β
If there's a book that you want to read, but it hasn't been written yet, then you must write it.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
You wanna fly, you got to give up the shit that weighs you down.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
Freeing yourself was one thing, claiming ownership of that freed self was another.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Love is or it ain't. Thin love ain't love at all.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
At some point in life the world's beauty becomes enough. You don't need to photograph, paint, or even remember it. It is enough.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
She is a friend of my mind. She gather me, man. The pieces I am, she gather them and give them back to me in all the right order.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Sweet, crazy conversations full of half sentences, daydreams and misunderstandings more thrilling than understanding could ever be.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Make up a story... For our sake and yours forget your name in the street; tell us what the world has been to you in the dark places and in the light. Don't tell us what to believe, what to fear. Show us belief's wide skirt and the stitch that unravels fear's caul.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Nobel Lecture In Literature, 1993)
β
Definitions belong to the definers, not the defined.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Don't ever think I fell for you, or fell over you. I didn't fall in love, I rose in it.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Jazz (Beloved Trilogy, #2))
β
You are your best thing
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Like any artist without an art form, she became dangerous.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
And I am all the things I have ever loved: scuppernong wine, cool baptisms in silent water, dream books and number playing.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
In this country American means white. Everybody else has to hyphenate.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
I tell my students, 'When you get these jobs that you have been so brilliantly trained for, just remember that your real job is that if you are free, you need to free somebody else. If you have some power, then your job is to empower somebody else. This is not just a grab-bag candy game.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Lonely, ain't it?
Yes, but my lonely is mine. Now your lonely is somebody else's. Made by somebody else and handed to you. Ain't that something? A secondhand lonely.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
Love is never any better than the lover.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Me and you, we got more yesterday than anybody. We need some kind of tomorrow.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
The function of freedom is to free someone else.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Anger ... it's a paralyzing emotion ... you can't get anything done. People sort of think it's an interesting, passionate, and igniting feeling β I don't think it's any of that β it's helpless ... it's absence of control β and I need all of my skills, all of the control, all of my powers ... and anger doesn't provide any of that β I have no use for it whatsoever."
[Interview with CBS radio host Don Swaim, September 15, 1987.]
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
She was the third beer. Not the first one, which the throat receives with almost tearful gratitude; nor the second, that confirms and extends the pleasure of the first. But the third, the one you drink because it's there, because it can't hurt, and because what difference does it make?
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
What difference do it make if the thing you scared of is real or not?
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
If you surrendered to the air, you could ride it.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
You think because he doesn't love you that you are worthless. You think that because he doesn't want you anymore that he is right -- that his judgement and opinion of you are correct. If he throws you out, then you are garbage. You think he belongs to you because you want to belong to him. Don't. It's a bad word, 'belong.' Especially when you put it with somebody you love. Love shouldn't be like that. Did you ever see the way the clouds love a mountain? They circle all around it; sometimes you can't even see the mountain for the clouds. But you know what? You go up top and what do you see? His head. The clouds never cover the head. His head pokes through, beacuse the clouds let him; they don't wrap him up. They let him keep his head up high, free, with nothing to hide him or bind him. You can't own a human being. You can't lose what you don't own. Suppose you did own him. Could you really love somebody who was absolutely nobody without you? You really want somebody like that? Somebody who falls apart when you walk out the door? You don't, do you? And neither does he. You're turning over your whole life to him. Your whole life, girl. And if it means so little to you that you can just give it away, hand it to him, then why should it mean any more to him? He can't value you more than you value yourself.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
As you enter positions of trust and power, dream a little before you think.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
It is sheer good fortune to miss somebody long before they leave you.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
Along with the idea of romantic love, she was introduced to another--physical beauty. Probably the most destructive ideas in the history of human thought. Both originated in envy, thrived in insecurity, and ended in disillusion.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Love is never any better than the lover. Wicked people love wickedly, violent people love violently, weak people love weakly, stupid people love stupidly, but the love of a free man is never safe. There is no gift for the beloved. The lover alone possesses his gift of love. The loved one is shorn, neutralized, frozen in the glare of the loverβs inward eye.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
It was a fine cry - loud and long - but it had no bottom and it had no top, just circles and circles of sorrow.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
