Rufus Choate quotes:

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  • Happy is he who has laid up in his youth, and held fast in all fortune, a genuine and passionate love of reading.

  • We have built no temple but the Capitol. We consult no common oracle but the Constitution.

  • Its Constitution--the glittering and sounding generalities of natural right which make up the Declaration of Independence.

  • We join ourselves to no party that does not carry the flag and I keep step to the music of the Union.

  • Neither irony nor sarcasm is argument.

  • The final end of government is not to exert restraint but to do good.

  • No lawyer can afford to be ignorant of the Bible.

  • The courage of New England was the courage of conscience. It did not rise to that insane and awful passion, the love of war for itself.

  • You don't want a diction gathered from the newspapers, caught from the air, common and unsuggestive; but you want one whose every word is full-freighted with suggestion and association, with beauty and power.

  • A book is the only immortality.

  • All that happens in the world of Nature or Man, - every war; every peace; every hour of prosperity; every hour of adversity; every election; every death ; every life; every success and every failure, - all change, - all permanence, - the perished leaf; the unutterable glory of stars, - all things speak truth to the thoughtful spirit.

  • Anything more low, obscene, feculent, the manifold heaving's of history have not cast up. We shall come to the worship of onions, cats and things vermiculite.

  • Appropriated to justice, to security, to reason, to restraint; where there is no respect of persons; where will is nothing and power is nothing and numbers are nothing, and all are equal and all secure before the law.

  • I will look, your Honor, and endeavor to find a precedent, if you require it; though it would seem to be a pity that the Court should lose the honor of being the first to establish so just a rule.

  • Knowledge is power as well as fame.

  • Mathematics may, be briefly defined as the science of quantities, and is one of the most important of disciplining studies which engage the practical student.

  • Power, carried to extremes, is always liable to reaction.

  • There was a state without king or nobles; there was a church without a bishop; there was a people governed by grave magistrates which it had selected, and by equal laws which it had framed.

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