Night Boat to Tangier Quotes
Night Boat to Tangier
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Kevin Barry21,745 ratings, 3.62 average rating, 2,775 reviews
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Night Boat to Tangier Quotes
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“But now he came up to himself slowly again—it was like rising through heavy water—and he was warmed by one of the great consolations: nothing very terrible lasts for very long.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“It’s freedom, she says. It’s poverty, Charlie says. Poverty is always for free.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“There is a stab of awareness at the beginning and at the end of love, and the feeling precisely replicates—it’s a twinge of cold certainty at either end of the affair, and it is twice terrifying.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“Fucking Ireland. Its smiling fiends. Its speaking rocks. Its haunted fields. Its sea memory. Its wildness and strife. Its haunt of melancholy. Its haunt of melancholy.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“A troubled silence descends—the old times are shifting again; they are rearranging like fault lines. The past will not relent.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“She gathered into a bundle of herself, drew up her legs—Dilly had a complicated arrangement with furniture always, and she took a while to settle. She wore her weather on the tip of her nose.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“But if he has nothing else to his name, he has his regrets, and these are not without value to the martyr's self-portrait displayed in his mind's eye.
We come into the world on the top of a scream and the wave of our poor mother's roaring.
She had a smile like a home-made explosive device.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
We come into the world on the top of a scream and the wave of our poor mother's roaring.
She had a smile like a home-made explosive device.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
“She sensed older presences as she walked. She knew by a cold stirring that here they had made their fires, and here their cattle had grazed, and here they ate periwinkles and oysters from the shell, and they had this burning salt on their lips, and felt this old rain, and made their cries of love and war, and roamed in hordes; their little kingdoms here were settled, and disassembled; by night, in our valley, the wolves had bayed.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“He was a country boy with his wires twisted all wrong. He should have never been let near a city.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“He was more than possessed by his crimes and excesses – he was the gaunt accumulation of them.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“There comes a time when you just have to live among your ghosts. You keep the conversation going. Elsewise the broad field of the future opens out as nothing but a vast emptiness.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“We come into the world on the tip of a scream and the wave of our poor mothers’ roaring.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“The days were cold as evil but the evenings spread magic from the sea inwards and stretched out and tapped the place until it was open to our dreaming.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“When we move by water, our hearts are moved. We are complicated fucking machines.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“The years are rolling out like tide now. There is old weather on their faces, on the hard lines of their jaws, on their chaotic mouths.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“Watch for the glamorous sentence that appears from nowhere - it might have plans for you. Watch out for the clauses that are elegantly strung , for the string of words bejewelled. Watch out for the ripe language-it means your words may be about to go off?”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“There is a stab of awareness at the beginning and at the end of love, and the feeling precisely replicates – it’s a twinge of cold certainty at either end of the affair, and it is twice terrifying.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“And now from the vantage of his years a terrible swoon comes down on him; Cynthia, for a moment, descends all the way through him. This is not a rare occurrence. He will never lose the feeling of the love that they had together, or the nausea of its absence. Hate is not the answer to love; death is its answer.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“The years are rolling out like tide now. There is old weather on their faces, on the hard lines of their jaws, on their chaotic mouths. But they retain – just about – a rakish air”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“It was peopled day and night by cirrhotic-looking old crooks and wastrel youths with insane mouths.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“Bad luck, bad luck – the idea entertained itself, fattened, came to fruition. They took cocaine in breakneck quantities against the idea of the bad luck. They were hammering into the Powers, the John Jameson, it was breakfast from the bottle and elevenses off the mirror.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“The motions of the alcohol are familiar: the easy warming, the calm sustain, and now the slow grading into remorse. A melancholy hour falleth. As afflicts a gentleman of colourful history. But, if he has nothing else to his name, he has his regrets, and these are not without value to the martyr’s self-portrait displayed in his mind’s eye. I am fifty-one years old, he thinks, and still at least halfways in love with meself. All told you’d have to call it a fucken achievement.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“The fear of turning into our parents, she said, is what turns us into our fucking parents.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“...the air is thick and smoky, and it makes the night glow a vivid thing, and dense. It is more than heavy enough for ghosts that it holds suspended here above us.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“The Irishmen look out blithely at the faces that pass by in a blur of the seven distractions—love, grief, pain, sentimentality, avarice, lust, want-of-death.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“Fathers throw the longer shadows. We get over the mothers, at last, but hardly ever the fathers, she said.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“Karima waited at the bottom of the road in her small Japanese car. she drove fucking hairdryers, always.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“They are old enough for the long view in either direction now.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“He fled from it a few weeks after the century turned—Maurice Hearne was not Y2K compliant, was his serious opinion.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
“These were fabled people. These were tricky times. They were in a moment of dangerous splendour. The men were lizardly, reptilian. They wore excellent fucking shoes.”
― Night Boat to Tangier
― Night Boat to Tangier
