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Wendell Phillips Quotes(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/34/Wendell_Phillips_by_Brady.jpg/280px-Wendell_Phillips_by_Brady.jpg)
An American abolitionist, advocate for Native Americans, and orator. Wendell Phillips (29 November 1811 – 2 February 1884) was an American abolitionist, advocate for Native Americans, and orator. He was an exceptional orator and agitator, advocate and lawyer, writer and debater.
Here are some famous quotes by Wendell Phillips.
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One on God's side is a majority.
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Christianity is a battle not a dream
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Revolutions are not made; they come.
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Every man meets his Waterloo at last.
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Politics is but the common pulse beat.
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Power is ever stealing from the many to the few.
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We live under a government of men and morning newspapers.
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What the Puritans gave the world was not thought but action.
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Right is the eternal sun; the world cannot delay its coming.
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Exigencies create the necessary ability to meet and conquer them.
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It is only liquid currents of thought that move men and the world.
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Health lies in labor and there is no royal road to it but through toil.
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Law is nothing unless close behind it stands a warm living public opinion.
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Politics is but the common pulsebeat of which revolution is the feverspasm.
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As the Greek said 'Many men know how to flatter few men know how to praise.'
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What is defeat? Nothing but education nothing but the first step to something better.
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Physical bravery is an animal instinct; moral bravery is a much higher and truer courage.
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Common sense does not ask an impossible chessboard but takes the one before it and plays the game.
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Every step of progress the world has made has been from scaffold to scaffold and from stake to stake.
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Let me make the newspapers and I care not what is preached in the pulpit or what is enacted in Congress.
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You can always get the truth from an American statesman after he has turned 70 or given up all hope of the Presidency.
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To hear some men talk of the government you would suppose that Congress was the law of gravitation and kept the planets in their places.
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Governments exist to protect the rights of minorities. The loved and the rich need no protection - they have many friends and few enemies.