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Delaware Quotes

Quotes tagged as "delaware" Showing 1-10 of 10
M.T. Anderson
“Tomorrow is the benefit dinner for the Save the Chameleon Fund. The Decentville Zoo thinks their chameleons are either dead, missing, or plaid.”
M.T. Anderson, Jasper Dash and the Flame-Pits of Delaware

Colson Whitehead
“Georgina hailed from Delaware and had that vexing way of Delaware ladies, delighting in puzzles.”
Colson Whitehead, The Underground Railroad

“302 phone number. Delaware. Truthfully, I didn't think they allowed anyone to live in Delaware anymore.”
Meltzer, Brad

Claudia Goldin
“Abraham Lincoln was correct when he said that less than one-half day's cost of the Civil War could have purchased the freedom of all the slaves in Delaware.

The Civil War cost the two sides a total of $6.6 billion in 1860s dollars, enough to buy the freedom of all the slaves at their 1860 market value, give each slave family 40 acres and a mule and make $3.5 billion in reparations to former slaves in lieu of 100 years of back wages.”
Claudia Goldin

“What's it mean; are you determined
To make modern all mankind?
If so, you should be be-sermoned
And brought back to healthy mind.”
Charles C. Abbott

M.T. Anderson
“It is a land of Wonders!
It is a land of Mystery.
It is a land that Time Forgot (or chose specifically not to remember).
Cut off from the civilized world for untold years, this land is called:
Delaware.”
M.T. Anderson, Jasper Dash and the Flame-Pits of Delaware

M.T. Anderson
“Jasper pointed out, "We've passed that statue seven times in the last hour."
"Very popular," said Bntno. "Who don't like that statue?"
"We're going in circles," said Jasper.
"Not circles," said Bntno. "Irregular polygons."
"Oh, come on!" complained Katie.
"No," said Jasper ruefully, "he's right. Maybe a trapezoid.”
M.T. Anderson, Jasper Dash and the Flame-Pits of Delaware

“The human spirit is stronger than anything that can happen to it. Faith, family, friends, and fortitude - with these four pillars, you can and will survive.
-Kevin Reilly”
Kevin Reilly

Jennifer Ackerman
“A native landscape enters a child’s mind through a meld of sensations: the smell of seaweed or hay, the sound of cicadas, the cold grit of stone. It is all heart and magic, confusion rather than order, but the feeling it evokes is wholly satisfying and lasting. Gaining this kind of deep familiarity with a landscape other than your native one is like learning to speak a foreign language. You can’t hope for quick or easy fluency. You work from the outside in, by accumulating a vocabulary of observed details. You learn where things happen in the rhythmic revolutions of the days and the year, which shrubs harbor families of grackles, which stands of beach plum send out sprays of August bloom, where the hog-nose snake waits for its toad, and the toad for its fly. Slowly the strange becomes familiar; the familiar becomes precious.”
Jennifer Ackerman, Birds by the Shore: Observing the Natural Life of the Atlantic Coast

“Ronald is a very shrewd, crazy, and determined killer who is not from Delaware where there are few thinkers but too many fools who had the inability to mind their own business. They both bemoaned this fact about Delaware.”
Ronald Limberry