Best 13 quotes of Patrick Mcgrath on MyQuotes

Patrick Mcgrath

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    For despite his confidence, and his apparent maturity, I suspected that there was in him a deep and childish need to elevate, and idealize, the love object. This is not uncommon in artists. The very nature of their work, the long periods of isolation followed by public self-display, and the associated risk of rejection all conspire to create unnaturally intense relationships with their sexual partners. Then, when disillusion occurs, as of course it must, the sense of betrayal is profound...

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    I often wondered how it would be to tramp off into the mountains and keep going until I was exhausted, then simply sink into the snow and fall asleep. Then the wolves could have me. To want to die in the forest and be eaten by wolves: another marker of incipient madness.

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    Isolated people, those who live alone, are always conscious of their condition in the homes of families.

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    Our conversations were like sex, our sex like conversation.

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    Perhaps that's the whole point about infidelity, I suggested, not that one has sex but that by doing so one puts at risk someone else's happiness?

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    Solitude is a terrible thing, for it permits the imagination to picture, in detail, that which perhaps should never be articulated.

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    Soon enough the tears came but of course nobody came down to see if she was all right, it was just the slut in the kitchen who'd ruined their lives, getting drunk of neat gin and howling for her lost lunatic offer.

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    Strange how reluctant I was to acknowledge that control of my fate lay beyond my own conscious will. Habit of a lifetime, I suppose.

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    There is something I have learned since being paralyzed, and that is that in the absence of sensory information, the imagination always tends to the grotesque.

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    these are precisely the conditions that killed love, after first blighting its growth: squalor, fear, uncertainty, overfamiliarity.

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    Various pieces of huge dark furniture constricted the passage, and the place smelled of boiled fish. I was shown into the parlor, where the gloom of that overcast day was filtered through windows curtained in dingy lace.

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    We coexisted in a state of mutual detachment.

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    Patrick Mcgrath

    We see nobody clearly. We see only the ghosts of absent others, and mistake for reality the fictions we construct from blueprints drawn up in early childhood. This is the problem.