
“I always tell what I believe. Whether it's true, I'm no more sure than any man.”
Source: The Tales of Alvin Maker, Seventh Son (1987), Chapter 9.
Source: Gargantua and Pantagruel (1532–1564), Fourth Book (1548, 1552), Chapter 38.
“I always tell what I believe. Whether it's true, I'm no more sure than any man.”
Source: The Tales of Alvin Maker, Seventh Son (1987), Chapter 9.
Source: One of the youngest serving Republicans on her 'fight for the American dream' https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/youngest-serving-republicans-fight-american-dream/story?id=63565981 (7 June 2019)
"Porcelain and Pink"
Quoted, Tales of the Jazz Age (1922)
Song lyrics, Biograph (1985), Up to Me (recorded 1974)
Quoted in Bob Woodward's, State of Denial: Bush at War, Part III, Simon & Schuster, 2006
2000s, 2006
Reported by Representative Martin Dies as having been said in a conversation at the White House, in the Congressional Record (September 22, 1950), vol. 96, Appendix, p. A6832. Reported as "exceedingly dubious" in Paul F. Boller, Jr., Quotemanship: The Use and Abuse of Quotations for Polemical and Other Purposes, chapter 8, p. 361 (1967); Boller goes on to say that "it is most unlikely that FDR would have said anything like it, even flippantly, to the zealous HUAC chairman, though he may have told Dies that he was exaggerating the size of the American communist movement".
Misattributed
Often misattributed to but inspired by GK Chesterton:
Fairy tales do not give the child his first idea of bogey. What fairy tales give the child is his first clear idea of the possible defeat of bogey. The baby has known the dragon intimately ever since he had an imagination. What the fairy tale provides for him is a St. George to kill the dragon.
Coraline (2002)