The Kenneth Williams Diaries Quotes

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The Kenneth Williams Diaries The Kenneth Williams Diaries by Kenneth Williams
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The Kenneth Williams Diaries Quotes Showing 1-6 of 6
“(Sunday, 20 March 1988)
Oh! to be out of it for ever! To cease upon the midnight with no pain. Why do I linger? Not from love of life, I've always found it awful... no, it's rather from a sense of curiosity... not wanting to miss the third act.”
Kenneth Williams, The Kenneth Williams Diaries
“(Tuesday, 22 January 1985)
Providing there is no pain I shall be happy to go when the time comes; nothing here has really delighted me except Art, the life-experience itself has no fascination for me and the very sight of active humanity invariably fills me with nausea.”
Kenneth Williams, The Kenneth Williams Diaries
“(Tuesday, 21 April 1964)
They needn't talk to me about loneliness. I've walked too many miles of pavement. I've scanned so many faces - I've looked with so much furtive hope, but it's never right. Only in my imagination. There, I have marvellous conversations with someone attractive, slow, charmingly phlegmatic & naturally reticent, and with me, he becomes articulate. But in fact, I take a sleeping pill & tell myself to shut up.”
Kenneth Williams, The Kenneth Williams Diaries
“(Tuesday, 1 October 1968)
Why oh! why did I keep on postponing experiences until it was too late to have them? I'm like someone who wanted - indeed ached to swim, but never dared put my foot in the water. Just sat and watched others doing it, till eventually the very idea of the water is alien and frightening. I am the living proof of the futility of thought without action.”
Kenneth Williams, The Kenneth Williams Diaries
“The need to cry, like a child, for all the stupid wasting of the thousand chances life has offered me. O! for the real courage to speak out bravely, to do one decisive, unselfish, and creative deed. Instead of watching the sand run through the glass and let the time trickle through one's hands...”
Kenneth Williams, The Kenneth Williams Diaries
“(Tuesday, 21 July 1964)
I would like very much to have been born very handsome. Not for its own sake, but for the sake of being attractive to others. The reason I am so conservative in my tiny circle of friends, and the reason I stay in the house so much, is because I think my face and body unprepossessing. I've no doubt that this is only a superficial excuse for a more profound complaint within me. This is of course the paradox of my own nature. The thing that I am, being the thing which I despise. But I think my despite is justified.”
Kenneth Williams, The Kenneth Williams Diaries