
Samuel Johnson in The Rambler no. 148 (17 August 1751).
Misattributed
No. 148 (17 August 1751)
The Rambler (1750–1752)
Samuel Johnson in The Rambler no. 148 (17 August 1751).
Misattributed
"The Crime against Kansas," speech in the Senate (May 18, 1856). The claims made against Senator Andrew Butler of South Carolina so angered Butler's cousin, Democrat Representative Preston Brooks, that Brooks assaulted Sumner with a cane in the Senate chamber a few weeks later
“He seems to think that posterity is a pack-horse, always ready to be loaded.”
Speech in the House of Commons (3 June 1862)
1860s
Source: Thou Shalt Not Be Aware : Society's Betrayal of the Child
The Voluntary Movie Rating System (2004)
Context: We count it crucial to make regular soundings to find out how the public perceives the rating program, and to measure the approval and disapproval of what we are doing... The rating system isn't perfect but, in an imperfect world, it seems each year to match the expectations of those whom it is designed to serve — parents of America.
“He wrote his mother that he had begun to hate the sight of his typewriter.”
Source: Outlaw Journalist (2008), Chapter 9, Epiphany, p. 131