Ironweed Quotes

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Ironweed Ironweed by William Kennedy
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Ironweed Quotes Showing 1-19 of 19
“Love, is always insufficient, always a lie. Love, you are the clean shit of my soul. Stupid love, silly love. ”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
tags: love
“...the only brotherhood they belonged to was the one that asked that enduring question: How do I get through the next twenty minutes? They feared drys, cops, jailers, bosses, moralists, crazies, truth-tellers, and one another. they loved storytellers, liars, whores, fighters, singers, collie dogs that wagged their tails, and generous bandits. Rudy, thought Francis: he's just a bum, but who ain't?”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“. . . and what if I did drink too much? Whose business is that? Who knows how much I didn't drink?”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“But after awhile you stand up, wipe the frost out of your ear, go someplace to get warm, bum a nickel for coffee, and then start walkin' toward somewheres else that ain't near no bridge.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“Why was it that suicide kept rising up in Francis' mind? Wake up in the weeds outside Pittsburgh, half frozen over, too cold to move, flaked out 'n' stiffer than a chunk of old iron, and you say to yourself: Francis, you don't ever want to put in another night, another mornin', like this one was. Time to go take a header off the bridge.
But after a while you stand up, wipe the frost out of your ear, go someplace to get warm, bum a nickel for coffee, and then start walkin' toward somewheres else that ain't near no bridge. ”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“Why the hell's he preachin' if he don't preach to people that need it?”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“One never knows the potential within the human breast.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“It stood on the east side of Ten Broeck Street, a three-block street in Arbor Hill named for a Revolutionary War hero and noted in the 1870s and 1880s as the place where a dozen of the city’s arriviste lumber barons lived, all in a row, in competitive luxury.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“Gerald, through an act of silent will, imposed on his father the pressing obligation to perform his final acts of expiation for abandoning the family. You will not know, the child silently said, what these acts are until you have performed them all. And after you have performed them you will not understand that they were expiatory any more than you have understood all the other expiation that has kept you in such prolonged humiliation. Then, when these final acts are complete, you will stop trying to die because of me.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“Mi culpa es todo lo que me queda. Si la pierdo, no habré significado nada, no habré hecho nada, no habré sido nada.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“He would not chance arrest by crawling into a corner of one of the old houses on Lower Broadway where the cops swept through periodically with their mindless net. What difference did it make whether four or six or eight lost men slept under a roof and out of the wind in a house with broken stairs and holes in the floors you could fall through to death, a house that for five or maybe ten years had been inhabited only by pigeons? What difference?”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“Katie bar the door.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“across”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“Sometimes I wonder what if I run off or dropped dead,” Francis said. “Helen’d probably go crazy.” “Why if you dropped dead she’d bury you before you started stinkin’,” Jack said. “That’s all’d happen.” “What a heart you have,” Francis said. “You gotta bury your dead,” Jack said.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“From a manhole in the middle of State Street steam rose and vanished. Francis imagined the subterranean element at the source of this: a huge human head with pipes screwed into its ears, steam rising from a festering skull wound.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“We could eat, why not? We’re sober, so he’ll let us in, the bastard. I ate there the other night, had a bowl of soup because I was starvin’. But god it was sour. Them dried-out bums that live there, they sit down and eat like fuckin’ pigs, and everything that’s left they throw in the pot and give it to you. Slop.” “He puts out a good meal, though.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“I wouldn’t mind bein’ buried right here,” Francis told Rudy. “You from around here?” “Used to be. Born here.” “Your family here?” “Some.” “Who’s that?” “You keep askin’ questions about me, I’m gonna give you a handful of answers.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“He lifted the picture for a closer look and saw himself among a group of men, tossing a baseball from bare right hand to gloved left hand. The flight of the ball had always made this photo mysterious to Francis, for the camera had caught the ball clutched in one hand and also in flight, arcing in a blur toward the glove. What the camera had caught was two instants in one: time separated and unified, the ball in two places at once, an eventuation as inexplicable as the Trinity itself. Francis now took the picture to be a Trinitarian talisman (a hand, a glove, a ball) for achieving the impossible: for he had always believed it impossible for him, ravaged man, failed human, to reenter history under this roof. Yet here he was in this acne of reconstitutable time, touching untouchable artifacts of a self that did not yet know it was ruined, just as the ball, in its inanimate ignorance, did not know yet that it was going nowhere, was caught.
But the ball is really not yet caught, except by the camera, which has frozen only its situation in space.
And Francis is not yet ruined, except as an apparency in process.
The ball still flies.
Francis still lives to play another day.
Doesn't he?”
William Kennedy, Ironweed
“Oye, todo es verdad — replicó Francis —. Todo cuanto te pasa por la imaginación, aunque apeste a chorrada, es verdad.”
William Kennedy, Ironweed