Just as the great composer is seldom also a great player, so is the great mathematician seldom also a great teacher. Christopher Robin Milne More Quotes by Christopher Robin Milne More Quotes From Christopher Robin Milne Some people are good with children. Others are not. It is a gift. You either have it, or you don't. My father didn't. Christopher Robin Milne good you father children I like to have around me the things I like today, not the things I once liked many years ago. Christopher Robin Milne things like me today When a child is small, it is his mother who is mainly responsible for the way he is brought up. So it was with me. I belonged in those days to my mother rather than my father. Christopher Robin Milne child me mother father In pessimistic moments, when I was trudging London in search of an employer wanting to make use of such talents as I could offer, it seemed to me, almost, that my father had got to where he was by climbing upon my infant shoulders, that he had filched from me my good name and had left me with nothing but the empty fame of being his son. Christopher Robin Milne good me father son So much were we together that Nanny became almost a part of me. Consequently, it was my occasional encounters with my parents that stand out as the events of the day. Christopher Robin Milne parents day me together The Christopher Robin who appears in so many of the poems is not always me. This was where my name, so totally useless to me personally, came into its own: it was a wonderful name for writing poetry round. Christopher Robin Milne name me poetry writing I enjoyed playing with my mother. This was something she was good at. There were plenty of things she couldn't do, had never been taught to do, didn't need to do because there was someone to do them for her, and she certainly couldn't have coped alone with a tiny child. Christopher Robin Milne alone good child mother One can never be sure whether a very early memory is a real memory or just the recollection of something which you were told happened. Christopher Robin Milne memory never you real If I seem to write most happily about the ordinary things that boys do who live in the country, it is because this is the part of my childhood that I look back upon with the greatest affection. Christopher Robin Milne live look childhood country I live at the bottom of a valley. I have a small bookshop in a small town, and I seldom venture far afield. Christopher Robin Milne valley live small small-town When one is a child, one has little say in the matter: one's parents decide. Mine chose Cotchford, and they chose the various schools I was sent to as I grew up. Christopher Robin Milne say parents child matter War and love - they have much in common. You can theorize about them, but until you have experienced them, you cannot know them, for the emotions that they engender are as complicated and as conflicting, as noble and as ignoble, as any that life has to offer. Christopher Robin Milne you love war life My father did not drink beer. He said he didn't like the taste, and I was prepared to accept that I wouldn't like the taste either. So I stuck to bottled cider. Christopher Robin Milne accept drink beer father It was not to learn about politics that I had gone to Cambridge. I was there as a mathematician, having won a major scholarship to Trinity College the previous year. Perhaps if there had not been quite so many things to distract me, I might have remained a mathematician. Christopher Robin Milne things me politics college Fractions, decimals, algebra, geometry, trigonometry, calculus, mechanics - these are the steps up the mountain side. How high is one going to get? For me, the pinnacle was Projective Geometry. Who today has even heard of this branch of mathematics? Christopher Robin Milne me mountain mathematics today Mathematics is like music. Neither needs to be useful. It is enough that each gives delight to those who seek delight from it. Christopher Robin Milne like mathematics music enough My father had always hoped that one day I would be a great cricketer, captaining the Stowe Eleven, perhaps, or even playing for Cambridge. Christopher Robin Milne day great one-day father My father was an individualist, and I took after him. At school, however, one is forced to be gregarious. I didn't resent this, but I didn't particularly enjoy it, and whenever I could, I withdrew into my own private world. Christopher Robin Milne enjoy father world school When I was three, my father was three. When I was six, he was six... he needed me to escape from being 50. Christopher Robin Milne escape me three father