By 'one tangent' I presume you mean differentiable at only one point (otherwise the function f(x) = x has only one tangent line).
Well, I can't write up a proof without using an epsilon/delta type argument (my idea was to consider what it means to not be differentiable, then show that differentiable in a point but nowhere else leads to a contradiction), but I think it's intuitively clear that you can't have this. If a function is differentiable at a point, then lim h->0- blah = lim h->0+ blah. Now the intuition, you can talk about other points arbitrarily close to the differentiable point - and if none of them are differentiable points, then this contradicts your lim h->0 'approximations'.
It might be best to draw a curve and see that. The idea is that, if a function is differentiable in a point, then it is differentiable in some neighborhood of that point.
At least, that's my gut feeling - maybe there is some slick proof without resorting to sequences /shrug.