Arthur Ponsonby Quote

At the outset the solemn asseverations of monarchs and leading statesmen in each nation that they did not want war must be placed on a par with the declarations of men who pour paraffin about a house knowing they are continually striking matches and yet assert they do not want a conflagration. This form of self-deception, which involved the deception of others, is fundamentally dishonest.


Falsehood in Wartime (1928) - Introduction


At the outset the solemn asseverations of monarchs and leading statesmen in each nation that they did not want war must be placed on a par with the...

At the outset the solemn asseverations of monarchs and leading statesmen in each nation that they did not want war must be placed on a par with the...

At the outset the solemn asseverations of monarchs and leading statesmen in each nation that they did not want war must be placed on a par with the...

At the outset the solemn asseverations of monarchs and leading statesmen in each nation that they did not want war must be placed on a par with the...