ARKANSAS QUOTES

quotations about Arkansas

Arkansas quote

Or send them to Arkansas to butcher the politicians and clergy? It is not only a way to get rid of them, and of the heavy expense of keeping them; it is a way to civilize Arkansas and the South Seas.

H. L. MENCKEN

Mencken Chrestomathy

Tags: H. L. Mencken


Arkansas is a curious and interesting community ... it is probably the most untouched and unawakened of all American states.

JOHN GUNTHER

Inside USA

Tags: America


I cannot prove that God is from Arkansas, but I know for sure that He has family there.

JIMMY PEACOCK

"Keep Arkansas in the Accent!", My Oklahomian Exile: An Exiled Arkie of the Covenant

Tags: God


If I could rest anywhere, it would be in Arkansas, where the men are the real half-horse, half-alligator breed such as grows nowhere else on the face of the earth.

DAVY CROCKETT

Narrative of the Life of David Crockett


I was the fattest baby in Clark County, Arkansas. They put me in the newspaper. It was like a prize turnip.

BILLY BOB THORNTON

attributed, IMDB


If any place can engender a sense of being permanently dissed, it's Arkansas.

PETER APPLEBONE

"It's Not Called Arkansas for Nothing", New York Times, Aug. 16, 1998


To be born in Arkansas is a misfortune and an injustice from which they will never recover and upon which they will look back with bitterness when plunged, in adult life, into competition with the children born from other states.

TWENTIETH CENTURY EDUCATIONAL REPORT

Arkansas and the New South: 1874-1929


Heaven: Arkansas without the heat and mosquitoes.

JIMMY PEACOCK

"Keep Arkansas in the Accent!", My Oklahomian Exile: An Exiled Arkie of the Covenant


There is pretty strong characters down there [in Arkansas]. You can't redeem 'em, you just join 'em.

WILL ROGERS

attributed, The Wit and Wisdom of Will Rogers

Tags: Will Rogers


Citizenship in New York is now worth no more than citizenship in Arkansas, for it is open to any applicant from the marshes of Bessarabia, and, still worse, to any applicant from Arkansas.

H. L. MENCKEN

A Second Mencken Chrestomathy

Tags: H. L. Mencken, New York


Mispronouncing Arkansas is illegal in Arkansas.

SANDY SILVERTHORNE

Amazing Tips to Make You Smarter: Hundreds of Helpful, Fun Facts to Improve Your Life


It strikes me that when people try to describe Arkansas, they usually describe Arkansans. Admittedly, many of their descriptions are wrong. For instance, we tend to wear shoes here as much as people in any other state, and most of us do not marry our cousins, kissing or otherwise. Arkansas's people have long borne these misconceptions and, in some cases, taken them up with pride.

ERIN DALTON

preface, Rough Sort of Beauty: Reflections on the Natural Heritage of Arkansas


Why did O. J. Simpson want to move to Arkansas? Everyone has the same DNA!

ANONYMOUS

Tags: funny


The smeller's the feller.

ARKANSAS PROVERB


Arkansas is the natural state and is not as bad as most people think it is.

ANONYMOUS

Urban Dictionary


Arkansas has one of the largest poverty populations in the country. It's a minority state. It's a working-people state. It's a small farmer state. If you can't be a populist in Arkansas, you ain't going to be a populist in Washington.

JIM HIGHTOWER

Mother Jones, November/December 1995


Why couldn't the baby Jesus be born in Arkansas? They couldn't find three wise men or a virgin!

ANONYMOUS

Tags: funny, Jesus


Arkansas?... Excuse me, but isn't that the Bubba/Backwater/Redneck capital of the Western World?

L. C. JOHNSON

Orlando Sentinel, Mar. 19, 2000


From the majestic Mississippi to the Oklahoma line is farther than from London to Paris. Between lies an empire--fields of cotton and grain, sparkling streams and lovely lakes.... Arkansas is my State. Every day it heaps riches upon me. These I shall some day repay. If I cannot sit high in the councils of my country I shall see that only worthy men do. My voice shall be honestly spoken.

JOHN H. HINEMON

The Arkansas Teacher, Jan. 1922


No matter where you go in Arkansas you discover that its people are close to the soil. In a Little Rock hotel lobby, where legislators stand around in a fog of tobacco smoke, a moderately good ear can distinguish the drawled "heahs" and "theahs" of a cotton-county representative from the slightly nasal burr of a hillman--who is likely to pronounce "put" as "putt" and "where" as "whir". Both men, however, probably know from boyhood experience the kick of a plow when it strikes a root, how hard it is to stalk a crow, and the disheartening length of a field when viewed over a hoe handle.

FEDERAL WRITERS' PROJECT

"Arkansas Today", The WPA Guide to Arkansas: The Natural State