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Katharine Whitehorn Quotes

Katharine Whitehorn Quotes
1.
Find out what you like doing best, and get someone to pay you for it.
Katharine Whitehorn

2.
The easiest way for your children to learn about money is for you not to have any.
Katharine Whitehorn

3.
The wind of change, whatever it is, blows most freely through an open mind.
Katharine Whitehorn

4.
Why do born-again people so often make you wish they'd never been born the first time?
Katharine Whitehorn

5.
Have you ever taken anything out of the clothes basket because it had become, relatively, the cleaner thing?
Katharine Whitehorn

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
It is a pity that so often the only way to treat girls like people seems to be to treat them like boys.
Katharine Whitehorn

7.
There are some circles in America where it seems to be more socially acceptable to carry a hand-gun than a packet of cigarettes.
Katharine Whitehorn

8.
A good listener is not someone with nothing to say. A good listener is a good talker with a sore throat.
Katharine Whitehorn

Quote Topics by Katharine Whitehorn: Men People Children Mother Women Thinking Girl Want Funny Party Money Office Boys Book Home Christmas Sports Looks Littles Long Order Nice Inspiring Inspirational Giving Up Smart Justice Smoking Feelings Hate
9.
It might be marvelous to be a man - then I could stop worrying about what's fair to women and just cheerfully assume I was superior, and that they had all been born to iron my shirts. Better still, I could be an Irish man - then I would have all the privileges of being male without giving up the right to be wayward, temperamental and an appealing minority.
Katharine Whitehorn

10.
The main purpose of children's parties is to remind you that there are children more awful than your own.
Katharine Whitehorn

11.
When it comes to housework the one thing no book of household management can ever tell you is how to begin. Or maybe I mean why.
Katharine Whitehorn

12.
The disease is painless; it's the cure that hurts.
Katharine Whitehorn

13.
Any committee that is the slightest use is composed of people who are too busy to want to sit on it for a second longer than they have to.
Katharine Whitehorn

14.
It has long been my boast that I can read or eat anything. But unfortunately, although I eat like a Hoover, I read so slowly that I am always on the smart book three years after everyone else has finished.
Katharine Whitehorn

15.
I just wish, when neither of us has written to my husband's mother, I didn't feel so much worse about it than he does.
Katharine Whitehorn

16.
As ridiculous to approve of property and let a few men have a grossly unfair share of it, as say you are all for marriage, and then let one man have all the wives.
Katharine Whitehorn

17.
I blame Rousseau, myself. "Man is born free", indeed. Man is not born free, he is born attached to his mother by a cord and is not capable of looking after himself for at least seven years (seventy in some cases).
Katharine Whitehorn

18.
There's comfort to an awful old dressing-gown a pretty peignoir is powerless to provide, and aging bra elastic, is, I suspect, as near to liberation as most women ever get.
Katharine Whitehorn

19.
Spring makes everything look filthy.
Katharine Whitehorn

20.
Whereas a lot of men used to ask for conversation when they really wanted sex, nowadays they often feel obliged to ask for sex even when they really want conversation.
Katharine Whitehorn

21.
Hats divide generally into three classes: offensive hats, defensive hats, and shrapnel.
Katharine Whitehorn

22.
From a commercial point of view, if Christmas did not exist it would be necessary to invent it.
Katharine Whitehorn

23.
One reason you are stricken when your parents die is that the audience you've been aiming at all your life - shocking it, pleasing it - has suddenly left the theater.
Katharine Whitehorn

24.
A good marriage is like Dr Who's Tardis: small and banal from the outside but spacious and interesting from within.
Katharine Whitehorn

25.
People get a bad impression of it [the English climate] by continually trying to treat it as if it was a bank clerk, who ought to be on time on Tuesday next, instead of philosophically seeing it as a painter, who may do anything so long as you don't try to predict what.
Katharine Whitehorn

26.
The Life and Soul, the man who will never go home while there is one man, woman or glass of anything not yet drunk.
Katharine Whitehorn

27.
I used to think the only use for sport was to give small boys something else to kick besides me.
Katharine Whitehorn

28.
I yield to no one in my admiration for the office as a social center, but it's no place actually to get any work done.
Katharine Whitehorn

29.
I am all for people having their heart in the right place; but the right place for a heart is not inside the head.
Katharine Whitehorn

30.
The rule is not to talk about money with people who have much more or much less than you.
Katharine Whitehorn

31.
Filing is concerned with the past; anything you actually need to see again has to do with the future.
Katharine Whitehorn

32.
No nice men are good at getting taxis.
Katharine Whitehorn

33.
I suppose we all share this pipe-dream of being able to reach out a hand and find anything at will; what is amazing is that we think that good filing could somehow make it comes true. On the contrary: putting a letter into a filing system is like releasing your ferret in the Hampton Court maze.
Katharine Whitehorn

34.
The case against censoring anything is absolute: ... nothing that could be censored can be so bad in its effects, in the long run, as censorship itself.
Katharine Whitehorn

35.
A food is not necessarily essential just because your child hates it.
Katharine Whitehorn

36.
Too great a preoccupation with motives (especially one's own motive) is liable to lead to too little concern for consequences.
Katharine Whitehorn

37.
Perennials are the ones that grow like weeds, biennials are the ones that die this year instead of next and hardy annuals are the ones that never come up at all.
Katharine Whitehorn

38.
An office party is not, as is sometimes supposed, the Managing Director's chance to kiss the tea-girl. It is the tea-girl's chance to kiss the Managing Director (however bizarre an ambition this may seem to anyone who has seen the Managing Director face on).
Katharine Whitehorn

39.
I cannot for the life of me see why the umpires, the only two people on a cricket field who are not going to get grass stains on their knees, are the only two people allowed to wear dark trousers.
Katharine Whitehorn

40.
I wouldn't say when you've seen one Western you've seen the lot; but when you've seen the lot you get the feeling you've seen one.
Katharine Whitehorn

41.
It beats me how Freud could say "What do women want?" as if we all must want the same thing.
Katharine Whitehorn

42.
It's a pity more men are not bastards by birth instead of vocation.
Katharine Whitehorn

43.
In hell they will bore you, in heaven you will bore them.
Katharine Whitehorn

44.
And what would happen to my illusion that I am a force for order in the home if I wasn't married to the only man north of the Tiber who is even untidier than I am?
Katharine Whitehorn

45.
In my next life I want to be a pessimist. Then other people could spend all their time cheering me up.
Katharine Whitehorn

46.
American patriotism is generally something that amuses Europeans, I suppose because children look idiotic saluting the flag and because the constitution contains so many cracks through which the lawyers may creep.
Katharine Whitehorn

47.
Being young is not having any money; being young is not minding not having any money.
Katharine Whitehorn

48.
Things a mother should know: how to comfort a son without exactly saying Daddy was wrong.
Katharine Whitehorn

49.
Americans, indeed, often seem to be so overwhelmed by their children that they'll do anything for them except stay married to the co-producer.
Katharine Whitehorn

50.
It would be nice to think that a censor could allow a genuine work of artistic seriousness and ban a titillating piece of sadism, but it would take a miracle to make such a distinction stick.
Katharine Whitehorn