Best 26 quotes of Jane Hamilton on MyQuotes

Jane Hamilton

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    From early on I valued the gift of memory above all others. I understood that as we grow older we carry a whole nation around inside of us, places and ways that have disappeared, believing that they are ours, that we alone hold the torch for our past, that we are as impenetrable as stone.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    I feel like I don't have all the ingredients a person is supposed to have.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    I had forgotten what it was like, to be drawn to a person...I'd forgotten how your blood flows toward a person when they move, so that all at once you know what the pull of gravity feels like. and you know that this is something strong and important, something that you need for life, this woman moving through the room.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    In the end maybe what marriage offered was the determination of one's burial site.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    Is it love that connects us, is that what it is? I never knew that the feeling I have is regular old love because it's so-intricate. Perhaps there is another name for it, one we don't yet know. I used to think that love was simple and noticeable, like rain falling, so that just as you'd look at your skin and say Water, you would also wake in the morning and say Love. But it has been underneath, this new and old thing I feel, subterranean, silent and steady, like blood, rushing along and along without often making itself known.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    It is a rule of nature that taking a day off on the farm sets a person back at least a week.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    It was about forgiving. I understood that forgiveness itself was strong, durable—like strands of a web weaving around us, holding us.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    It was impossible not to admire him, not to want to do something to contain that kind of beauty- drink him, ingest him, sneak into his shirt and hide for the rest of one's natural life.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    I used to think if you fell from grace it was more likely than not the result of one stupendous error, or else an unfortunate accident. I hadn't learned that it can happen so gradually you don't lose your stomach or hurt yourself in the landing. You don't necessarily sense the motion. I've found it takes at least two and generally three things to alter the course of a life: You slip around the truth once, and then again, and one more time, and there you are, feeling, for a moment, that it was sudden, your arrival at the bottom of the heap.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    Life on earth, filled with uncertainty and change, seemed far more difficult than what lay beyond the grave.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    My god has always been a laissez-faire deity, giving you the initial goods and sending you on to make your way.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    Ordinary life was laced with miracles, I knew that, had read enough poetry to understand that we are elevated with the knowing, and yet it was difficult to notice and be grateful when one was continually fatigued and irritated. I suppose that unquenchable sense of wonder is what separates us dolts from the saints and the poets.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    Our mission in life is not to discover our fate as we go along, or even to procreate, but rather to fill up the endless gray void that is time.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    She read books quickly and compulsively, paperback after paperback, as if she might drift away without the anchor of the printed page.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    The magical descriptions of Italy and hilarious observations about love, travel, natives and foreigners in Love in Idleness are but a few of its many pleasures. Amanda Craig has created a hot shimmery climate in which a cast of old friends, quirky family members and naughty children who make love potions come to know themselves and their hearts. A delightful brew.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    There were so many miracles at work: that a blossom might become a peach, that a bee could make honey in its thorax, that rain might someday fall. I thought then about the seasons changing, and in the gray of night I could almost will myself to see the azure sky, the gold of the maple leaves, the crimson of the ripe apples, the hoarfrost on the grass.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    This was life, I supposed, running and running and running, and realizing along the way that the phantom was getting closer.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    We all need people to tell us that we were the ones who had been deeply wronged.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    We're only passers-by, and all you can do is love what you have in your life. A person has to fight the meanness that sometimes comes with you when you're born, sometimes grows if you aren't in lucky surroundings. It's our challenge to fend it off, leave it behind us choking and gasping for breath in the mud. It's our task to seek out something with truth for us, no matter if there is a hundred-mile obstacle course in the way, or a ramshackle old farmhouse that binds and binds.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    ...you have to learn where your pain is. You have to burrow down and find the wound, and if the burden of it is too terrible to shoulder, you have to shout it out; you have to shout for help... And then finally, the way through grief is grieving.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    He wondered if somewhere far off, defying the laws of science, Mitch's two screams were still echoing, if those vibrations had traveled into space, if they moved on and on like rays in a light-year. There might be other forms of life who were receiving the noise and trying to interpret the tones.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    I have given up on speech with the Rev; there is no use explaining that you have to learn where your pain is. You have to burrow down and find the wound, and if the burden of it is too terrible to shoulder you have to shout it out; you have to shout for help. My trust, even down in that dark place I carry, is that some person will come running. And then finally the way through grief is grieving.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    She could never be part of so much of his turbulent history, his youthful adventure, where life had been deeply felt.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    Sometimes I couldn't figure it out, what all the living was for.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    The law of thermodynamics, you know, the idea that nothing is lost, that a loss in one area equals a gain in the other, was actually not invented by scientists but by the people who write redemptive fiction. [...] Actually, in real life, we lose things all the time and they're gone. Lost, period.

  • By Anonym
    Jane Hamilton

    Wait." Walter went to the basket, taking what was a gray sleeve, drawing it out fro the middle of the heap. "Oh," He said. He held the shapeless wool sweater to his chest. Joyce had knit for months the year Daniel died, and here was the result, her handiwork, the garment that would fit a giant. It was nothing more than twelve skeins of yarn and thousands of loops, but it had the power to bring back in a flash the green-tiled walls of the hospital, the sound of an ambulance trying to cut through city traffic in the distance, the breathing of the dying boy, his father staring at the ceiling, the full greasy bucket of fried chicken on he bed table. "I'll take this one," Walter said, balling up the sweater as best he could, stuffing it into a shopping bag that was half full of the books he was taking home, that he was borrowing. "Oh, honey," Joyce said. "You don't want that old scrap." "You made it. I remember your making it." Keep it light, he said to himself, that's a boy. "There's a use for it. Don't you think so, Aunt Jeannie? No offense, Mom, but I could invade the Huns with it or strap the sleeves to my car tires in a blizzard, for traction, or protect our nation with it out in space, a shield against nuclear attack." Jeannie tittered in her usual way in spite of herself. "You always did have that sense of humor," she said as she went upstairs. When she was out of range, Joyce went to Walter's bag and retrieved the sweater. She laid it on the card table, the long arms hanging down, and she fingered the stitches. "Will you look at the mass of it," she exclaimed. "I don't even recall making it." ""'Memory -- that strange deceiver,'" Walter quoted.