
“I can't accept the title, to win it this way doesn't mean anything to me.”
After winning the world heavyweight title because Jack Sharkey been disqualified. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/fight/peopleevents/p_schmeling.html
This is the Truth! (1949)
Context: I was responsible only for Joe Jackson. I positively can't say that I recall anything out of the way in the Series. I mean, anything that might have turned the tide. There was just one thing that doesn't seem quite right, now that I think back over it. Cicotte seemed to let up on a pitch to Pat Duncan, and Pat hit it over my head. Duncan didn't have enough power to hit the ball that far, particularly if Cicotte had been bearing down. Williams was a great control pitcher and they made a lot of fuss over him walking a few men. Swede Risberg missed the bag on a double-play ball at second and they made a lot out of that. But those are things that might happen to anybody. You just can't say out and out that that was shady baseball.
“I can't accept the title, to win it this way doesn't mean anything to me.”
After winning the world heavyweight title because Jack Sharkey been disqualified. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/fight/peopleevents/p_schmeling.html
In John Sloan on Drawing and Painting. Mineola NY: Dover Publications, 2000. Originally published in 1939 as The Gist of Art, p. 7.
The Gist of Art (1939)
“I didn’t say anything because I didn’t have anything to say.”
The Moment of the Storm (p. 181)
Short fiction, The Doors of His Face, The Lamps of His Mouth, and Other Stories (1971)
“I rise only to say that I do not intend to say anything.”
U.S. Grant's "perfect speech" which he used on several occasions beginning in 1865, as quoted in Grant: A Biography (1982) by William S. McFeely, p. 234.
1860s
Context: I rise only to say that I do not intend to say anything. I thank you for your hearty welcomes and good cheers.
http://rocknrollworldmagazine.com/2015/08/82915-rock-history/
“Anything I can sing, I call a song. Anything I can't sing, I call a poem.”
Liner notes https://bobdylan.com/albums/freewheelin-bob-dylan/, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan (1963)
Positive Vibration, from the album Rastaman Vibration (1976)
Disputed