Robert Newton Peck
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Quotes
Robert Newton Peck quotes (showing 1-13 of 13)
“Somehow, the Good Lord don't want to see no man start a cold morning with just black coffee.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
“Aren't you a Republican? Just about everyone is in the whole town of Learning."
"No, I'm not a Republican. And I'm not no Democrat. I'm not nothing."
"Why not?"
"Because I'm not allowed to vote."
"Me either. You have to be twenty-one to vote. I'm only twelve."
"Reckon I'm soon looking at sixty."
"Then why can't you vote? Is it because you're a Shaker?"
"No, it's account of I can't read or write. When a man cannot do these things, people think his head is weak. Even when he's proved his back is strong.
"Who decides?"
"Men who look at me and take me not for what I be. Men who only see my mark, my X, when I can't sign my name. They can't see how I true a beam to build our barn, or see that the rows of corn in my field are straight as fences. They just seem me walk the street in Learning in clothes made me by my own woman. They do not care that my coat is strudy and keeps me warm. They'll not care that I owe no debt and I am beholding to no man.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
"No, I'm not a Republican. And I'm not no Democrat. I'm not nothing."
"Why not?"
"Because I'm not allowed to vote."
"Me either. You have to be twenty-one to vote. I'm only twelve."
"Reckon I'm soon looking at sixty."
"Then why can't you vote? Is it because you're a Shaker?"
"No, it's account of I can't read or write. When a man cannot do these things, people think his head is weak. Even when he's proved his back is strong.
"Who decides?"
"Men who look at me and take me not for what I be. Men who only see my mark, my X, when I can't sign my name. They can't see how I true a beam to build our barn, or see that the rows of corn in my field are straight as fences. They just seem me walk the street in Learning in clothes made me by my own woman. They do not care that my coat is strudy and keeps me warm. They'll not care that I owe no debt and I am beholding to no man.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
“When you re the only one to do something it always gets done.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
“A Long Way from Chicago is the funniest book I have read in a while. You will enjoy the antics of Grandma and the love and dismay her grandchildren feel for her”
― Robert Newton Peck
― Robert Newton Peck
“Need is a weak word. has nothing to do with what people get. Ain't what you need that matters. It's what you do.”
― Robert Newton Peck
― Robert Newton Peck
“There would be no work on this day. A day no pigs would die.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
“No, sir. I won’t complain. Except when I move it sharp and sudden, my arm is real numb. It’s the rest of me that’s in misery.”
“Where?”
“My backside and my privates. I’m stuck so full of prickers, it makes me smart just to think on it.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
“Where?”
“My backside and my privates. I’m stuck so full of prickers, it makes me smart just to think on it.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
“Papa, ain’t it a caution that we can only eat two legs off a frog, ’stead of four.”
And he said: “Rob, here’s what you do. You catch a real big bullfrog and make friends with him. And teach him to jump backwards. That’ll make his front legs big as the hind.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
And he said: “Rob, here’s what you do. You catch a real big bullfrog and make friends with him. And teach him to jump backwards. That’ll make his front legs big as the hind.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
“I’d heard about the Baptists from Jacob Henry’s mother. According to her, Baptists were a strange lot. They put you in water to see how holy you were. Then they ducked you under the water three times. Didn’t matter a whit if you could swim or no. If you didn’t come up, you got dead and your mortal soul went to Hell. But if you did come up, it was even worse. You had to be a Baptist.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
“We’d learned in school that the city of London, England, is the largest city in the whole wide world. Maybe so. But it couldn’t have been much bigger than Rutland.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
“Try an’ try,” he said, “but when it comes day’s end, I can’t wash the pig off me. And your mother never complains. Not once, in all these years, has she ever said that I smell strong. I said once to her that I was sorry.”
“What did Mama say?”
“She said I smelled of honest work, and that there was no sorry to be said or heard.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die
“What did Mama say?”
“She said I smelled of honest work, and that there was no sorry to be said or heard.”
― Robert Newton Peck, A Day No Pigs Would Die



