“Love is the delusion that one woman differs from another.”
Sententiæ
1940s–present, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
“Love is the delusion that one woman differs from another.”
Sententiæ
1940s–present, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
“My business is not prognosis, but diagnosis. I am not engaged in therapeutics, but in pathology.”
1920s, Notes on Democracy (1926)
"Coda" from Smart Set (December 1920)
1920s
“Poverty is a soft pedal upon the branches of human activity, not excepting the spiritual.”
Fonte: 1910s, A Book of Prefaces (1917), Ch. 4
“I don't have prejudice, I hate everyone equally.”
Attributed in The Mammoth Book of Jokes (2006) edited by Geoff Tibbals; no earlier citation yet located.
Disputed
On Politics: A Carnival of Buncombe (1920-1936), p. 279
1920s
A Little Book in C Major, New York, NY, John Lane Company (1916) p. 76
1910s
"The American: His New Puritanism," http://books.google.com/books?id=tn9HAAAAYAAJ&q=%22If+there+is+one+mental+vice+indeed+which+sets+off+the+American+people+from+all+other+folks+who+walk+the+earth%22+%22it+is+that+of%22+%22that+every+human+act+must+be+either+right+or+wrong+and+that+ninety-nine+percent+of+them+are+wrong%22&pg=RA1-PA87#v=onepage The Smart Set (February 1914)
1910s
The American Mercury (May 1933), p. 136
1930s
1920s, Notes on Democracy (1926)
“Injustice is relatively easy to bear; what stings is justice.”
Fonte: 1920s, Prejudices, Third Series (1922), Ch. 3
1940s–present, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
“Jealousy is the theory that some other fellow has just as little taste.”
1940s–present, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
“The lunatic fringe wags the underdog.”
Sententiæ: The Citizen and the State
1940s–present, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
“A man may be a fool and not know it — but not if he is married.”
1940s–present, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche (1908), pg. 217
1900s
35
1940s–present, Minority Report : H.L. Mencken's Notebooks (1956)