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Quote by Gertrude Bell

“The most degrading of human passions is the fear of death. It tears away the restraints and the conventions which alone make social life possible to man; it reveals the brute in him which underlies them all. In the desperate hand-to-hand struggle for life there is no element of nobility. He who is engaged upon it throws aside honor, he throws aside self-respect, he throws aside all that would make victory worth having - he asks for nothing but bare life.”

Quote by Gertrude Bell

Author

Gertrude Bell
Gertrude Bell

British writer, explorer, and archaeologist, born on July 14, 1868, and died on July 12, 1926. Gertrude Bell is renowned for her explorations and archaeological work in the Middle East, particularly her studies of Palestine and Mesopotamia. more

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