Philip Gibbs Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Philip Gibbs's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Journalist Philip Gibbs's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 12 quotes on this page collected since May 1, 1877! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • If there is anything I've learned, is that piety is smarter than hate, that mercy is preferable even to justice itself, that if you go around the world with friendly look, one does good friends.

  • It was so quiet that morning in Paris that the heels of my two companions and myself were loud on the deserted pavements. It was a city of shuttered shops, and barred windows, and deserted avenues.

    Philip Gibbs (1946). “The Pageant of the Years: An Autobiography”
  • But do you know, I shall not be sorry to die. I shall be glad, Monsieur. And why glad, you ask? Because I love France and hate the Germans who have put this war on us.

    Sorry   Hate   War  
    Philip Gibbs (1950). “The Soul of the War”, p.34, Library of Alexandria
  • At all costs we must re-establish faith in spiritual values. We must worship something beyond ourselves, lest we destroy ourselves.

    Faith   Spiritual   Cost  
    Gibbs (Sir Philip Hamilton.), Philip Gibbs (1933). “Ways of Escape”
  • I am going to fight - I, a socialist and Syndicalist - so that we shall make an end to war, so that the little ones of France will sleep in peace, and the women go without fear.

    War   Sleep   Fighting  
    Philip Gibbs (1950). “The Soul of the War”, p.34, Library of Alexandria
  • It is better to give than to lend, and it costs about the same.

  • In less than twenty-five years . . . the motor-car will be obsolete, because the aeroplane will run along the ground as well as fly over it.

    Running   Years   Car  
    Philip Gibbs (1928). “The Day After To-morrow: What is Going to Happen to the World?”
  • It was announced as a French victory by the French Minister of War. I did not see any sign of victory but only the retreat of the French forces engaged in the battle.

    War   Victory   Battle  
  • There is poetry in a pork chop to a hungry man.

    Men   Pork   Hungry  
  • But the worst handicap we had the prohibition of naming individual units who had done the fighting.

    Philip Gibbs (1946). “The Pageant of the Years: An Autobiography”
  • During the early months of the war in 1914 there was a conflict of opinion between the War Office and the Foreign Office regarding news from the Front.

    War   Office   Months  
  • We who go out to die shall be remembered, because we gave the world peace. That will be our reward, though we will know nothing of it, but lie rotting in the earth - dead.

    Lying   World   Rotting  
    Philip Gibbs (1946). “The Pageant of the Years: An Autobiography”
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We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 12 quotes from the Journalist Philip Gibbs, starting from May 1, 1877! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
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