Best 286 quotes of Marilynne Robinson on MyQuotes

Marilynne Robinson

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    Marilynne Robinson

    A letter makes ordinary things seem important.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    A little too much anger, too often or at the wrong time, can destroy more than you would ever imagine.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    A man can know his father, or his son, and there might still be nothing between them but loyalty and love and mutual incomprehension.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    A narrow pond would form in the orchard, water clear as air covering grass and black leaves and fallen branches, all around it black leaves and drenched grass and fallen branches, and on it, slight as an image in an eye, sky, clouds, trees, our hovering faces and our cold hands.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    And often enough, when we think we are protecting ourselves, we are struggling against our rescuer.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Anybody who has read any biblical scholarship knows that every scholar struggles over completely intractable problems with the original texts, or what they have to work from. It's one of the great, powerful, mysterious objects that have come down through history. This does not translate into literal interpretation for me.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Any father…must finally give his child up to the wilderness and trust to the providence of God. It seems almost a cruelty for one generation to beget another when parents can secure so little for their children, so little safety, even in the best circumstances. Great faith is required to give the child up, trusting God to honor the parents’ love for him by assuring that there will indeed be angels in that wilderness.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Any human face is a claim on you, because you can't help but understand the singularity of it, the courage and loneliness of it. But this is truest of the face of an infant. I consider that to be one kind of vision, as mystical as any.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Ascension seemed at such times a natural law. If one added to it a law of completion - that everything must finally be made comprehensible - then some general rescue of the sort I imagined my aunt to have undertaken would be inevitable. For why do our thoughts turn to some gesture of a hand, the fall of a sleeve, some corner of a room on a particular anonymous afternoon, even when we are asleep, and even when we are so old that our thoughts have abandoned other business? What are all these fragments for , if not to be knit up finally?

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    Marilynne Robinson

    A sermon is a form that yields a certain kind of meaning in the same way that, say, a sonnet is a form that deals with a certain kind of meaning that has to do with putting things in relation to each other, allowing for the fact of complexity reversal, such things. Sermons are, at their best, excursions into difficulty that are addressed to people who come there in order to hear that.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    A sermon is a valuable thing now and so impressive when you do hear a good one - and there is a lot of failure in the attempt; it's a difficult form - is because it's so seldom true now that you hear people speak under circumstances where they assume they are obliged to speak seriously and in good faith, and the people who hear them are assumed to be listening seriously and in good faith.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Because, once alone, it is impossible to believe that one could ever have been otherwise. Loneliness is an absolute discovery.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Boughton says he has more ideas about heaven every day. He said, "Mainly I just think about the splendors of the world and multiply by two. I'd multiply by ten or twelve if I had the energy.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    ... but it's your existence I love you for, mainly. Existence seems to me now the most remarkable thing that could ever be imagined.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Characters more or less present themselves to me. I don't know their origins. I think if I did, if I seemed to myself to fabricate them, I could not induce suspension of disbelief in myself in the way writing fiction requires.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Christianity is a life, not a doctrine . . . I'm not saying never doubt or question. The Lord gave you a mind so that you would make honest use of it. I'm saying you must be sure that the doubts and questions are your own.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Cultures cherish artists because they are people who can say, Look at that.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Every single one of us is a little civilization built on the ruins of any number of preceding civilizations, but with our own variant notions of what is beautiful and what is acceptable - which, I haste to add, we generally do not satisfy and by which we struggle to live.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Every sorrow suggests a thousand songs and every song recalls a thousand sorrows and so they are infinite in number and all the same.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Every spirit passing through the world fingers the tangible and mars the mutable, and finally has come to look and not to buy.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Every spirit passing through the world fingers the tangible and mars the mutable and finally has come to look and not to buy. So shoes are worn and hassocks are sat upon and finally everything is left where it was and the spirit passes on, just as the wind in the orchard picks up the leaves from the ground as if there were no other pleasure in the world but brown leaves, as if it would deck, clothe, flesh itself in flourishes of dusty brown apple leaves and then drops them all in a heap at the side of the house and goes on.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Everything that falls upon the eye is apparition, a sheet dropped over the world's true workings. The nerves and the brain are tricked, and one is left with dreams that these specters loose their hands from ours and walk away, the curve of the back and the swing of the coat so familiar as to imply that they should be permanent fixtures of the world, when in fact nothing is more perishable.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Fact explains nothing. On the contrary, it is fact that requires explanation.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Faith takes a great many forms, suited to a variety of sensibilities, and mine happens to suit me very well.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Families will not be broken. Curse and expel them, send their children wandering, drown them in floods and fires, and old women will make songs of all these sorrows and sit on the porch and sing them on mild evenings.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Fiction may be, whatever else, an exercise in the capacity for imaginative love, or sympathy, or identification.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Generosity is also an act of freedom, a casting off of the constraints of prudence and self-interest.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    God does not need our worship. We worship to enlarge our sense of holy, so that we can feel and know the presense of the Lord, who is with us always. He said, Love is what it amounts to, a loftier love, and pleasure in a loving presence.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    Having a sister or a friend is like sitting at night in a lighted house. Those outside can watch you if they want, but you need not see them. You simply say, "Here are the perimeters of our attention. If you prowl around under the windows till the crickets go silent, we will pull the shades. If you wish us to suffer your envious curiosity, you must permit us not to notice it." Anyone with one solid human bond is that smug, and it is the smugness as much as the comfort and safety that lonely people covet and admire.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    He [Christ] even restored the severed ear of the soldier who came to arrest Him - a fact that allows us to hope the resurrection will reflect a considerable attention to detail.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    He will wipe the tears from all faces.' It takes nothing from the loveliness of the verse to say that is exactly what will be required

