
A Little Book in C Major, New York, NY, John Lane Company (1916) p. 76
1910s
Sketches of Etruscan Places (1932)
A Little Book in C Major, New York, NY, John Lane Company (1916) p. 76
1910s
As quoted in "Lady with a Switchblade" in LIFE magazine (20 September 1963) http://books.google.com/books?id=e1IEAAAAMBAJ&q=%22Europeans+used+to+say+Americans+were+puritanical+Then+they+discovered+that+we+were+not+puritans+So+now+they+say+that+we+are+obsessed+with+sex%22&pg=PA62#v=onepage
“It was a common saying among the Puritans, "Brown bread and the Gospel is good fare."”
Isaiah 30.
Commentaries
“A puritan is a person who pours righteous indignation into the wrong things.”
As quoted in an interview in The New York Times (21 November 1930)
Source: The Professor at the Breakfast Table (1859), Ch. VI.
“Like all neo-puritans you have a mind like an open drain.”
Source: The Jagged Orbit (1969), Chapter 44, “A Firm Decision to Go Into the Wagon-Fixing Business in a Big Way” (p. 132)
Diary entry, 20 January 1940, from The Diaries of Christopher Isherwood, vol I: 1939 - 1960, edited by Katherine Bucknell, p. 84<!-- >
Context: If I fear anything, I fear the atmosphere of the war, the power which it gives to all the things I hate — the newspapers, the politicians, the puritans, the scoutmasters, the middle-aged merciless spinsters. I fear the way I might behave, if I were exposed to this atmosphere. I shrink from the duty of opposition. I am afraid I should be reduced to a chattering enraged monkey, screaming back hate at their hate.