
“Needs must when the Devil drives.”
Source: Gargantua and Pantagruel (1532–1564), Fourth Book (1548, 1552), Chapter 57.
queried Galt, dryly.
“Not at all,” explained Donal, patiently. “But having such intellectual capabilities, a man must show proportionately greater inclinations toward either good or evil than lesser people. If he tends toward evil, he may mask it in himself—he may even mask its effect on the people with which he surrounds himself. But he has no way of producing the reflections of good which would ordinarily be reflected from his lieutenants and initiates—and which, if he was truly good—he would have no reason to try and hide. And by that lack, you can read him.”
“Mercenary II” (section 4, p. 386)
Dorsai! (1960)
“Needs must when the Devil drives.”
Source: Gargantua and Pantagruel (1532–1564), Fourth Book (1548, 1552), Chapter 57.
“They must needs go whom the Devil drives.”
Source: Don Quixote de la Mancha (1605–1615), Part I, Book IV, Ch. 4.
Source: Your Forces and How to Use Them (1912), Chapter 7, p. 114
“He must needes goe whom the devill doth drive.”
Part II, chapter 7.
Proverbs (1546), Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
“Hee must have a long spoone, shall eat with the devill.”
Part II, chapter 5.
Proverbs (1546), Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
“Though an angel should write, still 't is devils must print.”
The Fudges in England, Letter iii.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
Poem: The Jackdaw of Rheims http://www.bartleby.com/246/108.html
"The Hue and Cry," The Writing on the Wall (1970)
Context: Calling someone a monster does not make him more guilty; it makes him less so by classing him with beasts and devils (“a person of inhuman and horrible cruelty or wickedness,” OED, Sense 4). Such an unnatural being is more horrible to contemplate than an Eichmann — that is, aesthetically worse — but morally an Ilse Koch was surely less culpable than Eichmann since she seems to have had no trace of human feeling and therefore was impassable to conscience.