CHILDREN QUOTES IX

quotations about children

Thus parents, by humouring and cockering them when little, corrupt the principles of nature in their children, and wonder afterwards to taste the bitter waters, when they themselves have poison'd the fountain.

JOHN LOCKE

Some Thoughts Concerning Education


Most children feel immortal--they have no sense that they're ever going to die. For a child, even growing up is something that's barely comprehensible.

JOHN SAUL

Shadows


I wasn't really that informed about the two-year-old. Oh, I'd read about them, and occasionally I'd see documentaries on the Discovery Channel showing two-year-olds in the wild, where they belong.

RAY ROMANO

Everything and a Kite


Children go through life with same tact as tornado.

CHARLIE CHAN

Charlie Chan in The Secret Service


[Children are] like talking animals. Their consciousness is so different from ours that they constitute a different species. They don't have to be particularly interesting children; just the fact that they are children is sufficient. They don't know what anything is, so they have to make it up. No matter how dull they are, they still have to figure things out for themselves.

FRAN LEBOWITZ

The Paris Review, summer 1993


There was a little girl,
Who had a little curl,
Right in the middle of her forehead.
When she was good,
She was very good indeed,
But when she was bad she was horrid.

HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW

"There Was a Little Girl"


A childless man is like a loose engine in a ship. A man must be bolted and screwed to the community before he can work well for its advancement; and there are no such screws and bolts as children.

HENRY WARD BEECHER

Proverbs from Plymouth Pulpit


Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs than of their children.

WILLIAM PENN

Some Fruits of Solitude


Children are the brightest treasures we bring forth into this world, but too large a percentage of the population continues to treat them as inconveniences and nuisances, when they're not treating them as possessions or toys.

CHARLES DE LINT

The Onion Girl


And where, on earth, dwell hope and truth?
In childhood's uncorrupted heart;
Alas! too soon to guileless youth
The world doth its dark code impart!

ANNE S. BUSHBY

"The Morn of Life"


Have you never, when waves were breaking, watched children at sport on the beach,
With their little feet tempting the foam-fringe, till with stronger and further reach
Than they dreamed of, a billow comes bursting, how they turn and scamper and screech!

ALFRED AUSTIN

"A Woman's Apology"


Even when freshly washed and relieved of all obvious confections, children tend to be sticky.

FRAN LEBOWITZ

attributed, Say It With Style


When a child first catches adults out -- when it first walks into his grave little head that adults do not always have divine intelligence, that their judgments are not always wise, their thinking true, their sentences just -- his world falls into panic desolation. The gods are fallen and all safety gone. And there is one sure thing about the fall of gods: they do not fall a little; they crash and shatter or sink deeply into green muck. It is a tedious job to build them up again; they never quite shine. And the child's world is never quite whole again. It is an aching kind of growing.

JOHN STEINBECK

East of Eden