Lassie Come-Home Quotes
Lassie Come-Home
by
Eric Knight23,763 ratings, 4.19 average rating, 484 reviews
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Lassie Come-Home Quotes
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“To chase a dog is merely to teach it to run away.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“When human beings are ill, they often make a show of their injuries and parade them so that others may see and give them sympathy. It is just the reverse with an animal living in its natural state. Asking no sympathy, deeming rather that weakness of any kind is something to be ashamed of, it crawls away into some hidden corner and there, alone, it awaits the outcome – either recovery or death.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“But the stream had now carried her down towards the village. The boys on the bridge saw the spectacle of a dog being whirled by the current. They shouted and hallooed. With the cruelty of the young that sometimes gets free rein, they picked stones from the roadbed and flung them at her. As her body was whirled under the bridge, they ran across to the downstream side and continued their senseless pelting.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“And there’s a funny thing about honesty; there’s no two ways about it. There’s only one way about it. Honest is honest.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“The collie heard the word “lass,” and barked at it. The pedlar shook his head. “Nay, that’s the pity of it. Ye can understand some o’ man’s language, but man isn’t bright enough to understand thine. And yet it’s us that’s supposed to be most intelligent!”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“It is not, Dan. For I’ve tried it. I take her on the string – and not that she doesn’t follow bonnie and mind me. But she does it, Dan – ye know what I think?” “What?” “Well, like she’s just doing it because she’s sorry for us. We’ve been kind to her, and she wouldn’t want to hurt our feelings, so she just puts up with us. Like she’s too polite to run unless we tell her to go—” “Ah, now, no dog can be full of things like that – like human things—” “Nay, my Herself is, Dan. Ye don’t know that dog. Dan!”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“There are breeds of hunting dogs that are never so happy as when a gun is sounded. But not a collie. It seems as if this breed, having worked so long as man’s companion, has learnt that such sharp, savage sounds may mean hurt.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“There was a blur that flashed past her knees and then Priscilla stood, looking down the road, watching the dog go steadily at a lope as if it knew it had a long, long way to go. So she lifted her hand. “Goodbye, Lassie,” she said, softly. “Goodbye and – good luck!”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“The two of them stared at the dog behind the wire. Lassie stood, ignoring them as if she were a queen and they were beings so far beneath her that she could not see them.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“You’re an impertinent baggage,” he said. “But there’s some hope for you. You know, you’re just like I was when I was your age. You’re like me, that’s what you are. You take after me – the only one of the family that does! So there’s some hope for you.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“She submitted patiently to all the handling of Hynes, as if she knew there were no use making any protest – but each day, just before four o’clock in the afternoon, something waked in her, and the training of a lifetime called her. She would tear against the wires of her pen or dash at the fence and try to leap it. She had not forgotten.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“Joe trotted beside his father, who walked quickly. He was thinking that he would never be able to understand why grown-ups were so hard-hearted just when you needed them most.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“He raced on down High Street, and now Lassie seemed to catch his enthusiasm. She ran beside him, leaping high in the air, barking that sharp cry of happiness that dogs often can achieve. Her mouth was stretched wide, as collies so frequently do in their glad moments, and in a way that makes collie owners swear that their dogs laugh when pleased.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“Lassie was so well known in the village. It was because, as the women said, “You can set your clock by her”.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“happy She’s”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“argued and joked about prices.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“feeding all the stray dogs”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“weary”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“nor answered any of their commands.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“Lassie,”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“T’watter’s”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“Lassie”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“Hi”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“It is little use to blame a dog for having fear. A dog has so many braveries that its few fears do not cancel them out.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“Not with all his brain development can man tell how a bird or an animal can be crated, taken miles away in darkness, and when released, strike back towards its home. Man only knows that animals can do what he can neither do himself nor explain.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“Ah, war – machine wars. Bullets took them all. The brave and the cowardly, the weak and the fine strong ones like Dannie. And it wasn’t the dying that took bravery, then, for cowards could die. It was the living that took bravery – living in that mud and rain and cold and keeping the spirit strong through it all. That was the bravery.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“The tiny cottage, far out on the highway from any town, was a cheap place to live. In the little plot of land about it, Fadden grew a stock of vegetables. He had a flock of chickens, several ducks, and a goose “fattening for Christmas”. This last was their largest and most lasting joke. Some years before, Fadden had traded a dozen early hen eggs for one tiny gosling. Carefully, he had raised it, boasting about what a fine plump bird it would be by Christmas time. It had become just that – marvellous and plump. And a few days before the holiday of holidays, Fadden had taken his hatchet, and he had sat indoors a long time, regarding it. Finally his wife, understanding, had looked up patiently. “Dan,” she said. “I just don’t think I’d favour goose this year. If you did a chicken instead – and—” “Aye, Dally,” Fadden had said. “It would be a tarrible waste – one big goose for just the two on us. Now a chicken would be just right—” And so the goose was spared.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“For a dog is not like a cat. Like men, a dog has learnt to fear heights. And yet it was the only way.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“Ah, Peggy, and how should I know? All I do know is that ye’d be feeding all the stray dogs and waifs and tramps in the world if ye had your way.”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
“So the dogs stood for a moment – the one prone under Lassie’s stiff paw, the other cleaning himself with an air that seemed to say: “I didn’t have anything to do with this whole affair at all!”
― Lassie Come-Home
― Lassie Come-Home