He licked his lips. βWell, if you want my opinion-β
βI donβt, β She said. βI have my own.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Something that is loved is never lost.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
He wants to put his story next to hers.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
You can't own a human being. You can't lose what you don't own. Suppose you did own him. Could you really love somebody who was absolutely nobody without you? You really want somebody like that? Somebody who falls apart when you walk out the door? You don't, do you? And neither does he. You're turning over your whole life to him. Your whole life, girl. And if it means so little to you that you can just give it away, hand it to him, then why should it mean any more to him? He can't value you more than you value yourself.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
We die. That may be the meaning of life. But we do language. That may be the measure of our lives.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Anger is better. There is a sense of being in anger. A reality and presence. An awareness of worth. It is a lovely surging.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
There is really nothing more to say-except why. But since why is difficult to handle, one must take refuge in how.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Beauty was not simply something to behold; it was something one could do.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
There is a loneliness that can be rocked. Arms crossed, knees drawn up, holding, holding on, this motion, unlike a ship's, smooths and contains the rocker. It's an inside kind--wrapped tight like skin. Then there is the loneliness that roams. No rocking can hold it down. It is alive. On its own. A dry and spreading thing that makes the sound of one's own feet going seem to come from a far-off place.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
We mistook violence for passion, indolence for leisure, and thought recklessness was freedom.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Lonely was much better than alone.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
When you gone to get married? You need to have some babies. Itβll settle you.'
'I donβt want to make somebody else. I want to make myself.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
A sister can be seen as someone who is both ourselves and very much not ourselves - a special kind of double.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
The function, the very serious function of racism is distraction. It keeps you from doing your work. It keeps you explaining, over and over again, your reason for being. Somebody says you have no language and you spend twenty years proving that you do. Somebody says your head isnβt shaped properly so you have scientists working on the fact that it is. Somebody says you have no art, so you dredge that up. Somebody says you have no kingdoms, so you dredge that up. None of this is necessary. There will always be one more thing.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
All paradises, all utopias are defined by who is not there, by the people who are not allowed in.
[Conversation with Elizabeth Farnsworth, PBS NewsHour, March 9, 1998]
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Anything dead coming back to life hurts.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Pain. I seem to have an affection, a kind of sweettooth for it. Bolts of lightning, little rivulets of thunder.
And I the eye of the storm.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Jazz)
β
if they put an iron circle around your neck I will bite it away
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
All water has a perfect memory and is forever trying to get back to where it was.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Gimme hate, Lord,β he whimpered. βIβll take hate any day. But donβt give me love. I canβt take no more love, Lord. I canβt carry it...Itβs too heavy. Jesus, you know, you know all about it. Ainβt it heavy? Jesus? Ainβt love heavy?
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
Let me tell you something. A man ainβt a goddamn ax. Chopping, hacking, busting every goddamn minute of the day. Things get to him. Things he canβt chop down because theyβre inside.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
A dream is just a nightmare with lipstick.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
I dream a dream that dreams back at me
β
β
Toni Morrison (A Mercy)
β
They encouraged you to put some of your weight in their hands and soon as you felt how light and lovely it was, they studied your scars and tribulations...
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
I wish Iβd a knowed more people. I would of loved βem all. If Iβd a knowed more, I would a loved more
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
She is a friend of mind. She gather me, man. The pieces I am, she gather them and give them back to me in all the right order. It's good, you know, when you got a woman who is a friend of your mind.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
What I think the political correctness debate is really about is the power to be able to define. The definers want the power to name. And the defined are now taking that power away from them.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
But to find out the truth about how dreams die, one should never take the word of the dreamer.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Black literature is taught as sociology, as tolerance, not as a serious, rigorous art form.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Perhaps that's what all human relationships boil down to: Would you save my life? or would you take it?
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
Today is always here,' said Sethe. 'Tomorrow, never.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Writing is really a way of thinking--not just feeling but thinking about things that are disparate, unresolved, mysterious, problematic or just sweet.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Sunk in the grass of an empty lot on a spring Saturday, I split the stems of milkweed and thought about ants and peach pits and death and where the world went when I closed my eyes.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Was it hard? I hope she didn't die hard.'
