The Promised Land Quotes

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The Promised Land The Promised Land by Mary Antin
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The Promised Land Quotes Showing 1-8 of 8
“It is only that my illusion is more real to me than reality. And so do we often build our world on an error, and cry out that the universe is falling to pieces, if any one but lift a finger to replace the error by truth.”
Mary Antin, The Promised Land
“A long past vividly remembered is like a heavy garment that clings to your limbs when you would run.”
Mary Antin, The Promised Land
“The world is so busy, too, that it cannot afford to study any man's unfinished work; for the end may prove it a failure, and the world needs masterpieces.”
Mary Antin, The Promised Land
“The Wandering Jew in me seeks forgetfulness.”
Mary Antin, The Promised Land
“Had I been brought to America a few years earlier, I might have written that in such and such a year my father emigrated, just as I would state what he did for a living, as a matter of family history. Happening when it did, the emigration became of the most vital importance to me personally. All the processes of uprooting, transportation, replanting, acclimatization, and development took place in my own soul. I felt the pang, the fear, the wonder, and the joy of it. I can never forget, for I bear the scars. But I want to forget - sometimes I long to forget.”
Mary Antin, The Promised Land
“I was at a most impressionable age when I was transplanted to the new soil. I was in that period when even normal children, undisturbed in their customary environment, begin to explore their own hearts, and endeavor to account for themselves and their world.”
Mary Antin, The Promised Land
“Not a word of what he said remains in my mind, but I remember going away with the impression that it was possible to live without knowing everything, after all, and that I might even try to be happy in a world full of riddles.”
Mary Antin, The Promised Land
“what enthralled my imagination in the whole subject of natural history was not the orderly array of facts, but the glimpse I caught, through this or that fragment of science, of the grand principles underlying the facts.”
Mary Antin, The Promised Land