Growing Up Quotes

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Growing Up Growing Up by Russell Baker
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Growing Up Quotes Showing 1-9 of 9
“We all come from the past, and children ought to know what it was that went into their making, to know that life is a braided cord of humanity stretching up from time long gone, and that it cannot be defined by the span of a single journey from diaper to shroud.”
Russell Baker, Growing Up
“Children rarely want to know who their parents were before they were parents, and when age finally stirs their curiosity there is no parent left to tell them. If”
Russell Baker, Growing Up
“You find it so easy to be smart that you don’t bother to work very hard”
Russell Baker, Growing Up
“One Thanksgiving she burned herself badly when, running up from the cellar over with the ceremonial turkey, she tripped on the stairs and tumbled back down, ending at the bottom in the debris of giblets, hot gravy, and battered turkey. Life was combat, and victory was not to the lazy, the timid, the slugabed, the drugstore cowboy, the libertine, the mushmouth afraid to tell people exactly what was on his mind whether people liked it or not. She ran.”
Russell Baker, Growing Up
tags: life
“After that [father's death] I never cried with any real conviction, nor expected much of anyone's God except indifference, nor loved deeply without fear that it would cost me dearly in pain. At the age of five I had become a skeptic and began to sense that any happiness that came my way might be the prelude to some grim cosmic joke.”
Russell Baker, Growing Up
“The changeover from knickers to long pants was the ritual recognition that a boy had reached adolescence, or “the awkward age,” as everybody called it. The “teenager,” like the atomic bomb, was still uninvented, and there were few concessions to adolescence, but the change to long pants was a ritual of recognition.”
Russell Baker, Growing Up
“Children rarely want to know who their parents were before they were parents, and when age finally stirs their curiosity there is no parent left to tell them.”
Russell Baker, Growing Up
“forsan et haec olim meminisse invabit.” After great difficulty and with much help from the teacher I had worked this out to mean, “Someday we shall recall these trials with pleasure.”
Russell Baker, Growing Up
“One family close by produced children in such volume that the parents ran out of names and began giving them numbers.”
Russell Baker, Growing Up