Sethe shook her head. 'Soft as cream. Being alive was the hard part.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
What's the world for you if you can't make it up the way you want it?
β
β
Toni Morrison (Jazz)
β
The presence of evil was something to be first recognized, then dealt with, survived, outwitted, triumphed over.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
To get to a place where you could love anything you chose--not to need permission for desire--well now _that_ was freedom.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Not knowing it was hard; knowing it was harder
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
If you're going to hold someone down you're going to have to hold on by the other end of the chain. You are confined by your own repression.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
She learned the intricacy of loneliness: the horror of color, the roar of soundlessness and the menace of familiar objects lying still.
β
β
Toni Morrison (A Mercy)
β
the hopelessness that comes from knowing too little and feeling too much (so brittle, so dry he is in danger of the reverse: feeling nothing and knowing everything)
β
β
Toni Morrison (Jazz (Beloved Trilogy, #2))
β
There in the center of that silence was not eternity but the death of time and a loneliness so profound the word itself had no meaning.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
To be given dominion over another is a hard thing; to wrest dominion over another is a wrong thing; to give dominion of yourself to another is a wicked thing.
β
β
Toni Morrison (A Mercy)
β
He leans over and takes her hand. With the other he touches her face. βYou your best thing, Sethe. You are.β His holding fingers are holding hers.
βMe? Me?
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
But the picking out, the choosing. Don't ever think I fell for you, or fell over you. I didn't fall in love, I rose in it. I saw you and made up my mind. My mind.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Jazz (Beloved Trilogy, #2))
β
You looking good."
"Devil's confusion. He lets me look good long as I feel bad.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
At some point in life the world's beauty becomes enough. You don't need to photograph, paint or even remember it. It is enough. No record of it needs to be kept and you don't need someone to share it with or tell it to. When that happens β that letting go β you let go because you can.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Tar Baby (Vintage International))
β
She is a friend of my mind. She gather me, man. The pieces I am, she gather them and give them back to me in all the right order. It's good, you know, when you got a woman who is a friend of your mind.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
It's a bad word, 'belong.' Especially when you put it with somebody you love ... You can't own a human being.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
I stood at the border, stood at the edge and claimed it as central. l claimed it as central, and let the rest of the world move over to where I was.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
In a way, her strangeness, her naivetΓ©, her craving for the other half of her equation was the consequence of an idle imagination. Had she paints, or clay, or knew the discipline of the dance, or strings, had she anything to engage her tremendous curiosity and her gift for metaphor, she might have exchanged the restlessness and preoccupation with whim for an activity that provided her with all she yearned for. And like an artist with no art form, she became dangerous.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
Some things you forget. Other things you never do. But it's not. Places, places are still there. If a house burns down, it's gone, but the place--the picture of it--stays, and not just in my remory, but out there, in the world. What I remember is a picture floating around out there outside my head. I mean, even if I don't think if, even if I die, the picture of what I did, or knew, or saw is still out there. Right in the place where it happened.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
So when I think of autumn, I think of somebody with hands who does not want me to die.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
It never looked as terrible as it was and it made her wonder if hell was a pretty place too. Fire and brimstone all right, but hidden in lacy groves.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
I never asked Tolstoy to write for me, a little colored girl in Lorain, Ohio. I never asked [James] Joyce not to mention Catholicism or the world of Dublin. Never. And I don't know why I should be asked to explain your life to you. We have splendid writers to do that, but I am not one of them. It is that business of being universal, a word hopelessly stripped of meaning for me. Faulkner wrote what I suppose could be called regional literature and had it published all over the world. That's what I wish to do. If I tried to write a universal novel, it would be water. Behind this question is the suggestion that to write for black people is somehow to diminish the writing. From my perspective there are only black people. When I say 'people,' that's what I mean.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
I have only to break into the tightness of a strawberry, and I see summer β its dust and lowering skies.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Certain seeds it will not nurture, certain fruit it will not bear and when the land kills of its own volition, we acquiesce and say the victim had no right to live
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
I wrote my first novel because I wanted to read it.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
You looked at them and wondered why they were so ugly; you looked closely and could not find the source. Then you realized that it came from conviction, their conviction. It was as though some mysterious all-knowing master had given each one a cloak of ugliness to wear, and they had each accepted it without question.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Everything depends on knowing how much,β she said, and βGood is knowing when to stop.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
I don't think a female running a house is a problem, a broken family. It's perceived as one because of the notion that a head is a man.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
If happiness is anticipation with certainty, we were happy.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
She left me the way people leave a hotel room. A hotel room is a place to be when you are doing something else. Of itself it is of no consequence to one's major scheme. A hotel room is convenient. But its convenience is limited to the time you need it while you are in that particular town on that particular business; you hope it is comfortable, but prefer, rather, that it be anoymous. It is not, after all, where you live.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Being good to somebody is just like being mean to somebody. Risky. You don't get nothing for it.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
In Ohio seasons are theatrical. Each one enters like a prima donna, convinced its performance is the reason the world has people in it.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
I think thatβs what Toni Morrison and Alice Walker understand, the secret language of women. That itβs not a secret at all; men just donβt know how to listen.
