W.B. Yeats (1865–1939) Irish poet and playwright
The Spur http://poetry.poetryx.com/poems/1693/ <br class="br">Last Poems (1936-1939)
Cambridge 1995, pp. 61-62
The Ego and Its Own (1845)
W.B. Yeats (1865–1939) Irish poet and playwright
The Spur http://poetry.poetryx.com/poems/1693/ <br class="br">Last Poems (1936-1939)
Martin Buber (1878–1965) German Jewish Existentialist philosopher and theologian
Source: Eclipse of God: Studies in the Relation Between Religion and Philosophy (1952), p. 6
“Old age is like learning a new profession. And not one of your own choosing.”
Jacques Barzun (1907–2012) Historian
"Age of Reason" https://archive.is/20130630002019/www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/10/22/071022fa_fact_krystal?currentPage=all by Arthur Krystal, The New Yorker (2007-10-22), p. 103
“The young have less charity for aged follies than the old for those of youth.”
Nathaniel Hawthorne book The Wedding Knell
"The Wedding Knell" (1837) from Twice-Told Tales (1837, 1851)
Martin Farquhar Tupper (1810–1889) English writer and poet
The Song of Seventy.
A Thousand Lines (1846)
“Thirty-one.
Not old.
Not young.
But a viable die-able age.”
Arundhati Roy book The God of Small Things
The God of Small Things (1997)
“Learning acquired in youth arrests the evil of old age”
Leonardo Da Vinci (1452–1519) Italian Renaissance polymath
The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci (1883), XIX Philosophical Maxims. Morals. Polemics and Speculations.
Context: Learning acquired in youth arrests the evil of old age; and if you understand that old age has wisdom for its food, you will so conduct yourself in youth that your old age will not lack for nourishment.
“Those who love deeply never grow old; they may die of old age, but they die young.”
Arthur Wing Pinero (1855–1934) British writer