I Found It! (Abraham Lincoln Alcohol Quote)

I’m sorry. I was so happy and excited, I had to share this with someone. I have been literally looking for this quote in my private files for years. And I’ve got it!

It really does express the way I feel about alcohol, BTW. Growing up in a Catholic family, it wasn’t good, it wasn’t bad. It was just a part of life. And, like pornography, some people can handle it. And sadly some people can’t.

Here:

"When all such of us as have now reached the years of maturity first opened our eyes upon the stage of existence, we found intoxicating liquor recognized by everybody, used by everybody, repudiated by nobody

"It commonly entered into the first draught of the infant and the last of the dying man.

“It is true that even then it was known and acknowledged that many were greatly injured by it; but none seemed to think the injury arose from the use of a bad thing, but from the abuse of a very good thing.”

―ABRAHAM LINCOLN, 1842.

Thank you all for your time and indulgence :slight_smile: .

Or, as it’s been less eloquently but more succinctly put:

“To alcohol: the cause of, and solution to, all of life’s problems!”

–HOMER SIMPSON, 1997.

From Lincoln’s address to the Springfield Washington Temperance Society on February 22, 1842.

It has been postulated that without alcohol, the human race would have died out centuries ago.

As Benjamin Franklin put it, “Wine is a constant proof that God loves us and loves to see us happy.”

I like one President’s quote. I can’t remember who said it or the exact quote, but it went something like: “I don’t understand teetotalers. They wake up in the morning and that’s it! That’s as good as they’re going to feel all day.”

Not actually from Franklin, but based on some of the other verified quotes from him, he’d probably agree with the sentiment.

There is a saying about beer that is commonly misattributed to Franklin. But in a letter he wrote to his friend André Morellet he said, in part:

Or in English:

https://quoteinvestigator.com/2016/06/24/beer-wine/

I don’t know if that originated from a president. I’ve often read it from people who feel the need to justify using drugs. It’s a sentiment I loathe, even as a joke.

I believe that it might be from Robert Byrne - a humorous quote collector - rather than from one of the famous persons in his books, but I recall from one of his works:

Can a man live without his liquor? That depends on the liver.

(Or something to that effect)

I don’t know who cares, or where he got it, but my Daddy always said: Candy is dandy, but liquor is quicker

:face_with_hand_over_mouth:

One source was the original Willy Wonka movie:

My dad’s was: Liquor in the front, poker in the rear.

I think that’s also been misattributed to Churchill. But then, I think every quote about the joys of drinking has been misattributed to Churchill at some point.

Yeah, that’s probably where I got that from. I read the quote so long ago the memory is kind of vague.

“You can’t believe everything you read on the internet.”
– Abraham Lincoln.

I may be misunderstanding the meaning of this quote (I’ve heard it before, so I am slow…), but the fastest I’ve ever become tipsy was in breathing in the vapors from a cup of steaming-hot sake. It is instantaneous.

Almost as if people are conflating Churchill and W. C. Fields…?

When it comes to political alcohol-related quotes, my favorite is Noah S. Sweat’s “If By Whiskey” speech, read here by John Grisham:

IIRC, “candy is dandy” was Ogden Nash, forgotten and replaced by Calvin Trillin; who will also be forgotten and replaced. Gelette Burgess also figures in there somewhere, but we forget.

The poem is part of a series called Random Reflections. “On Ice-breaking” was run in The New Yorker magazine on August 8, 1930.

Candy
Is dandy
But liquor
Is quicker.