Source: Memoirs, May Week Was in June (1990), p. 241
“[Paul Patterson and I] soon got on the subject of the war, and I said flatly that I thought the Sun's course was not only ignorant and absurd, but also not a little disingenuous. It had gone over to the English in an abject and ignominious fashion, against all reason and all the obvious facts. Worse, it had yielded supinely to the most outrageous fiats of the Roosevelt censorship, and had even exceeded them. This shook Patterson somewhat, for he likes to think of himself as a news editor, and he insisted that in handling the war news the Sun had done good work.”
March 17, 1944
1940s–present, The Diary of H.L. Mencken (1989)
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H.L. Mencken 281
American journalist and writer 1880–1956Related quotes

October 24, 1945
1940s–present, The Diary of H.L. Mencken (1989)

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Lieutenant Richard Sharpe, p. 81
Sharpe (Novel Series), Sharpe's Rifles (1988)

“I don't believe Fermat had a proof. I think he fooled himself into thinking he had a proof.”
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Frances Stevenson's diary entry (7 February 1935), A. J. P. Taylor (ed.), Lloyd George: A Diary (London: Hutchinson, 1971), p. 300
Later life