Bartlett Giamatti Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Bartlett Giamatti. Here they are! All 10 of them:

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[Baseball] breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall all alone. You count on it, rely on it to buffer the passage of time, to keep the memory of sunshine and high skies alive, and then just when the days are all twilight, when you need it most, it stops.
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A. Bartlett Giamatti (Take Time for Paradise: Americans and Their Games)
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It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone. You count on it, rely on it to buffer the passage of time, to keep the memory of sunshine and high skies alive, and then just when the days are all twilight, when you need it most, it stops. Today, October 2, a Sunday of rain and broken branches and leaf-clogged drains and slick streets, it stopped and summer was gone.
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A. Bartlett Giamatti
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Romance is about putting things aright after some tragedy has put them asunder. It is about restoration of the right relations among things Β— and going home is where that restoration occurs because that is where it matters most.
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A. Bartlett Giamatti (Take Time for Paradise: Americans and Their Games)
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If a family is an expression of continuity through biology, a city is an expression of continuity through will amd imagination Β— through mental choices making artifice, not through physical reproduction.
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A. Bartlett Giamatti (Take Time for Paradise: Americans and Their Games)
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Sports represent a shared vision of how we continue, as individual, team, or community, to experience a happiness or absence of care so intense, so rare, and so fleeting that we associate their experience with experience otherwise described as religious or we say the sports experience must be the tattered remnant of an experience which was once described, when first felt, as religious.
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A. Bartlett Giamatti (Take Time for Paradise: Americans and Their Games)
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It is the story we have hinted at already, the story of going home after having left home, the story of how difficult it is to find the origins one so deeply needs to find. It is the literary mode called Romance.
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A. Bartlett Giamatti (Take Time for Paradise: Americans and Their Games)
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The gods have fled, I know. My sense is the gods have always been essentially absent. I do not believe human beings have played games or sports from the beginning merely to summon or to please or to appease the gods. If anthropologists and historians believe that, it is because they believe whatever they have been able to recover about what humankind told the gods humankind was doing. I believe we have played games, and watched games, to imitate the gods, to become godlike in our worship of eachother and, through those moments of transmutation, to know for an instant what the gods know.
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A. Bartlett Giamatti (Take Time for Paradise: Americans and Their Games)
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For all the allure of speciously stress-free suburbs, for all the grinding of city life, cities endure. And when all those diverse energies are harnessed, and those choices, private and public, cohere, and all the bargains made in a million ways every day hold up, then a city flourishes and is the most stimulating center for life, and the most precious artifact, a culture can create. Think of great cities large and small (size, as with any work of art, does not necessarily determine value) and, in addition to nodes of government, commerce, law, hospitals, libraries, and newspapers will come to mind, as will restaurants and theaters and houses of worship and museums and opera houses and galleries and universities. And so will stadia and arenas and parks. In short, once finds not simply commerce but culture, not simply work but leisure, not only negotium but otium, not simply that which ennobles but also that which perfects us. Such has forever been the ultimate purpose of a city, to mirror our higher state, not simply to shelter us from wind and rain. As with leisure, so with the city: It is the setting to make us not the best that Nature can make us, but to manifest the best we, humankind, adding Art to Nature, can make us.
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A. Bartlett Giamatti (Take Time for Paradise: Americans and Their Games)
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Baseball breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone. β€”A. BARTLETT GIAMATTI
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Lori Wilde (Back in the Game (Stardust, Texas, #1))
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Do not become one of those who only has the courage of other people’s convictions. Be one of those who believe in what Shakespeare called the pauser, reason. Be one for whom coercion, of any kind, whether coercion based on race or sex or religious or political belief, is an anathema. Leave the Apocalyptic Style to those who cannot, or do not want to, do the deeply human work of finding their own voices in the common chorus.
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A. Bartlett Giamatti (A Free and Ordered Space: The Real World of the University)