A face to lose youth for, to occupy age With the dream of, meet death with.
I love being down at Occupy Wall Street. The sincerity, the youth involvement, the desire for better, is palpable and moving. There is true caring, sharing, and refreshingly naive hope.
As an actor I worked for seven years with a community theater company based in London. We used improvisation techniques to take stories to young people who wouldn't normally have access to them - in prisons, hospitals, young offender's units, youth clubs and housing estates.
The love we have in our youth is superficial compared to the love that an old man has for his old wife.
Youth cannot know how age thinks and feels. But old men are guilty if they forget what it was to be young.
I spent my entire youth in front of a TV watching old movies, and as soon as I was able to get a subway pass, when I was 14, I joined the Museum of Modern Art and was there all weekend watching old movies.
After all, life hasn't much to offer except youth, and I suppose for older people, the love of youth in others.
I started doing organizing work as a teenager. I was part of an organization called the 21st Century Youth Leadership Movement at 14.
If youth is a defect, it is one we outgrow too soon.
I grew up in the '90s, so I've definitely resurrected many looks from my youth lately, including overalls, jelly shoes, and, of course, Doc Martens.
Every youth owes it to himself and to the world to make the most possible out of the stuff that is in him.
My best friend was really cool, and she went to a youth theatre in Paisley, so I thought maybe that's the way to do it. I went along, and I immediately found something I was passionate about and really enjoyed.
Paradoxical as it may seem, to believe in youth is to look backward; to look forward we must believe in age.
With regard to the youth vote we should encourage them to partake in the process, making more use of our education system to show the role Government plays in their lives, but also utilise the youth media they relate to to better connect them to our message.
Happy is he who has laid up in his youth, and held fast in all fortune, a genuine and passionate love of reading.
The fountain of youth is like the monkey's paw in the W. W. Jacobs story. It never ends well.
I think my mom recognized that I liked people to be happy. I like people to get along. And I like to be a peacemaker. And I liked the church. So she was like, 'You should be a youth pastor.'
Peer pressure is a huge part of youth behavior, whether one grows up in Washington, D.C., or Cody, Wyo.
Youth itself is a talent, a perishable talent.
I speak for a lot of church groups, youth groups, schools, colleges and do personal appearances. I've done conventions and trade shows. A lot of different little hats.