Shadows of the Workhouse Quotes
Shadows of the Workhouse
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Jennifer Worth27,227 ratings, 4.17 average rating, 2,126 reviews
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Shadows of the Workhouse Quotes
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“Bah! Suffragettes. I've no time for suffragettes. They made the biggest mistake in history. They went for equality. They should have gone for power!”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“Health is the greatest of God's gifts, but we take it for granted; yet it hangs on a thread as fine as a spider's web and the tiniest thing can make it snap, leaving the strongest of us helpless in an instant.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“Life turns on little things. The momentous events in history can leave us untouched, while small events may shape our destinies.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“The young can be very lovely, but the faces of the old can be truly beautiful. Every line and fold, every contour and wrinkle of Sister Monica Joan's fine white skin revealed her character, strength, courage, humanity and irrepressible humour.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“You know the secret of life, my dear, because you know how to love.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“Inanimate objects have a life of their own, especially when they are the daily companions of a living soul. Without that life, they take on a bleak, desolate appearance, like furniture piled up in a warehouse.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“I remember one old woman we pulled out of the rubble. She wasn’t hurt. She gripped my arm and said: ‘That bugger Hitler. ’E’s killed me old man, good riddance, ’e’s killed me kids, more’s the pity. ‘E’s bombed me ’ouse, so I got nowhere ’a live, bu’ ’e ain’t got me. An’ I got sixpence in me pocket an’ vat pub on ve corner, Master’s Arms, ain’t been bombed, so let’s go an’ ’ave a drink an’ a sing-song.’” There”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“Nothing binds people more strongly than the same sense of humour, and the ability to laugh together.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“The Lord grant us a quiet night and a perfect end.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“Sir, I have the honour to inform you that I do not consider your government has any right to detain me as a prisoner. I have therefore decided to escape from your custody,’ and ending up: ‘I remain, sir, your humble and obedient servant, Winston Churchill.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“And ‘woman’ in the slums is capable of taking on almost superhuman responsibility, from a very young age, that would crush most of us. Today they live in luxury — look at all the giddy young girls around us — they have no memory of how their mothers and grandmothers lived and died. They have no understanding of what it took to raise a family twenty or thirty years ago.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“We who live comfortable, affluent lives in the twenty-first century cannot begin to imagine what it must have been like to be a pauper in a workhouse. We cannot picture relentless cold with little heating, no adequate clothing or warm bedding, and insufficient food. We cannot imagine our children being taken away from us because we are too poor to feed them, nor our liberty being curtailed for the simple crime of being poor.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“For the working class, life was nasty, brutish and short. Hunger and hardship were expected. Men were old at forty, women worn out at thirty-five. The death of children was taken for granted. Poverty was frankly regarded as a moral defect. Social Darwinism (the strong adapt and survive, the weak are crushed) was borrowed and distorted from the Origin of Species (1858) and applied to human organisation.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“Women are the cohesive force in society.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“The accumulated experience of old age was much more interesting than the chatter of the young.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“We must all commit Sister Monica Joan to our prayers. We must seek God’s help. But I will also engage a good lawyer.” I”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“I woke in the middle of the night, and he was standing at the side of my bed. He was as real as my husband sleeping beside me. He was tall, and upright, but looked younger than when I had known him, like a handsome man of about sixty or sixty-five. He was smiling, and then he said, “You know the secret of life, my dear, because you know how to love.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“When you are young, you go where you wish, but when you are old, others will take you where you do not wish to go.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“I was in a Highland Regiment, as you know — the Scots Guards — and I’ll tell you something: there is nothing in the world like the sound of the bagpipes to raise a man’s morale, to lift his spirits, and give him strength. However tired and thirsty we were, the bagpipes at the front of the column only had to strike up and within seconds you felt your feet lift off the ground, your step lighten, your spirits rise, and every man-Jack was marching strong, in rhythm to the pipes.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“No men were allowed, and a nurse who smuggled one in would be dismissed if she was caught. Student nurses could not marry. All this was to repress our sexuality, yet we were dressed up like sex kittens. With exquisite irony, in today’s permissive society, when anything goes and nurses can do whatever they like sexually, the uniform has changed beyond all recognition, and the average nurse now looks like a sack of potatoes tied in the middle, often wearing trousers rather than sexy black stockings.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“Well, it certainly is for men, because large numbers of men living together can easily become like wild animals. Men are brutes at heart, and without the civilising influence of women they quickly revert to savagery.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“The knowledge of rejection, of being unwanted, is more terrible to live with than anything else, and a rejected child will usually never get over it.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“The young can be very lovely, but the faces of the old can be truly beautiful. Every line and fold, every contour and wrinkle of Sister Monica Joan’s fine white skin revealed her character, strength, courage, humanity and irrepressible humour.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“I sells ladies fings, and vis nun, she comes up to me stall an’ afore you can blink an eye, she picks up a couple of bread an’ cheeses, tucks ’em in ’er petticoats, an’ is off round the Jack Horner, dahn ve frog an’ toad, quick as shit off a stick. I couldn’t Adam an’ Eve it, bu’ vats wot she done. When I tells me carvin’ knife wot I seen, she calls me an ’oly friar, an’ says she’ll land me one on me north and south if I calls Sister Monica Joan a tea-leaf. Very fond of Sister, she is. So I never says nuffink to no one, like.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“More than anything else a dying person needs to have someone with them. This used to be recognised in hospitals, and when I trained, no one every died alone. However busy the wards, or however short the staff, a nurse was always assigned to sit with a dying person to hold their hand, stroke their forehead, or whisper a few words. Peace and quietness, even reverence for the dying, were expected and assured.
I disagree wholly with the notion that there is no point in staying with an unconscious patient because he or she does not know you are there. I am perfectly certain, though years of experience and observation, that unconsciousness, as we define it, is not a state of knowing. Rather, it is a state of knowing and understanding on a different level that is beyond our immediate experience.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
I disagree wholly with the notion that there is no point in staying with an unconscious patient because he or she does not know you are there. I am perfectly certain, though years of experience and observation, that unconsciousness, as we define it, is not a state of knowing. Rather, it is a state of knowing and understanding on a different level that is beyond our immediate experience.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“The men were ordered to retreat, and to leave the dead. In the sun the injured would die of thirst the following day. “That was the moment when I realised the truth of my mother’s words, that we were just ‘cannon-fodder’. Young private soldiers were ordered, time and time again, to march directly into gunfire, and High Command didn’t give a damn how many died, nor the cost in human suffering.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“...Our Lord's words to Peter, as recorded in St. John's gospel: 'When you are young, you go where you wish, but when you are old, others will take you where you do not wish to go.'...I have always thought that it is a general reflection about us all.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“In large groups of enclosed people who were not allowed out, infectious diseases spread like wildfire. For example, in the 1880s in a workhouse in Kent, it was found that in a child population of one hundred and fifty-four, only three children did not have tuberculosis.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“The young can be very lovely, but the faces of the old can be truly beautiful.”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
“Bah! Suffragettes. I’ve no time for suffragettes. They made the biggest mistake in history. They went for equality. They should have gone for power!”
― Shadows of the Workhouse
― Shadows of the Workhouse
