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Book cover of Our Sacred Honor: Words of Advice from the Founders in Stories, Letters, Poems, and Speeches
Politics & Government - Quotations, American Poetry, American & Canadian Letters, Leadership & Statesmanship, General & Miscellaneous Quotations, Self-Improvement, American Peoples & Cultures - Quotations, Speeches

Our Sacred Honor: Words of Advice from the Founders in Stories, Letters, Poems, and Speeches

by William J. Bennett
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Overview

In Our Sacred Honor, William J. Bennett has collected the best that has been thought and said by and about the men and women who founded America. And what a group they are: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, John and Abigail Adams, and so many more that otherwise first-rate intellects such as John Dickinson, Benjamin Rush, and George Mason are relegated to the status of footnotes in the popular imagination. Not since Periclean Athens has such a small nation been led by so many larger-than-life figures. The only characteristic they shared more widely than revolutionary ardor was their talent (and inclination) for advice. Here is that advice on virtually every aspect of "the good" - good government, good relations between individuals and nations, and what it means to live a good life. The stories, songs, letters, and speeches collected in Our Sacred Honor are an inspiring celebration of American exceptionalism, produced by a collection of exceptional Americans.

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Editorials

Library Journal

From the man who gave us the bestselling Book of Virtues: thoughts from America's founding fathers.

Kirkus Reviews

The indefatigable Bennett (The Moral Compass, 1995, etc.) continues his campaign to inculcate the old values into Americans generally—and young Americans more particularly—this time out by gathering selections from the writings of the generation that secured America's independence. The brief excerpts, drawn from speeches, letters, poems, and memoirs by both little-known patriots and by such luminaries as Benjamin Franklin, John and Abigail Adams, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson, are divided into such categories as "Patriotism and Courage," "Civility and Friendship," "Justice," and "Piety." Bennett says that the volume is intended to allow Americans to "see both our patrimony and our basic civic obligations; to keep our country safe and to hold our purpose high." There's no doubt that many of these passages are stirring and persuasive. But despite Bennett's brief introductory essays, the excerpts seem too fragmentary, and too admonitory, to be entirely compelling, and the larger context of the 18th century—a period of intense and but complex thought—is absent. Still, given the current enthusiasm for Bennett's crusade, the book is likely to be widely circulated.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 1997
Publisher
Broadman & Holman Publishers
Pages
320
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780805401530

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