Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American novelist Gladys Hasty Carroll.
Last updated on November 6, 2024.
Gladys Hasty Carroll was an American novelist active from the late 1920s into the 1980s. In her fiction and non-fiction, Carroll wrote about what she knew and people that she loved, especially those in the Southern Maine rural community of Dunnybrook, located in South Berwick, Maine. Carroll believed that the history of common folk mattered most and her works presented their stories.
Security isn't a thing you get and hold onto. You have to let it go and earn it again, over and over.
Loving somebody is the beginning of everything.
April is the two-week-old kitten, the month-old lamb, the six-month-old heifer, the two-year-old girl. Too young to know it has either past or future, it wears the ribbon of the fleeting present as part of itself.
Nothing lasts forever on this earth. But whatever's good comes back every once in a while if you let it.
February is the uncertain month, neither black nor white but all shades between by turns. Nothing is sure.
The past has been given to us. The future must be built, as others have built our past.