Quotes About Memory
War is the form nostalgia takes when men are hard-pressed to say something good about their country.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
And what do you remember, finally, when everyone has gone home and the streets are empty of devotion and hope, swept by river wind? Is the memory thin and bitter and does it shame you with its fundamental untruth--all nuance and wishful silhouette? Or does the power of transcendence linger, the sense of an event that violates natural forces, something holy that throbs on the hot horizon, the vision you crave because you need a sign to stand against your doubt?
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
That's why he was here, to surrender himself to longing, to listen to his host recite the anecdotal texts, all the passed-down stories of bonehead plays and swirling brawls, the pitching duels that carried into twilight, stories that Marvin had been collecting for half a century--the deep eros of memory that separates baseball from other sports.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
How memory conspires with objects of human craft, pressing time flat, inciting a tender reminiscence.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
It's the things we forget about that tell us who we are.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
Before I fell asleep, eventually, was thinking when I was a small kid how I'd try to imagine the end of the century and what a far-off wonder that was and I'd figure out how old I'd be when the century ended, years, months, days and now look, incredible we're here - we're six years in and I realize I'm the same skinny kid, my life shadowed by his presence, won't step on cracks on the sidewalk, not as superstition but as a test, a discipline, still do it.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
We travel into or away from our photographs.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
It was the kind of day in which you forget words and drop things and wonder what it is you came into the room to get because you are standing here for a reason and you have to tell yourself it is just a question of sooner or later before you remember because you always remember once you are here. The thing is communicated somehow.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
Every time she saw a videotape of the planes she moved a finger toward the power button on the remote. Then she kept on watching. The second plane coming out of that ice blue sky, this was the footage that entered the body, that seemed to run beneath her skin, the fleeting sprint that carried lives and histories, theirs and hers, everyone's, into some distance, out beyond the towers.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
The love of minds should last beyond lives.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
But she missed simple things, parents' birthdays, a rug underfoot, nights when she didn't have to sleep in a zipped bag. She began to think she was inadequate to the strict plain shapes of churchly faith. Head pains hit her at the end of the day. They came with a shining, an electrochemical sheen, light from out of nowhere, brain-made, the eerie gleam of who you are.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
The instant he knew he loved her, she slipped down his body and out of his arms. Then she wedged herself through the narrow opening in the boards and he watched her cross the street. Nothing moved out there. She was the lone stroke of motion, crew and extras gone, equipment gone, and she was cool and silvery slim and walking head-high, with technical precision, toward the last trailer in the service station, where she would find her clothes, dress quickly and disappear.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
What you see is not what wee se. What you see is distracted by memory, by being who you are, all this time, for all these years.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
She thought she understood the tourists. You travel somewhere not for museums and sunsets but for ruins, bombed-out terrain, for the moss-grown memory of war and torture.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
Memory is the faculty of absolution. Men developed memories to ease their disquiet over things they did as men. The deep past is the only innocence and therefore necessary to retain.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
I see them in the primitive silkscreen the brain is able to produce, maybe eight inches in front of my closed eyes, miniaturised by time and distance, riddled by visual static, each figure a dancing red ribbon. These are among the people I've tried to know twice, the second time in memory and language. Through them, myself. They are what I've become, in ways I don't understand but which I believe will accrue to a rounded truth, a second life for me as well as for them.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
When you see a thing like that, a thing that becomes a newsreel, you begin to feel you are a carrier of some solemn scrap of history.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
Nostalgia is a product of dissatisfaction and rage. It's a settling of grievances between the present and the past.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
This is the point of Babette.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
The moment is there to be forgotten. This seems the ultimate point. It's a moment never to be thought of except when it's in the process of unfolding. Maybe this is why it doesn't seem peculiar. It is only me. I don't think about it. I simply live within it and then leave it behind.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
Then she rubbed the cat's fur and felt her childhood there. It was complete in a touch, everything intact, carried out of old lost houses and fields and summer days into the river of her hand.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
The power of the dead is that we think they see us all the time. The dead have a presence. Is there a level of energy composed solely of the dead? They are also in the ground, of course, asleep and crumbling. Perhaps we are what they dream. May the days be aimless. Let the seasons drift. Do not advance the action according to a plan.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
Billy couldn't recall ever having seen a blind man laugh
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
We can't do justice to our dreams, reworking them in memory. They seem borrowed, part of another life, ours only maybe and only in the farthest margins.
~ Don DeLillo
BazillionQuotes.com
