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Aging & Wisdom Quote by Jules Renard

"It is not how old you are, but how you are old"

About this Quote

Age isn’t a number here; it’s a performance. Renard’s line pivots on a grammatical sleight of hand that feels almost like a stage direction: stop treating “old” as an objective condition and start treating it as a verb-like posture, a manner, a style. The wit is in the reversal. Everyone knows you can’t bargain with time, so Renard changes the battlefield from chronology to conduct, where vanity and self-deception can still pretend to have agency.

As a dramatist, he’s allergic to abstract moralizing. He wants character. “How you are old” implies choices you make while the inevitable happens: whether you become brittle or porous, whether you use age as an excuse, a weapon, or a kind of camouflage. The subtext has bite because it indicts the people who hide behind their years the way others hide behind credentials: I’m entitled to be boring, to be cruel, to stop learning. Renard refuses that alibi. Oldness, he suggests, is something you do to yourself as much as something done to you.

The context matters: fin-de-siecle France, where modern life is speeding up, manners are shifting, and the cult of youth is beginning to look like a new religion. Renard’s cynicism doesn’t flatter youth; it simply denies age the comfort of fatalism. The line lands because it offers no sentimental uplift, just a sharper standard: time passes, but your posture toward it is on you.

Quote Details

TopicAging
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It Is Not How Old You Are - Jules Renard
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About the Author

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Jules Renard (February 22, 1864 - May 22, 1910) was a Dramatist from France.

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