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I am delighted if people find that kind of sustenance in novels, but perhaps it's because they don't read the Scripture that they are comparing it to, which would perhaps provide deeper sustenance than many contemporary novels.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I am grateful for all those dark years, even though in retrospect they seem like a long, bitter prayer that was answered finally.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I am interested in Scripture and theology. This is an interest that I can assume I would share with a pastor, so that makes me a little bit prone to use that kind of character, perhaps, just at the moment. Then there is also the fact that, having been a church member for many years, I am very aware of how much pastors enrich people's experience, people for whom they are significant. I know that it's a kind of custom of American literature and culture to slang them. I don't think there is any reason why that needs to be persisted in.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I believe that reality is vastly richer than the cursory attention we usually give it permits us to understand. I like to write through a consciousness that allows me to suggest something of this richness.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I can’t believe we will forget our sorrows altogether. That would mean forgetting that we had lived, humanly speaking. Sorrow seems to me to be a great part of the substance of human life.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I did go through graduate school and I like to do research, to create something that has a certain objective solidity. The same thing influences my fiction to some degree, because, you know, my fiction is often based on history that I've read.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I do assume that a character or a place is inexhaustible and will always reward further attention.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I do have an impulse to sort of leverage what I say against something I disagree with.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I don't know exactly what covetous is, but in my experience it is not so much desiring someone else's virtue or happiness as rejecting it, taking offense at the beauty of it.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I don't think I would worry about an oversaturation of information if it was indeed information. It is the slovenly, hasty traffic in cliché and sensationalism and bad reasoning that bothers me. I love finding arcane primary texts on the web. The people who think to put them up are heroes of mine.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I experience religious dread whenever I find myself thinking that I know the limits of God’s grace, since I am utterly certain it exceeds any imagination a human being might have of it. God does, after all, so love the world.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    If these laws [in the Bible] belonged to any other ancient culture we would approach them very differently. We need not bother to reject the code of Hammurabi. Presumably it is because Moses is still felt to make some claim on us that this project of discrediting his law is persisted in with such energy. The unscholarly character of the project may derive from the supposed familiarity of the subject.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    If we focused on using the opportunities we have, which are very great by any standard - health, longevity, comfort and privacy, endless resources of culture and information - we would not just navigate this world, we would leave a good inheritance to succeeding generations.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    ...if you ever wonder what you've done in your life, and everyone does wonder sooner or later, you have been God's grace to me, a miracle, something more than a miracle.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    If you had to summarize the Old Testament, the summary would be: stop doing this to yourselves.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    If you read Calvin, for example, he says, How do we know that we are godlike, in the image of God? Well, look at how brilliant we are. Look how we can solve problems even dreaming, which I think is true, which I've done myself. So instead of having an externalized model of reality with an objective structure, it has a model of reality that is basically continuously renegotiated in human perception. I think that view of things is pretty pervasively influential in Protestant thought.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I got four volumes of the letters and speeches of Oliver Cromwell. He is prominent among the great unread, and treated so oddly by history that I wanted to hear his side of things.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I had been reading about [John] Calvin for years and had been studying the English Renaissance for many more years, and it had never occurred to me to think of them together. I learned that Calvin was the most widely read writer in England in Shakespeare's lifetime. He was translated and published in many editions.

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    Marilynne Robinson

    I hated waiting. If I had one particular complaint, it was that my life seemed composed entirely of expectation. I expected — an arrival, an explanation, an apology. There had never been one, a fact I could have accepted, were it not true that, just when I had got used to the limits and dimensions of one moment, I was expelled into the next and made to wonder again if any shapes hid in its shadows.