49+ Patricia Hampl Quotes On Education, Family And Reflective
Patricia Hampl is an American memoirist and essayist. She is best known for her memoirs A Romantic Education and The Florist's Daughter. Her work often focuses on memory and the power of personal narrative to shape identity. Following is our collection on famous quotes by Patricia Hampl on love, education, life.
Quick Jump To
- Top 10 Patricia Hampl Quotes
- Patricia Hampl Quotes About Life
- Short Patricia Hampl Quotes
- Life Lessons
- Famous Patricia Hampl Quotes
Top 10 Patricia Hampl Quotes
- People come and go in life, but they never leave your dreams. Once they're in your subconscious, they are immortal.
- Fundamentally, [prayer] is a position, a placement of oneself.
- Memory is, first, a captivating mystery.
- Maybe being oneself is always an acquired taste.
- True memoir is written, like all literature, in an attempt to find not only a self but a world
- No memoirists writes for long without experiencing an unsettling disbelief about the reliability of memory, a hunch that memory is not, after all, just memory.
- I come from people who have always been polite enough to feel that nothing has ever happened to them.
- Poverty didn't necessarily engender an envy of wealth; sometimes it might beget a passion for decency.
- Here, in memory, we live and die.
- Writing was the soul of everything else ... Wanting to be a writer was wanting to be a person.
Patricia Hampl Short Quotes
- Memoirists wish to tell their mind, not their story.
- It's always a thrilling risk to say exactly what you mean, to express exactly what you see.
- The world is full of mystery but it must not be choked with secrets: we must talk to one another.
- poetry is the sung voice of accurate perception.
- Planes are my foxhole. I'm always on my knees in them.
- Writing is so hard. And then, sometimes, it is so bewilderingly easy.
- In memory each of us is an artist: each of us creates.
- What is remembered is what becomes reality.
- I could tell you stories-if only stories could tell what I have in me to tell.
- I don't write about what I know: I write in order to find out what I know.
Patricia Hampl Quotes About Life
Silence, that inspired dealer, takes the day's deck, the life, all in a crazy heap, lays it out, and plays its flawless hand of solitaire, every card in place. Scoops them up, and does it all over again. — Patricia Hampl
We only store in memory images of value. To write about one's life is to live it twice, and the second time is both spiritual and historical. — Patricia Hampl
landscape, that vast still life, invites description, not narration. It is lyric. It has no story: it is the beloved, and asks only to be contemplated. — Patricia Hampl
Refuse to write your life and you have no life. — Patricia Hampl
Looking repeatedly into the past, you do not necessarily become fascinated with your own life, but rather with the phenomenon of memory. — Patricia Hampl
Patricia Hampl Famous Quotes And Sayings
The cold was our pride, the snow was our beauty. It fell and fell, lacing day and night together in a milky haze, making everything quieter as it fell, so that winter seemed to partake of religion in a way no other season did, hushed, solemn. — Patricia Hampl
Maybe being oneself is an acquired taste. For a writer it's a big deal to bow--or kneel or get knocked down--to the fact that you are going to write your own books and not somebody else's. Not even those books of the somebody else you thought it was your express business to spruce yourself up to be. — Patricia Hampl
The golden light of metaphor, which is the intelligence of poetry, was implicit in alchemical study. To change, magically, one substance into another, more valuable one is the ancient function of metaphor, as it was of alchemy. — Patricia Hampl
Memoirists, unlike fiction writers, do not really want to 'tell a story.' They want to tell it all - the all of personal experience, of consciousness itself. That includes a story, but also the whole expanding universe of sensation and thought ... Memoirists wish to tell their mind. Not their story. — Patricia Hampl
The artist's work, it is sometimes said, is to celebrate. But really that is not so; it is to express wonder. And something terrible resides at the heart of wonder. Celebration is social, amenable. Wonder has a chaotic splendor. — Patricia Hampl
Pondering was the highest vocation... Pondering was a special kind of thinking. It was not done in the mind, that chilly place, but in the heart, where the real mystery of intelligence - intuition - rather than thought lay catlike and feminine, ready to pounce. — Patricia Hampl
