Bill Clinton (1946) 42nd President of the United States
While touring tsunami-devastated areas with his presidential predecessor, George H. W. Bush, February 2005[citation needed]
2000s
Source: Where Rainbows End
Bill Clinton (1946) 42nd President of the United States
While touring tsunami-devastated areas with his presidential predecessor, George H. W. Bush, February 2005[citation needed]
2000s
“Now is now. It can never be a long time ago.”
Laura Ingalls Wilder book Little House in the Big Woods
Little House in the Big Woods (1932), Ch. 13
“I can die but once; and it is all one to me, now or another time.”
Cornstalk (1720–1777) Native American in the American Revolution
Speech at Point Pleasant, on his mission to warn the settlers that other Shawnee intended to attack them, just prior to his death (November 1777), as quoted in "Cornstalk, the Shawanee Chief" by Rev. William Henry Foote, in The Southern Literary Messenger Vol. 16, Issue 9, (September 1850) pp. 533-540 http://victorian.fortunecity.com/rothko/420/aniyuntikwalaski/cornstalk.html <br class="br">Context: When I was a young man and went to war, I thought that might be the last time, and I would return no more. Now I am here among you; you may kill me if you please; I can die but once; and it is all one to me, now or another time.
Samuel Butler (1835–1902) novelist
Populus Vult
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part XII - The Enfant Terrible of Literature
Allen Tate (1899–1979) American poet, essayist and social commentator
The Wolves, from Collected Poems (1970).