Elizabeth Bowen Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Elizabeth Bowen's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Novelist Elizabeth Bowen's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 218 quotes on this page collected since June 7, 1899! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
  • Often when I write I am trying to make words do the work of line and color. I have the painter's sensitivity to light. Much of my writing is verbal painting.

    Writing   Light   Color  
  • This, my first [bicycle] had an intrinsic beauty. And it opened for me an era of all but flying, which roads emptily crossing theairy, gold-gorsy Common enhanced. Nothing since has equalled that birdlike freedom.

    Freedom   Flying   Gold  
  • Art, at any rate in a novel, must be indissolubly linked with craft.

    Art   Crafts   Novel  
  • Good general-purpose manners nowadays may be said to consist in knowing how much you can get away with.

    Knowing   Purpose   May  
    Elizabeth Bowen (1950). “Collected Impressions”
  • Style is the thing that's always a bit phony, and at the same time you cannot write without style.

    Writing   Style   Phony  
    Elizabeth Bowen (1938). “The death of the heart”, Viking Pr
  • Certain books come to meet me, as do people.

    Book   Reading   People  
  • Dress has never been at all a straightforward business: so much subterranean interest and complex feeling attaches to it. As a topic ... it has a flowery head but deep roots in the passion. On the subject of dress almost no one, for one or another reason, feels truly indifferent: if their own clothes do not concern them, somebody else's do. ... Ten minutes talk about clothes (except between perfect friends) tends to make everyone present either overbearing, guarded or touchy.

    Passion   Roots   Clothes  
  • Silence sat in the taxi, as though a stranger had got in.

    Silence   Stranger   Taxi  
    Elizabeth Bowen (1952). “The house in Paris”
  • Pity the selfishness of lovers: it is brief, a forlorn hope; it is impossible.

    Elizabeth Bowen (1938). “The death of the heart”, Viking Pr
  • Curiosity in Rome is a form of courtesy.

  • ...the power-loving temperament is more dangerous when it either prefers or is forced to operate in what is materially a void. Wehave everything to dread from the dispossessed.

    Power   Void   Dangerous  
  • All your youth you want to have your greatness taken for granted; when you find it taken for granted, you are unnerved.

    Taken   Greatness   Want  
    ELIZABETH BOWEN (1935). “The House in Paris”
  • Who is ever adequate? We all create situations each other can't live up to, then break our hearts at them because they don't.

    Elizabeth Bowen (1938). “The death of the heart”, Viking Pr
  • Expectations are the most perilous form of dream, and when dreams do realise themselves it is in the waking world: the difference is subtly but often painfully felt.

    Elizabeth Bowen (1938). “The death of the heart”, Viking Pr
  • All good dialogue perhaps deals with something unprecedented.

  • life is a succession of readjustments.

  • every short story is an experiment - what one must ask is not only, did it come off, but was it, as an experiment, worth making?

    Elizabeth Bowen (1959). “Stories”
  • To the sun Rome owes its underlying glow, and its air called golden - to me, more the yellow of white wine; like wine it raises agreeability to poetry.

    Wine   Air   Rome  
    Elizabeth Bowen (2015). “A Time In Rome”, p.58, Random House
  • Exhibitionism and a nervous wish for concealment, for anonymity, thus battle inside the buyer of any piece of clothing.

    Clothes   Wish   Battle  
    Elizabeth Bowen (1950). “Collected Impressions”
  • [My early stories] are the work of a living writer whom I know in a sense, but can never meet.

    Fiction   Stories   Knows  
  • Childish fantasy, like the sheath over the bud, not only protects but curbs the terrible budding spirit, protects not only innocence from the world, but the world from the power of innocence.

    Bud   World   Spirit  
    Elizabeth Bowen (2015). “The Death Of The Heart”, p.326, Random House
  • Art is one thing that can go on mattering once it has stopped hurting.

    Art   Hurt   Memorable  
    Heat of the Day (1949) ch. 16
  • ... in general, the Anglo-Irish do not make good dancers; they are too spritely and conscious; they are incapable of one kind of trance or of being seemingly impersonal. And, for the formal, pure dance they lack the formality: about their stylishness (for they have stylishness) there is something impromptu, slightly disorderly.

    Dance   Kind   Conscious  
  • Princess Bibesco delighted in a semi-ideal world - a world which, though having a counterpart in her experience, was to a great extent brought into being by her own temperament and, one might say, flair.

    Princess   World   Might  
    Elizabeth Bowen, Allan Hepburn (2008). “People, Places, Things: Essays”, p.255, Edinburgh University Press
  • I do like Italian graves; they look so much more lived in.

    Italian   Looks   Graves  
    Elizabeth Bowen, Maud Ellman (2012). “The Hotel: A Novel”, p.99, University of Chicago Press
  • In 'real life' everything is diluted; in the novel everything is condensed.

    Real   Real Life   Novel  
    Elizabeth Bowen (1950). “Collected Impressions”
  • Nobody can be kinder than the narcissist while you react to life in his own terms.

    Elizabeth Bowen (1938). “The death of the heart”, Viking Pr
  • ... a novel survives because of its basic truthfulness, its having within it something general and universal, and a quality of imaginative perception which applies just as much now as it did in the fifty or hundred or two hundred years since the novel came to life.

    Truth   Years   Two  
  • Each of us keeps, battened down inside himself, a sort of lunatic giant; impossible socially, but full scale; and it's the knockings and battering we sometimes hear in each other that keep our banter from utter banality.

  • Never to lie is to have no lock on your door, you are never wholly alone.

    Lying   Doors   Locks  
    ELIZABETH BOWEN (1935). “The House in Paris”
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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 218 quotes from the Novelist Elizabeth Bowen, starting from June 7, 1899! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!