1.
A broken bone can heal, but the wound a word opens can fester forever.
Jessamyn West
2.
Talent is helpful in writing, but guts are absolutely necessary.
Jessamyn West
3.
Fiction reveals truths that reality obscures.
Jessamyn West
4.
A rattlesnake that doesn't bite teaches you nothing.
Jessamyn West
5.
It is very easy to forgive others their mistakes; it takes more grit and gumption to forgive them for having witnessed your own.
Jessamyn West
6.
A religious awakening which does not awaken the sleeper to love has roused him in vain.
Jessamyn West
7.
Writing is a solitary occupation. Family, friends, and society are the natural enemies of the writer. He must be alone, uninterrupted, and slightly savage if he is to sustain and complete an undertaking.
Jessamyn West
8.
There are two barriers that often prevent communication between the young and their elders. The first is middle-aged forgetfulness of the fact that they themselves are no longer young. The second is youthful ignorance of the fact that the middle aged are still alive.
Jessamyn West
9.
A taste for irony has kept more hearts from breaking than a sense of humor, for it takes irony to appreciate the joke which is on oneself.
Jessamyn West
10.
If you train people properly, they won't be able to tell a drill from the real thing. If anything, the real thing will be easier.
Jessamyn West
11.
People who keep journals have life twice
Jessamyn West
12.
Nothing is so dear as what you're about to leave.
Jessamyn West
13.
I've done more harm by the falseness of trying to please than by the honesty of trying to hurt.
Jessamyn West
14.
In my time and neighborhood (and in my soul) there was only one standard by which a woman measured success: did some man want her?
Jessamyn West
15.
Sleeplessness is a desert without vegetation or inhabitants.
Jessamyn West
16.
You make what seems a simple choice: choose a man or a job or a neighborhood- and what you have chosen is not a man or a job or a neighborhood, but a life.
Jessamyn West
17.
One can write out of love or hate. Hate tells one a great deal about a person. Love makes one become the person. Love, contrary to legend, is not half as blind, at least for writing purposes, as hate. Love can see the evil and not cease to be love. Hate cannot see the good and remain hate. The writer, writing out of hatred, will, thus, paint a far more partial picture than if he had written out of love.
Jessamyn West
18.
A good time for laughing is when you can.
Jessamyn West
19.
We can love an honest rogue, but what is more offensive than a false saint?
Jessamyn West
20.
The West is color. Its colors are animal rather than vegetable, the colors of earth and sunlight and ripeness.
Jessamyn West
21.
Teaching is the royal road to learning.
Jessamyn West
22.
The sick soon come to understand that they live in a different world from that of the well and that the two cannot communicate.
Jessamyn West
23.
I am always jumping into the sausage grinder and deciding, even before I’m half ground, that I don’t want to be a sausage after all.
Jessamyn West
24.
I seem to be the only person in the world who doesn't mind being pitied. If you love me, pity me. The human state is pitiable: born to die, capable of so much, accomplishing so little; killing instead of creating, destroying instead of building, hating instead of loving. Pitiful, pitiful.
Jessamyn West
25.
The past is really almost as much a work of the imagination as the future.
Jessamyn West
26.
Memory is a magnet. It will pull to it and hold only material nature has designed it to attract.
Jessamyn West
27.
Writing is so difficult that I feel that writers, having had their hell on earth, will escape all punishment hereafter.
Jessamyn West
28.
There is no royal path to good writing; and such paths as exist do not lead through neat critical gardens, various as they are, but through the jungles of self, the world, and of craft.
Jessamyn West
29.
The conversation of two people remembering, if the memory is enjoyable to both, rocks on like music or lovemaking. There is a rhythm and a predictability to it that each anticipates and relishes.
Jessamyn West
30.
Each death and departure comes to us as a surprise, a sorrow never anticipated. Life is a long series of farewells; only the circumstances should surprise us.
Jessamyn West
31.
Somehow I have the feeling that in some book is the great treasure I've been looking for all my life.
Jessamyn West
32.
To meet at all, one must open ones eyes to another; and there is no true conversation no matter how many words are spoken, unless the eye, unveiled and listening, opens itself to the other.
Jessamyn West
33.
Faithfulness to the past can be a kind of death above ground. Writing of the past is a resurrection; the past then lives in your words and you are free.
Jessamyn West
34.
If you want a baby, have a new one. Don't baby the old one.
Jessamyn West
35.
In their sympathies, children feel nearer animals than adults. They frolic with animals, caress them, share with them feelings neither has words for. Have they ever stroked any adult with the love they bestow on a cat? Hugged any grownup with the ecstasy they feel when clasping a puppy?
Jessamyn West
36.
Justice is a terrible but necessary thing.
Jessamyn West
37.
Some people are always thirsting for water from other people's wells.
Jessamyn West
38.
At fourteen you don't need sickness or death for tragedy.
Jessamyn West
39.
It is not easy to be solitary unless you are also born ruthless. Every solitary repudiates someone.
Jessamyn West
40.
The emotion, the ecstasy of love, we all want, but God spare us the responsibility.
Jessamyn West
41.
It is the loving, not the loved, woman who feels loveable.
Jessamyn West
42.
In their sympathies, children feel nearer animals than adults
Jessamyn West
43.
Knowledge of what you love somehow comes to you; you don’t have to read nor analyze nor study. If you love a thing enough, knowledge of it seeps into you, with particulars more real than any chart can furnish.
Jessamyn West
44.
Only a fool would refuse to enter a fool's paradise when that's the only paradise he'll ever have a chance to enter.
Jessamyn West
45.
Being consistent meant not departing from convictions already formulated; being a leader meant making other persons accept these convictions. It was a narrow track, and a one-way, but a person might travel a considerable distance on it. A number of dictators have.
Jessamyn West
46.
The source of one's joy is also often the source of one's sorrow.
Jessamyn West
47.
With enough libraries, all content is free.
Jessamyn West