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My Childhood Quotes

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My Childhood My Childhood by Maxim Gorky
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My Childhood Quotes Showing 1-17 of 17
“When the life is monotonous , even grief is a welcome event...”
Maxim Gorky, My Childhood
“In the monotony of everyday existence grief comes as a holiday, and a fire is an entertainment. A scratch embellishes an empty face.”
Maxim Gorky, My Childhood
“In recalling my childhood I like to picture myself as a beehive to which various simple obscure people brought the honey of their knowledge and thoughts on life, generously enriching my character with their own experience. Often this honey was dirty and bitter, but every scrap of knowledge was honey all the same.”
Maxim Gorky, My Childhood
“Anger is like ice, and also quick to melt”
Maxim Gorky, My Childhood
“Much later I realized that Russian people, because of the poverty and squalor of their lives, love to amuse themselves with sorrow--to play with it like children, and are seldom ashamed of being unhappy.”
Maxim Gorky, My childhood
“And this was the end of my first friendship with one of that innumerable company of people who are foreigners in their own country, but who are in reality its finest sons....”
Maxim Gorky, My Childhood
“All parents wash away their sins with their tears; you are not the only one.”
Maxim Gorky, My childhood
“Sometimes when I recall the abominations of that barbarous Russian life I question whether they are worth dwelling on. But on further consideration I am convinced that they demand being exposed, for they are the vicious tenacious truth, which has not been exterminated to this very day. They represent a truth which must be exposed to its roots and torn out of our grim and shameful life - torn out of the very soul and memory of man.

But there is another, more positive reason impelling me to describe such horrors. In spite of their repulsiveness and they way in which they mutilated what would otherwise be fine natures, the Russian is sufficiently young and wholesome in spirit to abolish such things and he will surely do so.

Our life is amazing not only for the vigorous scum of bestiality with which it is overgrown, but also for the bright and wholesome creative forces gleaming beneath. And the influence of good is growing, giving promise that our people will at last awaken to a life full of beauty and bright humanity.”
Maxim Gorky, My Childhood
“For sadness and gladness live within us side by side, almost inseparable; the one succeeding the other with an elusive, unappreciable swiftness.”
Maxim Gorky, My childhood
“For many years I kept grandfather鈥檚 church calendar with his notes written inside it. The words 鈥淪aved from calamity by these benefactors鈥� were written in straight letters and red ink on the day of Joachim and Anna. I remember that calamity. Worried about supporting his failed children, grandfather had begun to lend money, secretly holding his debtors鈥� possessions in hock. Someone informed against him, and one night the police descended on the house to search it. There was a great commotion, but it all turned out fine. Grandfather prayed until sunrise, and in the morning I watched him write those words in the calendar.”
Maxim Gorky, Childhood: An English Translation
“Silence reigned; and any sound, such as the fluttering of birds or the rustling of fallen leaves, struck one as being unnaturally loud, and caused a shuddering start, which soon died away into that torpid stillness which seemed to encompass the earth and cast a spell over the heart. In such moments as these are born thoughts of a peculiar purity--ethereal thoughts, thin, transparent as a cobweb, incapable of being expressed in words. They come and go quickly, like falling stars, kindling a flame of sorrow in the soul, soothing and disturbing it as at the same time; and the soul is, as it were, on fire, and, being plastic, reveives an impression which lasts for all time.”
Maxim Gorky, My Childhood
“Y sal铆 al mundo.”
Maxim Gorky, Dias de Infancia
“En nuestra vida no s贸lo es asombroso que la capa de barbarie de groser铆a animal sea a煤n tan densa y espesa, sino el hecho de que por debajo de esa capa, por gruesa que sea, crezca triunfante lo bueno, lo sano, lo que hay en el hombre de creador, y mantengan la inconmovible esperanza en nuestro renacimiento a una vida bella, luminosa, verdaderarnente humana. Cap铆tulo”
Maxim Gorky, Dias de Infancia
“Cuando reviven en mi recuerdo estas abominaciones, pe-sadas como plomo, de la vida incivil de Rusia, me pregunto a veces si vale la pena hablar de estas cosas. Y con toda convicci贸n me respondo: S铆, vale la pena, porque lo que des-cribo es a煤n una realidad viva y triste, una realidad que sigue existiendo hoy mismo en toda su barbarie y que es preciso conocer hasta en sus ra铆ces, para poder extirparla de la conciencia, del alma del pueblo, de nuestra vida entera est煤pida e ignominiosa.”
Maxim Gorky, Dias de Infancia
“Aprende a trabajar t煤 solo y no dejes que nadie te domine. Vive tranquilamente y en paz, pero al mismo tiempo con audacia. Escucha lo que dicen los dem谩s, pero haz siempre lo que mejor te parezca.”
Maxim Gorky, Dias de Infancia
“脟ocukken kendimi bir kovana benzetiyordum. 脟e艧it 莽e艧it, basit ve silik insanlar, ar谋lar gibi i莽ime, insana ve hayata dair bilgi ve duygular谋n谋n bal谋n谋 ta艧谋r, her biri elinden geldi臒i kadar c枚mert莽e, ruhumu zenginle艧tirirdi. 脟o臒u kez bu bal kirli ve ac谋 olurdu, ama yine de bald谋!”
Maxim Gorky, My Childhood
“Tek sam mnogo kasnije pojmio da Rusi, zbog siroma拧tva i oskudice u kojoj 啪ive, op膰enito vole da se zabavljaju svojim jadima, da se kao djeca igraju njima i da se malokad stide svoje nesre膰e.
U beskrajnom nizu sivih dana i jad je blagdan, i po啪ar je zabava; na praznom licu i ogrebotina je - ukras...”
Maxim Gorky, My Childhood