β
β
Marlon James
β
I had only one desire: to dismember it. To see of what it was made, to discover the dearness, to find the beauty, the desirability that had escaped me, but apparently only me.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
If you surrender to the wind you can ride it.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
The real hell of Hell is that it is forever.' Sula said that. She said doing anything forever and ever was hell.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
How exquisitely human was the wish for permanent happiness, and how thin human imagination became trying to achieve it.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Paradise (Beloved Trilogy, #3))
β
Every now and then she looked around for tangible evidence of his having ever been there. Where were the butterflies? the blueberries? the whistling reed? She could find nothing, for he had left nothing but his stunning absence.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
No matter what all your teeth and wet fingers anticipated, there was no accounting for the way that simple joy could shake you.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
guileless and without vanity,we were still in love with ourselves then. We felt comfortable in our own skins, enjoyed the news that our senses released to us, admired our dirt, cultivated our scars, and could not comprehend this unworthiness.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
You don't have to love me but you damn well have to respect me.
β
β
Toni Morrison (God Help the Child)
β
I don't think anybody cares about unwed mothers unless they're black or poor. The question is not morality, the question is money. That's what we're upset about.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
No matter how hard we try to ignore it, the mind always knows truth and wants clarity.
β
β
Toni Morrison (God Help the Child)
β
Now he knew why he loved her so. Without ever leaving the ground, she could fly. 'There must be another one like you,' he whispered to her. 'There's got to be at least one more woman like you.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
Nobody gave you to me. Nobody said thatβs the one for you. I picked you out. Wrong time, yep, and doing wrong by my wife. But the picking out, the choosing. Donβt ever think I fell for you, or fell over you. I didnβt fall in love, I rose in it. I saw you and made up my mind. My mind. And I made up my mind to follow you too.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Jazz (Beloved Trilogy, #2))
β
What you do to children matters. And they might never forget.
β
β
Toni Morrison (God Help the Child)
β
All of our waste which we dumped on her and which she absorbed. And all of our beauty, which was hers first and which she gave to us. All of us--all who knew her--felt so wholesome after we cleaned ourselves on her. We were so beautiful when we stood astride her ugliness. Her simplicity decorated us, her guilt sanctified us, her pain made us glow with health, her awkwardness made us think we had a sense of humor. Her inarticulateness made us believe we were eloquent. Her poverty kept us generous. Even her waking dreams we used--to silence our own nightmares. And she let us, and thereby deserved our contempt. We honed our egos on her, padded our characters with her frailty, and yawned in the fantasy of our strength.
And fantasy it was, for we were not strong, only aggressive; we were not free, merely licensed; we were not compassionate, we were polite; not good, but well behaved. We courted death in order to call ourselves brave, and hid like thieves from life. We substituted good grammar for intellect; we switched habits to simulate maturity; we rearranged lies and called it truth, seeing in the new pattern of an old idea the Revelation and the Word.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
I sure did live in this world.'
