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Clarice Lispector Quotes

Ukrainian-Brazilian journalist and author (d. 1977), Birth: 10-12-1920 Clarice Lispector Quotes
1.
But don't forget, in the meantime, that this is the season for strawberries. Yes.
Clarice Lispector

Nevertheless, bear in mind that this is the period for strawberries. Absolutely.
2.
Everything in the world began with a yes. One molecule said yes to another molecule and life was born.
Clarice Lispector

3.
It is because I dove into the abyss that I am beginning to love the abyss I am made of.
Clarice Lispector

4.
Putting my hand in someone else’s has always been my definition of happiness. Before I fall asleep, often - in that small struggle not to lose consciousness and go into the greater world - often, before I get up the courage to go into the vastness of sleep, I pretend that someone has my hand in theirs, and then I go, go to that enormous absence of form that is sleep. And when even after that I don’t have courage, I dream.
Clarice Lispector

5.
I only achieve simplicity with enormous effort
Clarice Lispector

Similar Authors: Cassandra Clare Charles Spurgeon Terry Pratchett Stephen King Winston Churchill Richelle Mead Jodi Picoult Francois de La Rochefoucauld Marianne Williamson Wayne Dyer Michel de Montaigne Chuck Palahniuk H. L. Mencken Suzanne Collins Leo Tolstoy
6.
The only truth is that I live. Sincerely, I live. Who am I? Well, that's a bit much.
Clarice Lispector

7.
I do not know much. But there are certain advantages in not knowing. Like virgin territory, the mind is free of preconceptions. Everything I do not know forms the greater part of me: This is my largesse. And with this I understand everything. The things I do not know constitute my truth.
Clarice Lispector

8.
Do you ever suddenly find it strange to be yourself?
Clarice Lispector

Quote Topics by Clarice Lispector: Writing World Want Men Answers Knowing Knows People Life Simplicity Long Mean School Self Sea Dream Believe Effort Silence Made Sadness Lost Passion Facts Humans Hope Love Sometimes Lost And Found Mourn Given
9.
Do you know that hope sometimes consists only of a question without an answer?
Clarice Lispector

10.
There it is, the sea, the most incomprehensible of non-human existences.
Clarice Lispector

11.
Whether she won or lost, she would continue to wrestle with life. It would not be with her own life alone but with all of life. Something had finally been released within her. And there it was, the sea.
Clarice Lispector

12.
Her curiosity instructed her more than the answers she was given.
Clarice Lispector

13.
The mystery of human destiny is that we are fated, but that we have the freedom to fulfill or not fulfill our fate: realization of our fated destiny depends on us. While inhuman beings like the cockroach realize the entire cycle without going astray because they make no choices.
Clarice Lispector

14.
Who has not asked himself at some time or other: am I a monster or is this what it means to be a person?
Clarice Lispector

15.
Things were somehow so good that they were in danger of becoming very bad because what is fully mature is very close to rotting
Clarice Lispector

16.
What I want is to live of that initial and primordial something that was what made some things reach the point of aspiring to be human.
Clarice Lispector

17.
I have grown weary of literature: silence alone comforts me. If I continue to write, it’s because I have nothing more to accomplish in this world except to wait for death. Searching for the word in darkness. Any little success invades me and puts me in full view of everyone. I long to wallow in the mud. I can scarcely control my need for self-abasement, my craving for licentiousness and debauchery. Sin tempts me, forbidden pleasures lure me. I want to be both pig and hen, then kill them and drink their blood.
Clarice Lispector

18.
No it is not easy to write. It is as hard as breaking rocks. Sparks and splinters fly like shattered steel.
Clarice Lispector

19.
You don't understand music: you hear it. So hear me with your whole body.
Clarice Lispector

20.
My life, the most truthful one, is unrecognizable, extremely interior, and there is no single word that gives it meaning.
Clarice Lispector

21.
How was she to tie herself to a man without permitting him to imprison her? And was there some means of acquiring things without those things possessing her?
Clarice Lispector

