James Fenimore Cooper Quotes

James Fenimore Cooper Quotes. Below is a collection of famous James Fenimore Cooper quotes. Here you can find the most popular and greatest quotes by James Fenimore Cooper. Share these quotations with your friends and family.

Everybody says it, and what everybody says must be true.

By James Fenimore Cooper
Slavery is no more sinful, by the Christian code, than it is sinful to wear a whole coat, while another is in tatters, to eat a better meal than a neighbor, or otherwise to enjoy ease and plenty, while our fellow creatures are suffering and in want.

By James Fenimore Cooper
Candor is a proof of both a just frame of mind, and of a good tone of breeding. It is a quality that belongs equally to the honest man and to the gentleman.

By James Fenimore Cooper
The American doctrinaire is the converse of the American demagogue, and, in this way, is scarcely less injurious to the public. The first deals in poetry, the last in cant. He is as much a visionary on one side, as the extreme theoretical democrat is a visionary on the other.

By James Fenimore Cooper
It is a misfortune that necessity has induced men to accord greater license to this formidable engine, in order to obtain liberty, than can be borne with less important objects in view; for the press, like fire, is an excellent servant, but a terrible master.

By James Fenimore Cooper
The common faults of American language are an ambition of effect, a want of simplicity, and a turgid abuse of terms.

By James Fenimore Cooper
Equality, in a social sense, may be divided into that of condition and that of rights. Equality of condition is incompatible with civilization, and is found only to exist in those communities that are but slightly removed from the savage state. In practice, it can only mean a common misery.

By James Fenimore Cooper
The very existence of government at all, infers inequality. The citizen who is preferred to office becomes the superior to those who are not, so long as he is the repository of power, and the child inherits the wealth of the parent as a controlling law of society.

By James Fenimore Cooper
The tendency of democracies is, in all things, to mediocrity.

By James Fenimore Cooper
It is a besetting vice of democracies to substitute public opinion for law. This is the usual form in which masses of men exhibit their tyranny.

By James Fenimore Cooper