1.
If you don't love life you can't enjoy an oyster; there is a shock of freshness to it and intimations of the ages of man, some piercing intuition of the sea and all its weeds and breezes. [They] shiver you for a split second.
Eleanor Clark
2.
Obviously, if you don't love life, you can't enjoy an oyster.
Eleanor Clark
3.
How smartly September comes in, like a racing gig, all style, no confusion.
Eleanor Clark
4.
The fresh start is always an illusion but a necessary one.
Eleanor Clark
5.
Even the stupidest cat seems to know more than any dog.
Eleanor Clark
6.
The Roman form of serenade is to race a motorcycle motor under the girl's window, but mufflers are not common in any situation; the only things as dearly loved as a good noise are breakneck speed and eye-splitting lights, preferably neon - all expressions of well-being, like a huge belly-laugh.
Eleanor Clark
7.
Anybody who's against birth control and abortion has to be a criminal idiot.
Eleanor Clark
8.
It is like a party all the time; nobody has to worry about giving one or being invited; it is going on every day in the street and you can go down or be part of it from your window.
Eleanor Clark
9.
Rome is ... an impossible compounding of time, in which no century has respect for any other and all hit you in a jumble at every turn.
Eleanor Clark
10.
Doubt remains a luxury I won't do without.
Eleanor Clark
11.
You are eating the sea, that's it, only the sensation of a gulp of sea water has been wafted out of it by some sorcery, and you are on the verge of remembering you don't know what, mermaids or the sudden smell of
kelp on the ebb tide or a poem you read once, something connected
with the flavor of life itself.
Eleanor Clark
12.
Even a tourist can tell in a Roman street that he is in something and not outside of something as he would be in most cities. In Rome to go out is to go home.
Eleanor Clark
13.
Shame can be self-indulgence too.
Eleanor Clark
14.
Music or the color of the sea are easier to describe than the taste of one of these Armoricaines.
Eleanor Clark
15.
To be first-rate at anything you have to stake your all. Nobody's an artist 'on the side'.
Eleanor Clark
16.
I think you write only out of a great trouble. A trouble of excitement, a trouble of enlargement, a trouble of displacement in yourself.
Eleanor Clark
17.
Rome is everybody's memory.
Eleanor Clark