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Life & Wisdom Quote by Ernest Gaines

"Question everything. Every stripe, every star, every word spoken. Everything"

About this Quote

Doubt, in Ernest Gaines's hands, isn't a parlor trick of cleverness; it's a survival skill with teeth. "Question everything" reads like a clean maxim until he starts naming symbols: "Every stripe, every star, every word spoken". He points straight at the civic wallpaper Americans are trained to stop seeing. Stripes and stars aren't just fabric. They're authority made decorative, the kind that asks for reverence before it earns trust. Gaines's genius is that he doesn't argue against patriotism; he interrogates the automatic loyalty that can travel under patriotism's flag.

The repetition does the heavy lifting. "Every" hammers like a gavel, refusing the usual carve-outs: not just your enemies, not just politicians, not just the other party. And then "every word spoken" widens the target from institutions to language itself. In Gaines's world, power isn't only enforced by laws or violence, it's smuggled through storytelling: who gets called "boy", whose history is treated as an anecdote, whose pain becomes a footnote. Questioning becomes a way to hear the coercion in the supposedly neutral sentence.

Context matters: Gaines wrote from Louisiana, with the long shadow of Jim Crow, where flags and pledges often functioned as cover for exclusion, not contradiction of it. Coming from a novelist who built moral drama out of ordinary people facing organized injustice, the line is less a slogan than an ethic: refuse the comforts of inherited certainty, because certainty is where oppression likes to hide. The final "Everything" isn't emphasis; it's an ultimatum.

Quote Details

TopicReason & Logic
Source
Verified source: Bloodline (Ernest Gaines, 1968)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Question everything. Every stripe, every star, every word spoken. Everything. (Short story: "The Sky Is Gray" (page varies by edition)). This line appears as dialogue spoken by the educated young man in Gaines’s short story “The Sky Is Gray,” which was later collected in Gaines’s short-story collection Bloodline (published as a book in 1968; commonly cited as Dial Press). The earliest publication I could corroborate on the open web is that “The Sky Is Gray” first appeared in the magazine Negro Digest in August 1963, which would be the FIRST publication venue (primary publication, though a periodical rather than a book). However, I was not able to access a scan/table-of-contents page from the actual August 1963 Negro Digest issue to capture a verifiable page number for the quote in that original magazine printing; confirming the exact magazine page requires access to the issue itself (library database / physical copy / archive scan).
Other candidates (1)
Wisdom for the Soul of Black Folk (Roderick Terry, 2007) compilation95.0%
... Question everything . Every stripe , every star , every word spoken . Everything . ~ Ernest Gaines , b . 1933 " T...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Gaines, Ernest. (2026, February 10). Question everything. Every stripe, every star, every word spoken. Everything. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/question-everything-every-stripe-every-star-every-132048/

Chicago Style
Gaines, Ernest. "Question everything. Every stripe, every star, every word spoken. Everything." FixQuotes. February 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/question-everything-every-stripe-every-star-every-132048/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Question everything. Every stripe, every star, every word spoken. Everything." FixQuotes, 10 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/question-everything-every-stripe-every-star-every-132048/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Question everything: every stripe every star every word
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About the Author

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Ernest Gaines (January 15, 1933 - November 5, 2019) was a Writer from USA.

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