The materials of true poetry are always humble, absolutely idiosyncratic, the autobiographical tatters that, in gifted hands, are made into the memoir that fits us all. — Patricia Hampl
We store in memory only images of value. The value may be lost over the passage of time, but that's the implacable judgment of feeling. — Patricia Hampl
The paradox: there can be no pilgrimage without a destination, but the destination is also not the real point of the endeavor. Not the destination, but the willingness to wander in pursuit characterizes pilgrimage. Willingness: to hear the tales along the way, to make the casual choices of travel, to acquiesce even to boredom. That's pilgrimage -- a mind full of journey. — Patricia Hampl
Silence was the first prayer I learned to trust. — Patricia Hampl
We do not, after all, simply have experience; we are entrusted with it. We must do something--make something--with it. A story, we sense is the only possible habitation for the burden of our witnessing. — Patricia Hampl
These days it seems the lyric impulse, so seemingly fragile, comes in for a lot of abuse-or simply a lot of mistrust. What's it for, anyway, in this hard-edged, worried world? Into this cultural uncertainty Gregory Orr's spirited meditation on the surprisingly tensile strength of poetry in the face of profound suffering and grief presents a welcome fresh view of the ancient human instinct to cry out and to praise. — Patricia Hampl
In description we hear and feel the absorption of the author in the material. We sense the presence of the creator of the scene. .. This personal absorption is what we mean by 'style.' It is strange that we would choose so oddly surfacey a word - style - for this most soulful aspect of writing. We could, perhaps more exactly, call this relation between consciousness and its subject 'integrity.' What else is the articulation of perception? — Patricia Hampl
The real subject of autobiography is not one's experience but one's consciousness. Memoirists use the self as a tool. — Patricia Hampl
The future is here, now, and the past is full of actual deeds, real history. Utopias hardly have the meat on their bones to sustain a people in grave times. — Patricia Hampl
Memoir is trustworthy and its truth assured when it seeks the relation of self to time, the piecing of the shards of personal experience into the starscape of history's night. The materials of memoir are humble, fugitive, a cottage knitting industry seeking narrative truth across the crevasse of time as autobiography folds itself into the vast, fluid essay that is history. A single voice singing its aria in a corner of the crowded world. — Patricia Hampl
Time, we like to say, cures all. But maybe the old saying doesn’t mean time heals. Time cures a secret in its brine, keeping it and finally, paradoxically, destroying it. Nothing is left in that salt solution but the pain or rage, the biting shame that lodged it there. Even they are diluted or denied. — Patricia Hampl
Prayer as focus is not a way of limiting what can be seen; it is a habit of attention brought to bear on all that is. — Patricia Hampl
Writing about why you write is a funny business, like scratching what doesn't itch. Impulses are mysterious, and explaining them must be done with mirrors, like certain cunning slight-of-hand routines. — Patricia Hampl
A peculiarity of the American historical sensibility allows us to be proud of great-grandfathers (or even grandfathers) who lived in crushing poverty, while the poverty of a father is too close for comfort. — Patricia Hampl
It is hard to sever the cords that tie us to our slavery and leave intact those that bind us to ourselves. — Patricia Hampl
French was the only language we had in common, and even that was like a dialect we had picked up at a rummage sale, rusty and missing a lot of essential parts. — Patricia Hampl
You can’t put much on paper before you betray your secret self, try as you will to keep things civil. — Patricia Hampl
A careful first draft is a failed first draft — Patricia Hampl
Life Lessons by Patricia Hampl
- Patricia Hampl's work demonstrates the power of reflection and introspection to uncover meaningful insights about life.
- Through her writing, she encourages readers to explore their own stories, memories, and experiences in order to gain a deeper understanding of themselves and the world around them.
- By exploring her own life and experiences, Hampl shows us that our stories have the potential to be transformative, and that we can use them to create a more meaningful and fulfilling life.
Citation
Feel free to cite and use any of the quotes by Patricia Hampl. For popular citation styles (APA, Chicago, MLA), go to citation page.
Embed HTML Link
Copy and paste this HTML code in your webpage