'Really? What have you got to show for it?'
'Show? To who? I got my mind. And what goes on in it. Which is to say, I got me.'
'Lonely, ain't it?'
'Yes. But my lonely is mine. Now your lonely is somebody else's. Made by somebody else and handed to you.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
You your best thing, Sethe. You are.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Love is never any better than the lover. Wicked people love wickedly, violent people love violently, weak people love weakly, stupid people love stupidly, but the love a free man is never safe.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Nowadays silence is looked on as odd and most of my race has forgotten the beauty of meaning much by saying little. Now tongues work all day by themselves with no help from the mind.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Love)
β
You been gone too long, Sula.
Not too long, but maybe too far.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
You looked at me then like you knew me, and I thought it really was Eden, and I couldn't take your eyes in because I was loving the hoof marks on your cheeks.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
I donβt think many people appreciate silence or realize that it is as close to music as you can get.
β
β
Toni Morrison (God Help the Child)
β
She had been looking all along for a friend, and it took her a while to discover that a lover was not a comrade and could never be - for a woman. And that no one would ever be that version of herself which she sought to reach out to and touch with an ungloved hand. There was only her own mood and whim, and if that was all there was, she decided to turn the naked hand toward it, discover it and let others become as intimate with their own selves as she was.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
People say to write about what you know. I'm here to tell you, no one wants to read that, cos you don't know anything. So write about something you don't know. And don't be scared, ever.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
And talking about dark! You think dark is just one color, but it ain't. There're five or six kinds of black. Some silky, some woolly. Some just empty. Some like fingers. And it don't stay still, it moves and changes from one kind of black to another. Saying something is pitch black is like saying something is green. What kind of green? Green like my bottles? Green like a grasshopper? Green like a cucumber, lettuce, or green like the sky is just before it breaks loose to storm? Well, night black is the same way. May as well be a rainbow.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
I always looked upon the acts of racist exclusion, or insult, as pitiable, for the other person. I never absorbed that. I always thought that there was something deficient about such people.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Her passions were narrow but deep.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
And fantasy it was, for we were not strong, only aggressive; we were not free, merely licensed; we were not compassionate, we were polite; not good, but well behaved. We courted death in order to call ourselves brave, and hid like thieves from life. We substituted good grammar for intellect; we switched habits to simulate maturity; we rearranged lies and called it truth, seeing in the new pattern of an old idea the Revelation and the Word.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Let me tell you about love, that silly word you believe is about whether you like somebody or whether somebody likes you or whether you can put up with somebody in order to get something or someplace you want or you believe it has to do with how your body responds to another body like robins or bison or maybe you believe love is how forces or nature or luck is benign to you in particular not maiming or killing you but if so doing it for your own good. Love is none of that. There is nothing in nature like it. Not in robins or bison or in the banging tails of your hunting dogs and not in blossoms or suckling foal. Love is divine only and difficult always. If you think it is easy you are a fool. If you think it is natural you are blind. It is a learned application without reason or motive except that it is God. You do not deserve love regardless of the suffering you have endured. You do not deserve love because somebody did you wrong. You do not deserve love just because you want it. You can only earn - by practice and careful contemplations - the right to express it and you have to learn how to accept it. Which is to say you have to earn God. You have to practice God. You have to think God-carefully. And if you are a good and diligent student you may secure the right to show love. Love is not a gift. It is a diploma. A diploma conferring certain privileges: the privilege of expressing love and the privilege of receiving it. How do you know you have graduated? You don't. What you do know is that you are human and therefore educable, and therefore capable of learning how to learn, and therefore interesting to God, who is interested only in Himself which is to say He is interested only in love. Do you understand me? God is not interested in you. He is interested in love and the bliss it brings to those who understand and share the interest. Couples that enter the sacrament of marriage and are not prepared to go the distance or are not willing to get right with the real love of God cannot thrive. They may cleave together like robins or gulls or anything else that mates for life. But if they eschew this mighty course, at the moment when all are judged for the disposition of their eternal lives, their cleaving won't mean a thing. God bless the pure and holy. Amen.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Paradise (Beloved Trilogy, #3))
β
Toni Morrison said, "The function of freedom is to free someone else," and if you are no longer wracked or in bondage to a person or a way of life, tell your story. Risk freeing someone else. Not everyone will be glad that you did. Members of your family and other critics may wish you had kept your secrets. Oh, well, what are you going to do?
