Barbara W. Tuchman Quote

Cromwell. The door was flung open. In stalked the Protector, disgusted once more with the inability of human weaklings to come to the point, to get action, to see what he wanted and let him have it. Was it not, he berated them, every Christian’s duty to receive the Jews into England, the only nation where religion was taught in its full purity, and not to exclude them from the light and leave them among false teachers, Papists and idolaters? This argument silenced objectors among the clergy. Then he poured his contempt upon the City men. Can ye really be afraid that this mean and despised people should be able to prevail in trade over the merchants of England, the noblest and most esteemed merchants of the whole world? Thus he went on, says an observer, till he had silenced them too.… I never heard a man speak so well in his life. But

Barbara W. Tuchman

Cromwell. The door was flung open. In stalked the Protector, disgusted once more with the inability of human weaklings to come to the point, to get action, to see what he wanted and let him have it. Was it not, he berated them, every Christian’s duty to receive the Jews into England, the only nation where religion was taught in its full purity, and not to exclude them from the light and leave them among false teachers, Papists and idolaters? This argument silenced objectors among the clergy. Then he poured his contempt upon the City men. Can ye really be afraid that this mean and despised people should be able to prevail in trade over the merchants of England, the noblest and most esteemed merchants of the whole world? Thus he went on, says an observer, till he had silenced them too.… I never heard a man speak so well in his life. But

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About Barbara W. Tuchman

Barbara Wertheim Tuchman (; January 30, 1912 – February 6, 1989) was an American historian, journalist and author. She won the Pulitzer Prize twice, for The Guns of August (1962), a best-selling history of the prelude to and the first month of World War I, and Stilwell and the American Experience in China (1971), a biography of General Joseph Stilwell.
Tuchman focused on writing popular history.