| The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996. |
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| NUMBER: | 27070 |
| QUOTATION: | I shall never love England till she sues to us for help; and, in the meantime, the fewer triumphs she obtains, the better for all the parties. An Englishman in adversity is a very respectable character; he does not lose his dignity, but merely comes to a proper conceit of himself.... I seem to myself like a spy or a traitor, when I meet their eyes, and am conscious that I neither hope nor fear in sympathy with them, although (unless they detect me for an American by my aspect) they look at me in full confidence of sympathy. |
| ATTRIBUTION: | Nathaniel Hawthorne (18041864), U.S. author. English Notebooks, entry for October 6, 1854 (1870, revised 1941). |
| BIOGRAPHY: | Columbia Encyclopedia. |
| WORKS: | Hawthorne Collection. |
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| | | The Columbia World of Quotations. Copyright © 1996 Columbia University Press. |
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