Writing Quotes

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Writing Writing by Marguerite Duras
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Writing Quotes Showing 1-30 of 63
“Finding yourself in a hole, at the bottom of a hole, in almost total solitude, and discovering that only writing can save you. To be without the slightest subject for a book, the slightest idea for a book, is to find yourself, once again, before a book. A vast emptiness. A possible book. Before nothing. Before something like living, naked writing, like something terrible, terrible to overcome.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“The solitude of writing is a solitude without which writing could not be produced, or would crumble, drained bloodless by the search for something else to write.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“La escritura: la escritura llega como el viento, está desnuda, es la tinta, es lo escrito, y pasa como nada pasa en la vida, nada, excepto eso, la vida.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“One does not find solitude, one creates it. Solitude is created alone. I have created it. Because I decided that here was where I should be alone, that I would be alone to write books. It happened this way. I was alone in this house. I shut myself in—of course, I was afraid. And then I began to love it. This house became the house of writing. My books come from this house. From this light as well, and from the garden. From the light reflecting off the pond. It has taken me twenty years to write what I just said.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Writing was the only thing that populated my life and made it magic.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“There is something suicidal in a writer’s solitude. One is alone even in one’s own solitude. Always inconceivable. Always dangerous. Yes. The price one pays for having dared go out and scream.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“A writer is an odd thing. He’s a contradiction, and he makes no sense. Writing also means not speaking. Keeping silent. Screaming without sound. A writer is often quite restful; she listens a lot. She doesn’t speak much because it’s impossible to speak to someone about a book one has written, and especially about a book one is writing. It’s impossible. It’s the opposite of the cinema, the theater, and other performances. It’s the opposite of any kind of reading. It’s the hardest of all. It’s the worst. Because a book is the unknown, it’s night, it’s closed off, and that’s that. It’s the book that advances, grows, advances in directions one thought one had explored; that advances toward its own fate and the fate of its author, who is annihilated by its publication: her separation from it, the dream book, like the last-born child, always the best loved.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Women should not let lovers read the books they write.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“« L'écrit ça arrive comme le vent, c'est nu, c'est de l'encre, c'est l'écrit, et ça passe comme rien d'autre ne passe dans la vie, rien de plus, sauf elle, la vie. »”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“The person who writes books must always be enveloped by a separation from others.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“بقيتُ لأرى. لأرى كيف يكتسح الموت الذبابَ تدريجيًّا ، و كذا لأعرف من أين ينبعث هذا الموت. من الخارج ، من كثافة الجدار ، أم من الأرض. من أي ليلٍ يأتي ، من البسيطة أم من السماء ، من الغابات القريبة ، أم من عدمٍ لا اسمَ له ، قريب جدًّا ربما ، لعلّه آتٍ منّي أنا التي تحاول أن تعثر على الممرّات التي ستسلكها الذبابة لتعبر إلى الأزل”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Escribir es intentar saber qué escribiríamos si escribiésemos [...]”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“it is in a house that one is alone. not outside it, but inside. outside, in the garden, there are birds and cats. and also, once, a squirrel, and a ferret. one isn't alone in a garden. but inside the house, one is so alone that one can lose one's bearings.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“The death of a fly is still death. It’s death marching toward a certain end of the world, which widens the field of the final sleep. When you see a dog die, or a horse die, you say something, like poor thing … But when a fly dies, nothing is said, no one records it, nothing.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“I think that if I had played piano professionally, I would never have written books.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“بوسعي قول كل ما أريد ، لكنّي لن أجد أبدًا لماذا نكتب ، ولا كيف نكتب”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“فبما إنّي كنتُ أكتب .. توجّب الحديث عن الكتب ، وهذا ما لا يتحمّله الرجال ، لا يتحمّلون امرأةً تكتب. إنّه أمرٌ لا يُطاق بالنسبة إلى الرجل ، شاقّ على الجميع”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“أن أكتب ، ذا الشيء الوحيد الذي عمّر حياتي وفتَنها. وقد فعلتُه إذ أنّ الكتابة لم تغادرني قط”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“الكتاب هو المجهول ، هو الليل ، المغلق ، هو ذا”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Llorar, es necesario que eso también suceda.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Es la mayor injusticia del tiempo, de todos los tiempos: y si uno no llora por eso una sola vez en su vida no llora por nada. Y no llorar nunca es no vivir.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Todo escribe a nuestro alrededor, eso es lo que hay que llegar a percibir; todo escribe, la mosca, la mosca escribe, en las paredes, la mosca escribió mucho a la luz de la sala, reflejada por el estanque. La escritura de la mosca podría llenar una página entera. Entonces sería una escritura. Desde el momento en que podría ser una escritura, ya lo es. Un día, quizás, a lo largo de los siglos venideros, se leería esa escritura, también seria descifrada, y traducida. Y la inmensidad de un poema legible se desplegaría en el cielo.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Nosotros, los del 68, somos enfermos de la esperanza, la esperanza es lo que se confía a las funciones del proletariado. Y a nosotros, ninguna ley, nada, ni nadie ni nada, nos curará de esa esperanza. Quisiera volver a afiliarme al PC. Pero, al mismo tiempo, sé que no será necesario. También quisiera dirigirme a la derecha e insultarla con todas mis fuerzas. El insulto, el insulto es tan fuerte como la escritura. Es una escritura, pero dirigida. He insultado a gente en mis artículos y produce tanta satisfacción como escribir un buen poema.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Người ta không tìm thấy nỗi cô đơn, người ta tạo ra nó. Nỗi cô đơn, nó tự sinh ra.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Chính ở trong nhà là lúc người ta cảm thấy cô đơn. Và không phải ở ngoài mà là ở trong nhà. Trong công viên có chim, có mèo. Và một lần còn có cả một con sóc, một con chồn hương. Người ta không cô đơn khi ở trong công viên. Nhưng khi ở trong nhà, người ta cô đơn đến nỗi đôi khi người ta lạc lối.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Sometimes in the evening, around sunset, the colors of Via Appia are those of Tuscany. I learned of that northern region when I was very young, still a child. First in a travel guidebook. And then during a school trip. It was a civilization contemporary with Rome that has now disappeared. I wish I knew how to tell you about the beauty of that region, where that civilization and that philosophy occurred in a lovely and fleeting coincidence. I wish I could tell you about the simplicity of their existence, their geography, the color of their eyes, of their climates, their agriculture, their pastures, their skies.” (A pause.) “You see, it would be like your smile, but lost, untraceable after it occurs. Like your body, but vanished; like a love, but without you or me. And so how can one say? How can one not love?”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“He died without any grave at all. Thrown into a mass pit on top of the previous corpses. And this is something so terrible to think about, so horrible, that it cannot be endured, and one cannot know just how horrible without having lived through it. It’s not the heap of bodies, not at all; it’s the disappearance of that body in the mass of other bodies. It’s his, his own body, thrown into the trench, without a word. Except a prayer for all the dead.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“That is the major injustice of time, of all times: and if one doesn’t cry about it at least once in life, then one doesn’t cry about anything. And never to cry means not to live.”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“And that only in this house am I alone. To write. To write, not as I had up until then, but to write books still unknown to me and not yet decided on by me and not decided on by anyone”
Marguerite Duras, Writing
“Her hands are empty, her head is empty, all she knows of this adventure, of this book, is dry, naked writing, without a future, without an echo”
Marguerite Duras, Writing

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