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Updated: October 28, 2003

 

Richard Cobden (1804-1865)

 

 

"the Don Quixotes of Europe"

 

"To set myself right with those hon. Gentlemen who profess to have great regard for liberty everywhere, I beg to state that I yield to no one in sympathy for those who are struggling for freedom in any part of the world; but I will never sanction an interference which shall go to establish this or that nationality by force of arms, because that invades a principle which I wish to carry out in the other direction - the prevention of all foreign interference with nationalities for the sake of putting them down...

Are we to be the Don Quixotes of Europe, to go about fighting for every cause where we find that some one has been wronged? In most quarrels there is generally a little wrong on both sides; and, if we make up our minds always to interfere when any one is being wronged, I do not see always how we are to choose between the two sides. It will not do always to assume that the weaker party is in the right, for little States, like little individuals, are often very quarrelsome, presuming on their weakness, and not unfrequently abusing the forbearance which their weakness procures them."


Richard Cobden, "Russian War" (December 22, 1854) in Speeches on Questions of Public Policy, (1980), pp. 311-12, 314.