Archive

Quotes

The young leading the young is like the blind leading the blind.

—Philip Dormer Stanhope, 1747

No wise man ever wished to be younger.

—Jonathan Swift, 1706

A sick child is always the mother’s property; her own feelings generally make it so.

—Jane Austen, 1816

No one’s serious at seventeen.

—Arthur Rimbaud, 1870

I shall soon be six-and-twenty. Is there anything in the future that can possibly console us for not being always twenty-five?

—Lord Byron, 1813

The thing that impresses me most about America is the way parents obey their children.

—Edward VIII, 1957

I’ve never understood why people consider youth a time of freedom and joy. It’s probably because they have forgotten their own.

—Margaret Atwood, 1976

Childhood has no forebodings—but then, it is soothed by no memories of outlived sorrow.

—George Eliot, 1860

I was born at a very early age. Before I had time to regret it, I was four and a half years old.

—Groucho Marx, 1959

The young man must store up, the old man must use.

—Seneca the Younger, c. 63

Most men employ the first years of their life in making the last miserable.

—Jean de La Bruyère, 1688

Childhood knows what it wants—to leave childhood behind.

—Jean Cocteau, 1947

The boy is, of all wild beasts, the most difficult to manage. 

—Plato, c. 348 BC