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Mary Shelley: On peace and war
Anti-war essays, poems, short stories and literary excerpts
British writers on peace and war
Women writers on peace and war
Mary Shelley: On peace and war
Mary Shelley: The fate of the world bound up with the death of a single man
Mary Shelley: I do not sympathize in their dreams of massacre and glory
Mary Shelley: I turned to the corpse-strewn earth and felt ashamed of my species
Mary Shelley: Men have slain each other by thousands, now man is a creature of price
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- Blaise Pascal: Observations on the causes of war
- Mór Jókai: Bellona is a fair woman. Rain follows all battles.
- Peter John Allan: Timid muse from angry Mars would flee, to dwell at peace with nature and mankind
- Thomas Carlyle: Selections on war
- Peter John Allan: ‘Tis Satan’s, and ’twas Xerxes’ lot
- Thomas Carlyle: Inept government’s sole achievement, getting together men to kill other men
- Iris Murdoch: The soldiers should all just throw down their arms
- Rasul Gamzatov: Lament for a slain brother
- Iris Murdoch: You don’t have to kill people fighting for social justice
- William Alexander: Cover’d with a bloody stain fields that once look’d pleasantly
- William Alexander: No sooner does peace descend than golden age of literature and poetry arises
- William Alexander: Of all calamities to which we may be destined, none is so baleful and destructive as war
- Julian Hawthorne: Why soldiers become prison guards
- George Meredith: Women and war
- Horace P. Biddle: Wine, War, and Love
- Emily Gilmore Alden: The world should write more victories, the victories of love
- W. S. Walker: Furies learn’d to blush at human crimes
- W. S. Walker: One last sanguinary conquest
- Thomas McGrath: Against the False Magicians
- Theodore Watts-Dunton: Seat above the conflict, power to call Peace like a Zephyr
- Albert Fenner Kercheval: Peace sheds her silvery light on all compass points
- William Ellery Channing: Sermon on War
- Gore Vidal: Navies, colonies, presidents, wars
- James Fenimore Cooper: Selections on peace and war
- James Fenimore Cooper: The short-lived patriotism of war
- James Fenimore Cooper: The uncelebrated victims of war
- Victor Cousin: When might is right, natural state of man is war
- Klaus Mann: The whole country was transformed into an armed camp
- Herman Melville: All the cruel carnal glory wrought out by naval heroes
- Padraic Fiacc: Credo Credo
- Herman Melville: Gospel lacking practical wisdom of earth – nations at times demanding bloody massacres and wars
- Rick Rozoff: Mars, only Olympian whose veins flow not with ichor
- Thomas McGrath: Poems on war
- Herman Melville: Soldier or sailor, the fighting man is but a fiend
- Padraic Fiacc: Der Bomben Poet
- Thomas McGrath: Homecoming
- Herman Melville: The whole matter of war is a thing that smites common-sense and Christianity in the face
- Thomas McGrath: Nocturne Militaire
- Herman Melville: When shall the time come, how much longer will God postpone it?
- Thomas McGrath: Ode for the American Dead in Asia
- Herman Melville: Gaining glory by a distinguished slaughtering of their fellow-men
- Thomas Moore: No trophies but of Love
- Herman Melville: How can a religion of peace flourish in a castle of war?
- Herman Melville: Selections on peace and war
- Herman Melville: Characterological drawback of consorting with cannon
- Elmer Rice: The expediency of choosing the right side in a war
- Machado de Assis: Let the reader decide between the soldier and the priest
- Joseph Conrad: Humanity’s inhuman toleration of war
- Joseph Conrad: Never before has war received so much homage at the lips of men
- Herman Melville: Minister of the Prince of Peace serving the God of War
- Mary Shelley: On peace and war
- Joseph Conrad: Democratic, commercial wars more ferocious than those of kings
- Joseph Conrad: From the frozen ground of battlefields a chorus of groans calls for vengeance from Heaven
- Mary Shelley: Men have slain each other by thousands, now man is a creature of price
- Mary Shelley: I turned to the corpse-strewn earth and felt ashamed of my species
- Mary Shelley: I do not sympathize in their dreams of massacre and glory
- Grant Allen: How can he be good if he hires himself out indiscriminately to kill or maim whoever he’s told to?
- W. R. Titterton: The Silent People of No Man’s Land
- Eunice Tietjens: Children of War
- Justin Martyr: We who formerly murdered one another now refrain from making war upon our enemies
- Ella Wheeler Wilcox: Selections on peace and war
- Ella Wheeler Wilcox: What We Need
- Alice Cary: Better dwell the lowliest shepherd of Arcadia’s bowers
- Ella Wheeler Wilcox: When the Regiment Came Back
- Sven Delblanc: No, three megatons, it’s a question of moral principle
- Victor Hugo: At last, a peaceful strain!
- Nathaniel Hawthorne: War personified; red cheek emblem of fire and sword; blackness of other betokened mourning that attends them
- Victor Hugo: I prefer poet to marshals’ cannonade
- Herman Melville: In the solace of the Truce of God, the Calumet has come
- Heinrich Mann: “No! The less force exercised in the world the better!”
- Latin American writers on war and peace
- Mariano Picón-Salas: From dream of warlike soldiers to nightmare of flames and ashes
- Julio Ortega: The fall of the great warrior empires
- Ambrose Bierce: Military Malthusianism
- Marcel Moreau: Children playing at war, the actual weapon of a crime
- Ambrose Bierce: He created patriotism and taught the nations war
- Henry James: No more sacrifice on the altar of war
- George Frederick Cameron: Is it true greatness to lead armed hirelings on to bleed?
- Percy Bysshe Shelley: War and the decline of poetry
- Roger Nimier: Selections on war
- Sydney Dobell: The Army Surgeon
- Wilfrid Scawen Blunt: “How I am wounded for thee in these wars”
- Roger Nimier: Sacrificial lambs whose howls could be heard from the Atlantic Ocean to the Caspian Sea
- Roger Nimier: Those who fall in love with war will surely die in her arms
- Martial: So have fallen men
- Roger Nimier: Soldiers are like that
- Livy: Waging war against all rights human and divine
- Roger Nimier: I saw war in its stark reality
- Sallust: One may become famous in peace as well as in war
- Roger Nimier: Thankful for divine justice: a horrible wound rewarded me for all the harm I had done
- George Edward Woodberry: American I am; would wars were done!
- Grenville Mellen: The Lonely Bugle Grieves
- Edward Bulwer Lytton: Selections on peace and war
- Edward Bulwer Lytton: “We poor men have no passion for war”
- Edward Bulwer Lytton: War and wrath and rapine cease, O Messenger of Peace!
- Thomas Carlyle: Fighting with steel murder-tools
- Fyodor Dostoevsky: The expediency and inexpediency of war
- Joseph Roth: His son was dead. His world had ended.
- Joseph Roth: Black and red, death fluttered over them
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Mary is a classic!
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Thanks. I’m in complete agreement. For all the celebration of her contemporary Jane Austen (whose appeal I’ve never understood), Shelley has been all but ignored aside from Frankenstein, which I dare say has been misinterpreted. The Last Man is an almost 600-page novel and one well worth reading.
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