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Love Quote by Charles Dudley Warner

"How many wars have been caused by fits of indigestion, and how many more dynasties have been upset by the love of woman than by the hate of man"

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Politics, Warner suggests, is just biology in a waistcoat. By pairing “fits of indigestion” with wars and “the love of woman” with toppled dynasties, he drags grand historical narratives down to the body and the bedroom. It’s a journalist’s deflationary move: puncture the heroic myth that leaders act from principle, then replace it with petty appetite, discomfort, and desire. The line works because it flatters the reader’s skepticism. You’re invited to see through official rhetoric and spot the human mess underneath.

The first jab, indigestion, isn’t random. In the 19th century, digestion was practically a moral and medical obsession, shorthand for temperament and stability. Warner’s insinuation is that a ruler’s “policy” can be a bad night’s sleep, a sour stomach, an overfed ego. The joke lands because it’s plausible; history is full of irritable men with armies.

Then he pivots to sex and power, and the phrasing matters: not “women” as political actors, but “the love of woman” as a destabilizing force in male-centered courts. That’s the period’s bias speaking, but it also exposes the vulnerability of dynastic systems built on inheritance, legitimacy, and reputation. Romance threatens the chain of succession in a way open hatred often can’t, because it slips past the public logic of enemies and enters the private logic of households.

Warner’s subtext is cynically democratic: if empires can swing on stomach acid and infatuation, no regime deserves the awe it demands.

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Warner on appetite, desire, and history
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Charles Dudley Warner (September 12, 1829 - October 20, 1900) was a Journalist from USA.

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