Sinclair Lewis Quote

This age, which should adjudge happiness to be as valuable as soap or munitions, would never come so long as the workers accepted the testimony of paid spokesmen... to the effect that they were contented and happy, rather than the evidence of their own wincing nerves to the effect that they live in a polite version of hell.


The Job (1917)


This age, which should adjudge happiness to be as valuable as soap or munitions, would never come so long as the workers accepted the testimony of...

This age, which should adjudge happiness to be as valuable as soap or munitions, would never come so long as the workers accepted the testimony of...

This age, which should adjudge happiness to be as valuable as soap or munitions, would never come so long as the workers accepted the testimony of...

This age, which should adjudge happiness to be as valuable as soap or munitions, would never come so long as the workers accepted the testimony of...