through [World War One] will startle the world into some new realization of the sanctity of life, animal as well as human.

    Life   Prayer   War  
  • If you go to Wikipedia and you look at the Tour de France, there's this huge block in World War One with no winners, and there's another block in World War Two. And then it seems like there's another world war.

    Block   War   Two  
    Interview with Dan Roan, www.bbc.com. January 26, 2015.
  • This war proceeds along its terrible path by the slaughter of infantry...I say to myself every day. What is going on while we sit here, while we go away to dinner or home to bed? Nearly, 1000 - Englishmen, Britishers, and the other is America...Everything else is swept away.

    War   Home   America  
  • I cannot but think we have much to be thankful for, and more still to hope for in the future.

    Winston Churchill (1957). “The world crisis”
  • In Flanders fields the poppies blow Between the crosses, row on row, That mark our place, and in the sky, The larks, still bravely singing, fly Scarce heard among the guns below.

    Blow   Gun   Sky  
    Punch 8 Dec. 1915 "In Flanders Fields"
  • My only consolation for the failure of the Dardanelles was that God wished things to be prolonged in order to sicken mankind of war, and that therefore He had interfered with a project that would have brought the war to a speedier conclusion.

    War   Order   World  
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