
“I write what I believe in and don't care a damn about the consequences.”
I Don't Know One Editor In India Who Is Well-Read
As quoted in The Times [London] (9 October 1944); this attribution probably originates in a letter by Thomas Babington Macaulay, 1st Baron Macaulay (6 March 1849), in which he states "How they settle the matter I care not, as the duke says, one twopenny damn."
Disputed
“I write what I believe in and don't care a damn about the consequences.”
I Don't Know One Editor In India Who Is Well-Read
“I don't give a damn about what people say. They can be reptile food for all I care.”
Source: Dance Dance Dance
Statement after the October Revolution of 1917, as quoted in "Communists: The Battle over the Tomb" in TIME (24 April 1964).
Attributions
Being with You (1981)
Song lyrics, Solo
On the political cartoons of Thomas Nast in Harper's Weekly, as quoted in "Article IV: An Episode in Municipal Government" by Charles F. Wingate in The North American Review (July 1875), p. 150
Source: The Keys to the Kingdom series, Lord Sunday (2010), p. 45.
"The Terrible People"
Many Long Years Ago (1945)
Context: People who have what they want are very fond of telling people who haven't what they want that they really don't want it,
And I wish I could afford to gather all such people into a gloomy castle on the Danube and hire half a dozen capable Draculas to haunt it.
I dont' mind their having a lot of money, and I don't care how they employ it,
But I do think that they damn well ought to admit they enjoy it.