Encountering Directors interview (1969) 
Context: I think people talk too much; that's the truth of the matter. I do. I don't believe in words. People use too many words and usually wrongly. I am sure that in the distant future people will talk much less and in a more essential way. If people talk a lot less, they will be happier. Don't ask me why.
                                    
“Sad is a fake word for me to be using, I am still angry that their reason for disagreeing with McCarthy was too often his crude methods.... Many of the anti-Communists were, of course, honest men. But none of them... has stepped forward to admit a mistake. It is not necessary in this country; they too know that we are a people who do not remember much. I have written here that I have recovered. I mean it only in a worldly sense because I do not believe in recovery. The past, with its pleasures, its rewards, its foolishness, its punishments, is there for each of us forever, and it should be.”
Source: Scoundrel Time (1976), p. 150
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Lillian Hellman 20
American dramatist and screenwriter 1905–1984Related quotes
                                        
                                        Source: Scoundrel Time (1976), p. 150 
Context: Sad is a fake word for me to be using, I am still angry that their reason for disagreeing with McCarthy was too often his crude methods.... Many of the anti-Communists were, of course, honest men. But none of them... has stepped forward to admit a mistake. It is not necessary in this country; they too know that we are a people who do not remember much. I have written here that I have recovered. I mean it only in a worldly sense because I do not believe in recovery. The past, with its pleasures, its rewards, its foolishness, its punishments, is there for each of us forever, and it should be.
                                    
Blog posting (16 July 2011) http://janefonda.com/qvc-cancelled-my-appearance/
                                        
                                        Tape number two, side A 
1975 - 1992, Oral history interview with Joan Mitchell, 1986
                                    
                                        
                                        Character 
1880s, Lectures and Biographical Sketches (1883)
                                    
Responding to a question at his press conference (February 28, 1947); reported in Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Harry S. Truman, 1947, p. 191