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5 votes
Word is stronger than sword​

2 Answers

5 votes

Answer: That is correct. or at least to Edward Bulwer-Lytton. The pen is mightier than the sword was said in 1839 by Edward Bulwer-Lytton the author of The last days of pompeii, Zanoni, The coming race, A strange story, Paul Clifford, The Caxtons, Ernest maltravers, The last of the Barons, Harold: The last of the saxon kings, The haunted and the haunters, Pelham, or, Adventures of a gentleman, Athens: Its rise and fall : with views of the literature; philosophy and social life of the athenian people ; in two volumes, Calderon the courtier, Bulwer works, Rienzi; The last of the Roman tribunes, Dramatic works, Novels, O'Neill; Or the rebel, Night and morning complete, Caxtoniana, Poetical works of the right hon, Glenaveril, Tomlinsoniana, My Novel; Or varieties in English life; personal & literary letters of Robert; First earl of Lytton Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Walpole: Or every man has his price, after paradise, The earl's return, King Arthur: In Two Volumes, My novel; Or, varieties in English life; Volume II, Serbski Pesme, Leila, Alice, and much more.

Thank You For Your Time,

~Esther

User JRJ
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4 votes
this means that words have more power than any weapon.
User Freeo
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5.1k points