Best 23 quotes of Tillie Olsen on MyQuotes

Tillie Olsen

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    And when is there time to remember, to sift, to weigh, to estimate, to total?

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    Better mankind born without mouths and stomachs than always to worry about money to buy, to shop, to fix, to cook, to wash, to clean.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    Compared to men writers of like distinction and years of life, few women writers have had lives of unbroken productivity, or leave behind a 'body of work.' Early beginnings, then silence; or clogged late ones (foreground silences); long periods between books (hidden silences); characterize most of us.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    Every woman who writes is a survivor.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    I could not live by literature if only to begin with, because of the slow maturing of my work and its special character.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    I don't want to die leaving the world as it is right now.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    It is a long baptism into the seas of humankind, my daughter. Better immersion than to live untouched.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    It is distraction, not meditation, that becomes habitual; interruption, not continuity; spasmodic, not constant toil.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    It's hard for me to talk about the terrible things that have happened in my lifetime because they didn't need to be.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    I very much dislike the word "race," and I never use it. I use the word "racist." Race is not a fact. There is only one race: human. Skin color is less than 2 percent of the DNA.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    Lighting does occasionally strike and occasional the result isn't a corpse.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    Literary history and the present are dark with silences . . . I have had special need to learn all I could of this over the years, myself so nearly remaining mute and having to let writing die over and over again in me. These are not natural silences--what Keats called agonie ennuyeuse (the tedious agony)--that necessary time for renewal, lying fallow, gestation, in the natural cycle of creation. The silences I speak of here are unnatural: the unnatural thwarting of what struggles to come into being, but cannot.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    More than in any other human relationship, overwhelmingly more, motherhood means being instantly interruptible, responsive, and responsible

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    Not everybody feels religion the same way. Some it's in their mouth, but some it's like a hope in their blood, their bones.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    She would not exchange her solitude for anything. Never again to be forced to move to the rhythms of others.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    That's what I want to be when I grow up, just a peaceful wreck holding hands with other peaceful wrecks.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    The clock talked loud. I threw it away, it scared me what it talked.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    The fact that human beings do not put up forever with misery, humiliation, degradation, actual physical deprivation but act is a fact which every human being should know about. We are a species that makes changes.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    The habits of a lifetime when everything else had to come before writing are not easily broken, even when circumstances now often make it possible for writing to be first; habits of years - responses to others, distractibility, responsibility for daily matters - stay with you, mark you, become you. The cost of discontinuity (that pattern still imposed on women) is such a weight of things unsaid, an accumulation of material so great, that everything starts up something else in me; what should take weeks take me sometimes months to write; what should take months, takes years.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    There are worse words than cuss-words, there are words that hurt.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    Think about all that we've lost that has been said orally because nobody was taking it down. I feel very fortunate to live in a time where we have so many different voices. We have a much richer literature than we've ever had, and we can know America so much better.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    Women have the right to say: this is surface, this falsifies reality, this degrades.

  • By Anonym
    Tillie Olsen

    Writers in a profit making economy are an exploitable commodity whose works are products to be marketed, and are so judged and handled.