
Source: Wild Open Spaces: Why We Love Westerns
Falsehood, iv
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part XIX - Truth and Convenience
Source: Wild Open Spaces: Why We Love Westerns
Buffalo Rising interview (2007)
Context: Maybe by doing this work and putting my name on the front line, like a science project, will also afford me the opportunity to embarked into a very special opportunity to show that growing up poor doesn't have to mean being unworthy or forgettable. This is a very important lesson for those who propagate such narrow minded universally accepted inaccuracies about poverty.
“I do myself a greater injury in lying than I do him of whom I tell a lie.”
Book II, Ch. 17
Attributed
"The Goat Paths", line 89, in Collected Poems (London: Macmillan, 1954) p. 6.
“Do not take up cause against the inaccuracies printed about you. They are your protection.”
Diary of an Unknown (1988)
Mobutu to congressman Mervyn Dymally, 1988. Elliot and Dymally, p. 25
“Do you hate me so much?” “no, I can’t hate you. I wish I could, but I can’t””
Devoted