Little Women
Little Women

Jo March: Women, they have minds, and they have souls, as well as just hearts. And they've got ambition, and they've got talent, as well as just beauty. I'm so sick of people saying that love is just all a woman is fit for.

Little Women
Little Women

Amy March: Well, I believe we have some power over who we love, it isn't something that just happens to a person.
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: I think the poets might disagree.
Amy March: Well. I'm not a poet, I'm just a woman. And as a woman I have no way to make money, not enough to earn a living and support my family. Even if I had

my own money, which I don't, it would belong to my husband the minute we were married. If we had children they would belong to him, not me. They would be his property. So don't sit there and tell me that marriage isn't an economic proposition, because it is. It may not be for you but it most certainly is for me.

Little Women
Little Women

Jo March: Perhaps... perhaps I was too quick in turning him down. Laurie.
Marmee March: Do you love him?
Jo March: If he asked me again, I think I would say yes. Do you think he'll ask me again?
Marmee March: But do you love him?
Jo March: I care more to be loved. I want to be loved.


Marmee March: That is not the same as loving.

Little Women
Little Women

Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: Don't marry him.
Amy March: What?
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: Don't marry him.
Amy March: Why?
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: You know why...
Amy March: No, Laurie, that's mean, it's just mean of you...
Theodore 'Laurie'

Laurence: Why?
Amy March: I have been second to Jo my whole life in everything and I will not be the person you settle for just because you cannot have her. I won't do it, not when, not when I've spent my entire life loving you.

Little Women
Little Women

Jo March: I'd rather be a free spinster and paddle my own canoe.

Little Women
Little Women

Aunt March: I may not always be right, but I am never wrong.

Little Women
Little Women

Jo March: I can't say "Yes" truly so I won't say it at all. You'll see that I'm right, eventually, and you'll thank me for it.
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: I'll be hanged if I do!
Jo March: You'll find some lovely accomplished girl, who will adore you, and make a fine mistress for your fine house. I wouldn't. I'm homely and awkward

and odd and you'd be ashamed of me and we would quarrel - we can't help it even now! - I'd hate elegant society and you'd hate my scribbling and we would be unhappy and wish we hadn't done it and everything will be horrid.
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: Anything more?
Jo March: Nothing more -- except that... I don't believe I will ever marry. I'm happy

as I am, and love my liberty too well to be in any hurry to give it up.
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: You will care for somebody, and you'll love him tremendously, and live and die for him. I know you will, it's your way, and you will and I'll watch.
Jo March: Teddy...

Little Women
Little Women

Beth March: It's like the tide going out. It goes out slowly, but it can't be stopped.
Jo March: I'll stop it. I've stopped it before.

Little Women
Little Women

Meg March: I can't believe today is my wedding day!
Jo March: Me neither.
Meg March: What's wrong?
Jo March: Nothing.
Meg March: Jo...
Jo March: We can leave. We can leave right now.
Meg March: What?
Jo March: I can

make money: I'll sell stories, I'll do anything - cook, clean, work in a factory. I can make a life for us.
Meg March: But, Jo...
Jo March: And you, you should be an actress and have a life on the stage. Let's run away together.
Meg March: I want to get married.
Jo March: Why?
Meg

March: I love him.
Jo March: You will be bored of him in two years and we will be interesting forever.
Meg March: Just because my dreams are different than yours doesn't mean they're unimportant. I want a home and a family and I'm willing to work and struggle, but I want to do it with John.
Jo March: I just hate that

you're leaving me. Don't leave.
Meg March: Oh, Jo, I'm not leaving you. Besides, one day it will be your turn.
Jo March: I'd rather be a free spinster and paddle my own canoe. I would. I can't believe childhood is over.
Meg March: It was going to end one way or another. And what a happy end.

Little Women
Little Women

Jo March: [Whispering to Beth] Don't go quietly, fight! Please fight to the end, be LOUD! Don't just quietly go away!

Little Women
Little Women

Amy March: I'm making a mould of my foot for Laurie to remind him I have nice feet.

Little Women
Little Women

Jo March: I can't get over my disappointment at being a girl.

Little Women
Little Women

Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: That's my grandfather. Are you scared of him?
Jo March: I'm not scared of anyone! He looks stern, but my grandfather was much more handsome.
Marmee March: Jo! We do not compare grandfathers!

Little Women
Little Women

Beth March: I love to listen to you read, Jo, but I love it even better when you read the stories you've written.
Jo March: I don't have any new stories.
Beth March: Why not?
Jo March: Haven't written any.
Beth March: You have pencil and paper. Sit here and write me something.

Jo March: Uhh. I can't, I don't think I can anymore.
Beth March: Why?
Jo March: It's just, no one even cares to hear my stories anyway.
Beth March: Write something for me. You're a writer. Even before anyone knew or paid you. I'm very sick and you must do what I say. Do what Marmee taught us to do. Do it for

someone else.

Little Women
Little Women

Jo March: If she had died it would've been my fault.
Marmee March: She will be fine, the doctor said he didn't even think she'd catch cold.
Jo March: What is wrong with me? I've made so many resolutions and written sad notes and cried over my sins, but it just doesn't seem to help. When I get in a passion I get so savage I could hurt

anyone and I'd enjoy it.
Marmee March: You remind me of myself.
Jo March: But you're never angry.
Marmee March: I'm angry nearly every day of my life.
Jo March: You are?
Marmee March: I'm not patient by nature, but with nearly forty years of effort I'm learning to not let it get

the better of me.
Jo March: I'll do the same, then.
Marmee March: I hope you'll do a great deal better than me. There are some natures too noble to curb and too lofty to bend.

Little Women
Little Women

Jo March: You will get better. Father will get better. And we'll all be together soon.
Beth March: We can't stop God's will.
Jo March: God hasn't met my will yet. What Jo wills shall be done.

Little Women
Little Women

Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: [Laurie standing on a chair, looking out the window]
John Brooke: Please. You have to learn this. I can't afford to lose this position. Just return to the Cicero.
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: There's a girl out there!
John Brooke: No, there is not.
Theodore 'Laurie'

Laurence: Yes, Mr. Brooke. There's a girl.
John Brooke: No, there is not.
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: [Laurie moves a stool over for Mr. Brooke]
John Brooke: [stands on chair] Oh. There is a girl.
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: That's a girl.
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence:

[Yelling to Amy] Hello there. Are you hurt?
Amy March: I'm Amy!
Theodore 'Laurie' Laurence: Hello Amy, I'm Laurie.
Amy March: I know. You brought my sister back from the dance. I would have never have sprained my ankle. I have lovely small feet, the best in the family. But I can never go home again, because I'm in such

trouble. Look!
Amy March: [Holding up her hand] Mr Davis hit me.

Little Women
Little Women

Marmee March: [reading Father March's letter] Give them all my dear love and a kiss. Tell them I think of them by day, pray for them by night and find my best comfort in their affection at all times. A year seems a very long time to wait before I see them but remind them that while we wait we may all work, so that these hard days need not be wasted. I know they will be loving

children to you, do their duty faithfully, fight their enemies bravely and conquer themselves so beautifully... that when I come back to them I may be fonder and prouder than ever of my little women.

Little Women
Little Women

Jo March: When is Amy coming home?
Marmee March: We didn't want to worry her.
Jo March: Does she not know?
Meg March: Beth insisted we not tell her because she didn't want to ruin Amy's trip.
Jo March: Amy has always had a talent for getting out of the hard parts of life.

Marmee March: Jo, don't be angry with your sister...

Little Women
Little Women

Jo March: I suppose marriage has always been an economic proposition. Even in fiction.