The Cricket in Times Square Quotes
The Cricket in Times Square
by
George Selden67,526 ratings, 4.04 average rating, 2,456 reviews
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The Cricket in Times Square Quotes
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“I guess I'm just feeling Septemberish," sighed Chester. "It's getting towards autumn now. And it's so pretty up in Connecticut. All the trees change color. The days get very clear―with a little smoke on the horizon from burning leaves. Pumpkins begin to come out.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“Talent is something rare and beautiful and precious,
and it must not be allowed to go to waste.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
and it must not be allowed to go to waste.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
“Just this once, in the very heart of the busiest of cities, everyone was perfectly content not to move and hardly to breathe. And for those few minutes, while the song lasted, Times Square was still as a meadow at evening, with the sun streaming in on the people there and the wind moving among them as if they were only tall blades of grass.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“Chester's playing filled the station. Like ripples around a stone dropped into still water, the circles of silence spread out from the newsstand. And as people listened, a change came over their faces. Eyes that looked worried grew soft and peaceful; tongues left off chattering; and ears full of the city's rustling were rested by the cricket's melody.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“Neatness was not one of the things he aimed at in life.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“Tucker the mouse said I learned the value of ecomonicness - which means savings.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“Harry had been down to Washington Square to hear an open-air concert of chamber music. How you could play chamber music outdoors Chester didn't understand—but it was New York and anything could happen.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“downtown. He held the matchbox up at the level of his chest so the cricket could see out. This was the first time Chester had been able to watch where he was going on the subway. The last time he had been buried under roast beef sandwiches. He hung out of the box, gazing up and down the car.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“A three-cornered conversation began.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“If a leaf in a green forest far from New York had fallen at midnight through the darkness into a thicket, it might have sounded like that.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“his”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“Bellini”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
“Old Money Bags Mouse, he’s known as.”
― The Cricket in Times Square
― The Cricket in Times Square
