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And One
Quotation Mistakenly Attributed From time to time online, I've come across various citations of a quotation attributed to Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn that goes as follows:
"I is from God; we is from the Devil."
Or, alternately,
"We is from the Devil but I is from God."
I quite like the idea behind that saying, and even cited it in an Amazon.com review of one of K-L's smaller works. The problem was that in my K-L reading, I'd never been able to find precisely where he said it. I found one posting online where someone said it was from Leftism Revisited. Getting out my copy, I read this on page 5:
That's clearly the sentiment in question. Except that as you can see, (a) the idea is that I "comes from the flesh" not from God, and (b), K-L did not originate the idea but is paraphrasing Simone Weil.
Somewhat unusually for the König of discursive endnotes, K-L didn't attribute that saying to any particular work of Weil's. However, a bit of digging turned up the following in her 1950 book Attente de Dieu, published in 1951 as Waiting for God:
Not as pithy and hard-hitting, perhaps, as "I is from God; we is from the Devil," but certainly a powerfully thought-provoking sentiment in its own right.
If you wish, you can return to: or My K-L Intro and Biography Page.
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This page last updated on
Saturday, March 22, 2008
E-mail: andrew (at) andrewrogers (dot) net