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Daily Inspiration Quote by William Golding

"My yesterdays walk with me. They keep step, they are gray faces that peer over my shoulder"

About this Quote

Golding turns memory into a platoon: not a scrapbook you flip through, but a presence that follows, matches your pace, refuses to be outrun. "My yesterdays walk with me" lands with a quiet menace because it denies the comfort of past-tense. Yesterday is not over; it has legs. The verb choice makes time physical, almost predatory, and it echoes Golding's lifelong obsession with how quickly civilization's story about itself collapses under the pressure of what people have already done.

The second sentence sharpens the pressure. "They keep step" is militaristic, disciplined, unromantic. There's no liberating distance, no nostalgia's soft focus. Then comes the uncanny image: "gray faces that peer over my shoulder". Gray isn't just age or gloom; it's moral weather, the color of ambiguity and aftermath. Faces suggest witnesses, or ghosts, or versions of the self that won't accept your latest reinvention. "Peer" implies scrutiny rather than companionship: the past appraises the present, close enough to see the seams in your self-justifications.

In Golding's postwar context, this hits like an ethical aftershock. A writer shaped by World War II doesn't let history stay abstract; he makes it a chorus of staring reminders. The intent isn't to romanticize regret but to dramatize accountability: your former choices trail you like a file of silent observers, and the real horror is their steadiness. You can change direction, but they already know your route.

Quote Details

TopicNostalgia
Source
Verified source: Free Fall (William Golding, 1959)
Text match: 98.86%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
My yesterdays walk with me. They keep step, they are grey faces that peer over my shoulder.. This line appears in William Golding’s novel Free Fall (first published in the UK in 1959 by Faber & Faber) as part of the opening paragraph (commonly quoted as an opening line/opening paragraph). Many secondary websites repeat it in isolation, sometimes with the American spelling “gray”; in the UK text it’s commonly shown as “grey.” I was able to verify the wording and its placement as opening-paragraph text via multiple non-primary web reproductions and references that explicitly attribute it to Free Fall, but I did not access a scan of the 1959 first edition to extract an authoritative page number from the primary artifact itself. If you need ‘first published’ down to the earliest edition/printing and an exact page number, you’ll want to consult the 1959 Faber & Faber first edition (or a library-held facsimile/scan) and cite the page where the opening paragraph begins.
Other candidates (1)
Wind-Songs in Rhythm & Rhyme (Melody Hamby Goss, 2022) compilation95.0%
... My yesterdays walk with me . They keep step , they are gray faces that peer over my shoulder " ... William Goldin...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Golding, William. (2026, February 22). My yesterdays walk with me. They keep step, they are gray faces that peer over my shoulder. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/my-yesterdays-walk-with-me-they-keep-step-they-110511/

Chicago Style
Golding, William. "My yesterdays walk with me. They keep step, they are gray faces that peer over my shoulder." FixQuotes. February 22, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/my-yesterdays-walk-with-me-they-keep-step-they-110511/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"My yesterdays walk with me. They keep step, they are gray faces that peer over my shoulder." FixQuotes, 22 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/my-yesterdays-walk-with-me-they-keep-step-they-110511/. Accessed 28 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

William Golding

William Golding (September 19, 1911 - June 19, 1993) was a Novelist from England.

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