
III – The Soldier and the Statesman.
"Generals and Generalship" (1939)
Source: Excerpts of Martial law speech (14 December 1981)
III – The Soldier and the Statesman.
"Generals and Generalship" (1939)
This is clearly spurious. The only published appearance of this attribution yet located is in Baking Recipes of Our Founding Fathers : Authentic Baking Recipes from the Wives and Mothers Of, & Trivia About, the Signers of the Declaration of Independence and Our Constitution (2004), by Robert W. Pelton, p. 213. As the "religionists" passage cited was not written until 1956, and was not misattributed to Henry until 1988, it is obvious that Rutledge (who died in 1800) can neither have said that he agreed with it nor attributed it to Henry.
Misattributed
“Sometimes, the loneliness probably got to be too much and anyone seemed better than no one.”
Source: Through the Zombie Glass
Interview with Request Magazine, October 1994 http://web.stargate.net/soundgarden/articles/request_10-94.shtml,
Soundgarden Era
Source: Full Catastrophe Living: Using the Wisdom of Your Body and Mind to Face Stress, Pain, and Illness
Source: The Masters and the Path (1925), Ch. 1
2022, June 2022, Statement by President Joe Biden on the 101st Anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre
Roosevelt to Henry M. Heymann (2 December 1919), as quoted in Roosevelt and Howe (1962), by Alfred B. Rollins, Jr., p. 153
1910s