22.
A horse is freedom so indominable that it becomes useless to imprison it to serve man: it lets itself be domesticated, but with a simple, rebellious toss of the head-shaking its mane like an abundance of free-flowing hair-it shows that its inner nature is always wild, translucent and free.
Clarice Lispector

23.
But I welcome the darkness where the two eyes of that soft panther glow. The darkness is my cultural broth. The enchanted darkness. I go on speaking to you, risking disconnection: I’m subterraneously unattainable because of what I know.
Clarice Lispector

24.
Love is so much more deadly than I had thought, love is so much inherent as the very lack, and we are guaranteed by a need to be renewed continuously. Love is now, is forever. There is just the blow of grace - call it passion.
Clarice Lispector

25.
I want the following word: splendor, splendor is fruit in all its succulence, fruit without sadness. I want vast distances. My savage intuition of myself.
Clarice Lispector

26.
And even sadness was also something for rich people, for people who could afford it, for people who didn't have anything better to do. Sadness was a luxury.
Clarice Lispector

27.
To think is an act. To feel is a fact.
Clarice Lispector

28.
All the world began with a yes. One molecule said yes to another molecule and life was born. But before prehistory there was the prehistory of the prehistory and there was the never and there was the yes. It was ever so. I don’t know why, but I do know that the universe never began. Make no mistake, I only achieve simplicity with enormous effort.
Clarice Lispector

29.
I work only with lost and founds.
Clarice Lispector

30.
Reality prior to my language exists as an unthinkable thought. . . . life precedes love, bodily matter precedes the body, and one day in its turn language shall have preceded possession of silence.
Clarice Lispector

31.
I' is merely one of the world's instantaneous spasms.
Clarice Lispector

32.
And now -- now it only remains for me to light a cigarette and go home. Dear God, only now am I remembering that people die. Does that include me? Don't forget, in the meantime, that this is the season for strawberries. Yes.
Clarice Lispector

33.
So long as I have questions to which there are no answers, I shall go on writing.
Clarice Lispector

34.
And I want to be held down. I don't know what to do with the horrifying freedom that can destroy me.
Clarice Lispector

35.
The world's continual breathing is what we hear and call silence.
Clarice Lispector

36.
Do not mourn the dead. They know what they are doing.
Clarice Lispector

37.
Holding someone's hand was always my idea of joy.
Clarice Lispector

38.
I hear the mad song of a little bird and crush butterflies between my fingers.
Clarice Lispector

39.
Today at school I wrote an essay about Flag Day which was so beautiful, but ever so beautiful - for I even used words without really knowing what they meant.
Clarice Lispector

40.
Ela acreditava em anjo e, porque acreditava, eles existiam" | "She believed in angels, and, because she believed, they existed
Clarice Lispector

41.
Love is now, is always. All that is missing is the coup de grâce- which is called passion.
Clarice Lispector

42.
Living isn't courage, knowing that you're living, that's courage
Clarice Lispector

43.
For only when I err do I get away from what I know and what I understand. If "truth" were what I can understand, it would end up being but a small truth, my-sized. Truth must reside precisely in what I shall never understand.
Clarice Lispector

44.
For one has the right to shout. So, I am shouting.
Clarice Lispector

45.
I write and that way rid myself of me and then at last I can rest.
Clarice Lispector

46.
At first she dreamed of sheep, of going to school, of cats drinking milk. Little by little she dreamed of blue sheep, of going to school in the middle of the woods, of cats drinking milk from golden saucers. And her dreams became increasingly dense and acquired colours that were difficult to dilute into words.
Clarice Lispector

47.
For at the hour of death you became a celebrated film star, it is a moment of glory for everyone, when the choral music scales the top notes.
Clarice Lispector

48.
I write as if to save somebody’s life. Probably my own. Life is a kind of madness that death makes. Long live the dead because we live in them.
Clarice Lispector

49.
I write to save someone's life, probably my own
Clarice Lispector

50.
I just know that I don't want cheating. I refuse. I deepened myself but I don't believe in myself because my thought is invented.
Clarice Lispector