Archive

Quotes

If parents would only realize how they bore their children!

—George Bernard Shaw, c. 1910

It is not flesh and blood but the heart which makes us fathers and sons.

—Friedrich Schiller, 1781

All women become like their mothers. That is their tragedy. No man does. That’s his.

—Oscar Wilde, 1895

The family is the test of freedom; because the family is the only thing that the free man makes for himself and by himself.

—G.K. Chesterton, 1919

Familiarity breeds contempt—and children.

—Mark Twain, c. 1900

Men are what their mothers made them.

—Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1860

Every man sees in his relatives, and especially in his cousins, a series of grotesque caricatures of himself.

—H.L. Mencken, 1919

The strength of a family, like the strength of an army, is in its loyalty to each other.

—Mario Puzo, 2001

Nobody, who has not been in the interior of a family, can say what the difficulties of any individual of that family may be.

—Jane Austen, 1815

The most socially subversive institution of our time is the one-parent family.

—Paul Johnson, 1989

A family’s photograph album is generally about the extended family—and, often, is all that remains of it.

—Susan Sontag, 1977

By and large, mothers and housewives are the only workers who do not have regular time off. They are the great vacationless class.

—Anne Morrow Lindbergh, 1955

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

—Edward, Duke of Windsor, 1957