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Every father knows at once too much and too little about his own son.
Fanny Fern
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Fanny Fern
Age: 61 †
Born: 1811
Born: July 9
Died: 1872
Died: October 10
Columnist
Essayist
Journalist
Novelist
Writer
Portland
Maine
Sara Payson Willis Parton
Sara Payson Willis
Little
Much
Every
Son
Father
Littles
More quotes by Fanny Fern
Hurry, drive and bustle ... Everybody looking out for number one, and caring little who jostled past, if their rights were not infringed.
Fanny Fern
I am convinced that there are times in everybody's experience when there is so much to be done, that the only way to do it is to sit down and do nothing.
Fanny Fern
I am getting sick of people. I am falling in love with things. They hold their tongues.
Fanny Fern
To her, the name of father was another name for love.
Fanny Fern
Oh! to be a child again. My only treasures, bits of shell and stone and glass. To love nothing but maple sugar. To fear nothing but a big dog. To go to sleep without dreading the morrow. To wake up with a shout. Not to have seen a dead face. Not to dread a living one. To be able to believe.
Fanny Fern
There are no little things. Little things, so called, are the hinges of the universe.
Fanny Fern
It is the most astonishing thing that persons who have not sufficient education to spell correctly, to punctuate properly, to place capital letters in the right places, should, when other means of support fail, send mss. for publication.
Fanny Fern
I hate the word proper. If you tell me a thing is not proper, I immediately feel the most rabid desire to go 'neck and heels' into it.
Fanny Fern
The term 'lady' has been so misused, that I like better the old-fashioned term, woman.
Fanny Fern
Hoary-headed old Winter, I have had enough of you!
Fanny Fern
One person is as good as another in New England, and better, too.
Fanny Fern
Experience is an excellent doctor, though he never had a diploma.
Fanny Fern
Advice is like a doctor's pills how easily he gives them! how reluctantly he takes them when his turn comes!
Fanny Fern
Everything in the country, animate and inanimate, seems to whisper, be serene, be kind, be happy. We grow tolerant there unconsciously.
Fanny Fern
The cream of enjoyment in this life is always impromptu. The chance walk the unexpected visit the unpremeditated journey the unsought conversation or acquaintance.
Fanny Fern
adversity is so rough a teacher!
Fanny Fern
Why don't men ... leave off those detestable stiff collars, stocks, and things, that make them all look like choked chickens, and which hide so many handsomely-turned throats, that a body never sees, unless a body is married, or unless a body happens to see a body's brothers while they are shaving.
Fanny Fern
A little oil makes machinery work easy.
Fanny Fern
Why will parents use that expression? What right have you to have a favorite child?
Fanny Fern
No crust so tough as the grudged bread of dependence.
Fanny Fern