“When my brother… was a young boy learning the Chinese classics, I was in the habit of listening with him and I became unusually proficient at understanding those passages that he found too difficult to grasp and memorize. Father, a most learned man, was always regretting the fact: "Just my luck!" he would say. "What a pity she was not born a man!" But then I gradually realized that people were saying "It's bad enough when a man flaunts his Chinese learning; she will come to no good," and since then I have avoided writing the simplest [Chinese] character. My handwriting is appalling.”
trans. Richard Bowring
The Diary of Lady Murasaki
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Murasaki Shikibu 24
Japanese novelist, poet during the Heian period. best known… 973–1014Related quotes
That's a sign of respect that my father didn't get, that my brother didn't get, that my mother didn't get.
Attributed

William Scott Wilson, Gregory Lee. Ideals of the Samurai: Writings of Japanese Warriors, 1982. p 95

Jimmy Kantor in 'A healthy grave' (1967).
Rivonia Trial

Not found in Twain's works, this was attributed to him in Reader's Digest (September 1939): no prior attribution known. Mark Twain’s father died when Twain was eleven years old.
Disputed
Variant: When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished at how much the old man had learned in seven years.

This is how we all are.
John Banville: Who cares whodunnit? (2013)

Source: Diane Sawyer interview (ABC, 1993)

"Highway Patrolman"
Song lyrics, Nebraska (1982)