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Quote by Natalie Babbitt

Work

Tuck Everlasting

Set in the early 20th century, the story follows a young boy who discovers the secret of a family with the ability to live forever. This discovery leads him to confront profound questions about life, death, and the nature of time. more

Author

Natalie Babbitt
Natalie Babbitt

Natalie Babbitt was a renowned American children's literature author, born on July 28, 1932, and passed away on October 31, 2016. Her works are known for their unique imagination, profound emotions, and rich themes, which have won the hearts of readers. more

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“However keen you may be to begin your study, before you venture on to the mat and attempt any of the basic techniques it is necessary to know something of the principles that govern aikido, for unless you do understand a little about posture, movement, balance, gentleness and courtesy, you will not be a satisfactory pupil. (Page 18).”

“Oh ho, the private eyeball! Poor, prosaic, wretched eyeball. Alas, alack, woe and whoa! Harder and faster they chain him to the stone of stereotype—more and more he cannot earn his daily bread without conforming to the curious standards so stringently set out for him. Once upon a time he had to talk from out of the side of stiff-lipped mouth in accents clipped and surly, and there was the bleak but sheer necessity of constant sexual acrobatics with each and every lady who entered within earshot of the case, no matter how casually. And if by chance the case were not a “caper,” it was no damned case at all. There was the day he had to punch all people in the belly with the natural follow-through of one perfect, accurate, and final punch to the chin (for some reason called the button, as you may recall), but that was before the advent of judo. After judo (after World War II, that is), our hero merely had to straighten his palm and smite the nape of his vis-à-vis, who would immediately fall prone or supine but obligingly comatose.”