Ernest Hemingway Quotes About Age

We have collected for you the TOP of Ernest Hemingway's best quotes about Age! Here are collected all the quotes about Age starting from the birthday of the Author – July 21, 1899! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 11 sayings of Ernest Hemingway about Age. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • Cowardice, as distinguished from panic, is almost always simply a lack of ability to suspend the functioning of the imagination. Learning to suspend your imagination and live completely in the very second of the present with no before and no after is the greatest gift a soldier can acquire.

    Men at War introduction (1942)
  • Hesitation increases in relation to risk in equal proportion to age.

    Ernest Hemingway (2008). “The Good Life According to Hemingway”, Ecco
  • Retirement is the ugliest word in the language.

  • The thing is to become a master and in your old age to acquire the courage to do what children did when they knew nothing.

  • No one should be alone in their old age, he thought.

    Ernest Hemingway, Nick Lyons, Jack Hemingway (2012). “Hemingway on Fishing”, p.205, Simon and Schuster
  • And how much better to die in all the happy period of undisillusioned youth, to go out in a blaze of light, than to have your body worn out and old and illusions shattered.

    Ernest Hemingway, Carlos Baker (2003). “Ernest Hemingway Selected Letters 1917-1961”, p.19, Simon and Schuster
  • A continent ages quickly once we come. The natives live in harmony with it. But the foreigner destroys, cuts down the trees, drains the water, so that the water supply is altered, and in a short time the soil, once the sod is turned under, is cropped out and, next, it starts to blow away as it has blown away in every old country and as I had seen it start to blow in Canada. The earth gets tired of being exploited.

    Ernest Hemingway (2014). “The Hemingway Collection”, p.3159, Simon and Schuster
  • As you get older it is harder to have heroes, but it is sort of necessary.

    "How Do You Like It Now, Gentlemen?" by Lillian Ross, www.newyorker.com. May 13, 1950.
  • The only thing that can spoil a day is people and if you can keep from making engagements, every day has no limits.

  • Everyone my age had written a novel and I was still having difficulty writing a paragraph.

    Writing  
  • The first and most important thing of all, at least for writers today, is to strip language clean, to lay it bare down to the bone.

    Writing  
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