Magical Diaries of Aleister Crowley : Tunisia 1923 (1996), edited by Stephen Skinner p. 21. 
Context: There seems to be much misunderstanding about True Will … The fact of a person being a gentleman is as much an ineluctable factor as any possible spiritual experience; in fact, it is possible, even probable, that a man may be misled by the enthusiasm of an illumination, and if he should find apparent conflict between his spiritual duty and his duty to honour, it is almost sure evidence that a trap is being laid for him and he should unhesitatingly stick to the course which ordinary decency indicates … I wish to say definitely, once and for all, that people who do not understand and accept this position have utterly failed to grasp the fundamental principles of the Law of Thelema.
                                    
“When he let Kennedy use his column to send signals to Nikita Khrushchev, or lent his skill to Vandenberg to reinforce the anti-Soviet consensus in American diplomacy, he wasn't acting as a reporter but as a patriot. This urge may be a dereliction of duty in the journalist, but it is a sign of decency in the man. That the two impulses in journalism should so often be at odds — duty versus decency — tells us more about the trade than most of us care to know.”
"Scotty: All the news that's fit to schmooze," The Weekly Standard, 24 February 2003
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Andrew Ferguson 4
American journalist 1956Related quotes
“Great promptness in the report of all derelictions of duty, that evils may be at once corrected.”
Report of the Superintendent of the New York and Erie Railroad to the Stockholders (1856)
The Day We Celebrate (Forefathers' Day), Address, New England Society of Brooklyn (December 21, 1888).
                                        
                                        Pt. II, Ch. 2 
Pioneers of France in the New World (1865)
                                    
“Reason shows us our duty; he who can make us love our duty is more powerful than reason itself.”
                                        
                                        No. 15. 
Maxims and Moral Sentences
                                    
“…in his fingers he has more skill than any of the rest of us.”
                                        
                                        Rubinstein remarking on a performance by Maurizio Pollini — reported in Joanne Sheehy Hoover (March 13, 1981) "Captain Of the Keyboard", The Washington Post, p. C1. 
Attributed
                                    
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 201.
Preface to The Story of the Stone, Vol. 2: 'The Crab-Flower Club' (1979), p. 20
“When a stupid man is doing something he is ashamed of, he always declares that it is his duty.”
                                        
                                         Act III http://books.google.com/books?id=3wAOAQAAMAAJ 
Source: 1890s, Caesar and Cleopatra (1898)