Monday, May 6, 2013

The world is a wilderness, in which we may indeed get our station changed, but the move will be out of one wilderness station unto another.

      --Thomas Boston, quoted by Alice Munro in her story "A Wilderness Station"


What man so wise, what earthly wit so ware,
As to descry the crafty cunning train
By which Deceit doth mask in visor fair,
And cast her colors dyed deep in grain
To seem like Truth, whose shape she well can feign.

     --Sir Edmund Spenser, from The Faerie Queen


And after pain, the calm--dark records on dark shelves:
Some notion of romance we never got over,
Some sweet past theme we kept trying to recover,
Some concept of ourselves as more than our lost selves.

     --Joe Bolton, from "Prelude: Late Twentieth-Century Piece"


Fiction is about everything human and we are made out of dust, and if you scorn getting yourself dusty, then you shouldn't try to write fiction.

     --Flannery O'Connor, from "The Nature and Aim of Fiction"


Six years of such small preoccupations!
Six years of shuttling in and out of this place!
O my hunger! My hunger!
I could have gone around the world twice
or had new children--all boys.
It was a long trip with little days in it
and no new places.

     --Anne Sexton, from "Flee on Your Donkey"

5 comments:

Christopher said...

And after pain, the calm--dark records on dark shelves:
Some notion of romance we never got over,
Some sweet past theme we kept trying to recover,
Some concept of ourselves as more than our lost selves.


--Joe Bolton, from "Prelude: Late Twentieth-Century Piece"

Has there ever been an artist of any note that hasn't it? And is there something that therapy perhaps could do about this, or maybe just a stiff upper lip, or a conversion?

Who would want to be Anne Sexton or Sylvia Plath, or even Elizabeth Bishop? But then, if you had been, would you have decided against it?

What are you suggesting with these wonderful quotes, Dawn? I've been reading them over and over for 24 hours and certainly they've grown on me, and of course I take them personally. But who wouldn't?

Love to hear anything about this crux from any of you others.

Christopher

Dawn Potter said...

What am I suggesting? I'm suggesting that I ran across a series of quotations that caught my attention.

If another reader takes them personally, that of course is a wonderful thing.

What happened is that I took them personally.

Christopher said...

I'll say if you say, o.k? Because I'd love to know how they grab you.

I'd also like to know the source -- or at least why they were put together in the first place, for what audience and to what end?

In fact I thought you must be keeping a wonderfully indexed commonplace book to come up with all these quotes about me!

Dawn Potter said...

Not going to happen, Christopher. You'll have to take what you see here. I'm starting a new job as a baker this afternoon, and my writing time is spoken for.

Cristopher said...

What I had hoped for could have been done in just that many words.

Never mind -- better luck with the bread.

Would love to know your feelings about Dod Procter as well, but obviously that's too much tat his point too.

Wish you didn't feel you had to put up something new every day -- in some ways leaven, in others deflating.

C.