Marguerite Young Quotes (43 Quotes)


    I would teach from nine to four, sleep an hour, and write from six until midnight, night after night.

    There were also some cruel reviews by women, but the tone of the male reviewers, sometimes hysterical, was different. I have suffered, but I don't want to name names-but there have been men who have seemed to want to destroy me or my writing, men I don't even know.

    If there is no certain reality, the idea of following a leader must be scrutinized.

    The asexual angel, neither male nor female... unable to live without her mask of illusions... showed herself to be the denuded character every person would be if confronted with the loss of their illusions as she was.

    Dreiser... I love... and almost wouldn't speak to anyone who ever attacked him.


    The first money I ever had was when I received an award from the American Association of University Women.

    I like Gertrude Stein, and spent two weeks with her at the University of Chicago.

    I think most people don't like others who, without a voice of their own, emulate the other. I certainly don't want anybody just to pick up my thoughts and hand them back to me.

    I never thought of myself as either a woman or a man. I thought of myself as a person who was born to a writer, who was doomed to be a writer.

    If you don't have obsessions, don't write. my characters are obsessed.

    The first poem I ever wrote, about loss, when I was 5 years old, expressed the themes of everything I would ever write.

    I see myself as traditional even though I know you see my work as experimental. I don't really consider Sterne, Joyce, and Proust experimental either because the tradition of their writing goes back a long way. Traditional. The Grand Tradition.

    I think there is a rage against women. I've come to see that now although at the time I did not notice it. I was preoccupied with my teaching and my writing.

    I'm quite sure that most writers would sustain real poetry if they could, but it takes devotion and talent.

    I believe that all my work explores the human desire or obsession for utopias, and the structure of all my works is the search for utopias lost and rediscovered.

    If you know anything about James Whitcomb Riley, you know that Little Orphan Annie is one of the most fantastic characters who ever lived in America before Charlie Chaplin.

    I knew Anais Nin, who called me after I had been away for a few years. She was seeking help because at that time no one would give her a decent review. She was made fun of.

    My first attempt to write about Robert Owen was in the form of poetry. Then I turned it into a blank verse poem, but I discovered that I couldn't fit in all the facts, which are fabulous. I decided to rewrite it a third time, still retaining every image I had already written in the first two versions.

    I think that the style is the writing, a beautiful sense of style. And if you don't have it, it doesn't matter what you write, it doesn't really make any difference. I'm not speaking of realistic novels now, but of the pseudo-poetic novel or short story.

    It's the thing I never could write, the idea of identity and passage of the soul.

    All creatures are flawed, but out of the flaw may come the universe.

    If you understand hallucination and illusion, you don't blindly follow any leader. You must know if the person is sane or insane, over the abyss.

    Like Kay Boyle, whose work I'm wild about, I could have married, written a book with every baby, a baby with every book.

    I think the category between fiction and non-fiction is nothing. The poetry of non-fiction is as fabulous as any poetry you could ever write in fiction. Poets have greatly influenced me. The only difference between the novel as poem and the lyric as poem is the difference in length.



    A good writer cannot avoid having social consciousness. I don't mean this about small pieces of writing, but about a big book. If it's a big book, there has to be more than one undertow.

    I don't believe there can be a poetic novel without political consciousness. I have a strong political conscience.

    I would say my theme has always been paradise lost, always the lost cause, the lost leader, the lost utopia.

    I had a book, which was stolen, the art of the life of the character, in which you present a whole life in three of four pages. I used that method.

    Is it experimental to have been influenced by the Bible? By Saint Augustine?

    Some of the poetic writers who insert passages of realism in their texts have no underlying philosophy to uphold them, and revert to realism.

    When you have examined all the illusions of life and know that there isn't any reality, but you nevertheless go on, then you are a mature human being. You accept the idea that it is all mask and illusion and that people are in disguise. You see the crumbl

    I never fantasized or invented a thing, not one thing. I knew every single thing I ever wrote about.

    I'm as much influenced by Joseph Smith and the Mormons as I am, more so, than by Eliot. Actually, I'm much more influenced by the poetry of the Mormons.

    I've been willing to go for years without publishing. That's been my career.

    All my writing is about the recognition that there is no single reality. But the beauty of it is that you nevertheless go on, walking towards utopia, which may not exist, on a bridge which might end before you reach the other side.

    A lawyer I once knew told me of a strange case, a suffragette who had never married. After her death, he opened her trunk and discovered 50 wedding gowns.

    I would never write realistic prose. I don't like people who try to write in a poetic style, but in the course of their book abandon it for realism, and weave back and forth like drunkards between the surreal and the real.

    All the books I have written have been one book, from the beginning.

    At the age of 18 all young poets are sure they will be dead at 21 - of old age.

    I had read the histories of mountain climbers, of suffragette captains, of travelers to the Middle East... all the ladies who went to the Middle East. I'd like to go myself. I didn't invent anything in my book. I didn't need to.

    I was not influenced by Joyce although he's a great writer, and I love his work. I was influenced by Saint Augustine.


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