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Youth Quotes - Page 34

Some may believe we're on the road to the Hitler youth.

Some may believe we're on the road to the Hitler youth.

"Countdown" with Keith Olbermann, www.nbcnews.com. May 14, 2010.

California has all the beauties of youth as well as its idiocies and vices.

Gertrude Atherton (2014). “The Avalanche”, p.101, The Floating Press

Nature in denying us perennial youth has at least invited us to become unselfish and noble.

George Santayana (1934). “Little essays drawn from the writings of George Santayana”, p.99, Рипол Классик

A well-bred youth neither speakes of himselfe, nor being spoken to is silent.

George Herbert (1874). “The Complete Works of George Herbert: Prose”, p.328

Presse a stick, and it seemes a youth.

George Herbert (1874). “The Complete Works of George Herbert: Prose”, p.319

Even the youngest of us may be wrong sometimes.

George Bernard Shaw (2016). “The Critical Shaw: On Literature”, p.25, RosettaBooks

You are a man still young, so to say, in your first youth and so put intellect above everything.

Fyodor Dostoevsky (1999). “Crime and Punishment”, p.467, Modern Library

i was perhaps an egotist in youth, but i soon found it made me morbid to think too much about myself

F. Scott Fitzgerald (2015). “The Complete Works of F. Scott Fitzgerald: Novels, Short Stories, Poetry, Articles, Letters, Plays & Screenplays: From the author of The Great Gatsby, The Side of Paradise, Tender Is the Night, The Beautiful and Damned, The Love of the Last Tycoon, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and many other notable works”, p.289, e-artnow

It is youth’s felicity as well as its insufficiency that it can never live in the present, but must always be measuring up the day against its own radiantly imagined future

F. Scott Fitzgerald, Matthew J. Bruccoli (1995). “The Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald: A New Collection”, p.195, Simon and Schuster

It is easy, retrospectively, to endow one's youth with a false precocity or a false innocence; to tamper with the dates marking one's stature on the edge of the door.

Evelyn Waugh (2012). “Brideshead Revisited: The Sacred and Profane Memories of Captain Charles Ryder”, p.31, Penguin UK