β
β
Anne Lamott
β
She is a friend of my mind. She gather me, man. The pieces I am, she gather them and give them back to me in all the right order. It's good, you know, when you got a woman who is a friend of your mind."
Sixo
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Risky, thought Paul D, very risky. For a used-to-be-slave woman to love anything that much was dangerous, especially if it was her children she had settled on to love. The best thing, he knew, was to love just a little bit, so when they broke its back, or shoved it in a croaker sack, well, maybe you'd have a little love left over for the next one.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
...the change was adjustment without improvement.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
There is no bad luck in the world but whitefolks
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Love is divine only and difficult always.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Paradise (Beloved Trilogy, #3))
β
Every sentence, every word, was new to them and they listened to what he said like bright-eyed ravens, trembling in their eagerness to catch & interpret every sound in the universe.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
Sifting daylight dissolves the memory, turns it into dust motes floating in light.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
you got two feet, Sethe, not four." he said, and right then a forest sprang up between them; tactless and quiet.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
I don't care what she is. Grown don't mean a thing to a mother. A child is a child. They get bigger, older, but grown? What's that supposed to mean? In my heart it don't mean a thing.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
For now he knew what Shalimar knew: If you surrendered to the air, you could ride it.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
Misery colored by the greens and blues in my mother's voice took away all the grief out of the words and left me with a conviction that pain was not only endurable, it was sweet.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
But her brain was not interested in the future. Loaded with the past and hungry for more, it left her no room to imagine, let alone plan for, the next day.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Jealousy we understood and thought natural... But envy was a strange, new feeling for us. And all the time we knew that Maureen Peal was not the Enemy and not worthy of such intense hatred. The Thing to fear was the Thing that made her beautiful, and not us.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Say make me, remake me. You are free to do it and I am free to let you because look, look. Look where your hands are. Now.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Jazz (Beloved Trilogy, #2))
β
Here was an ugly little girl asking for beauty....A little black girl who wanted to rise up out of the pit of her blackness and see the world with blue eyes. His outrage grew and felt like power. For the first time he honestly wished he could work miracles.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
In this here place, we flesh; flesh that weeps, laughs; flesh that dances on bare feet in grass. Love it. Love it hard. Yonder they do not love your flesh. They despise it. They don't love your eyes; they'd just as soon pick em out. No more do they love the skin on your back. Yonder they flay it. And O my people they do not love your hands. Those they only use, tie, bind, chop off and leave empty. Love your hands! Love them. Raise them up and kiss them. Touch others with them, pat them together, stroke them on your face 'cause they don't love that either. You got to love it, you! And no, they ain't in love with your mouth. Yonder, out there, they will see it broken and break it again. What you say out of it they will not heed. What you scream from it they do not hear. What you put into it to nourish your body they will snatch away and give you leavins instead. No, they don't love your mouth. You got to love it. This is flesh I'm talking about here. Flesh that needs to be loved. Feet that need to rest and to dance; backs that need support; shoulders that need arms, strong arms I'm telling you. And O my people, out yonder, hear me, they do not love your neck unnoosed and straight. So love your neck; put a hand on it, grace it, stroke it and hold it up. and all your inside parts that they'd just as soon slop for hogs, you got to love them. The dark, dark liver--love it, love it and the beat and beating heart, love that too. More than eyes or feet. More than lungs that have yet to draw free air. More than your life-holding womb and your life-giving private parts, hear me now, love your heart. For this is the prize.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
When Toni Morrison said 'write the book you want to read,' she didn't mean everybody.
β
β
Fran Lebowitz
β
Oppressive language does more than represent violence; it is violence; does more than represent the limits of knowledge; it limits knowledge.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
I'm not entangled in shaping my work according to other people's views of how I should have done it.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
O Lord, Sula,β she cried, βgirl, girl, girlgirlgirl.β
It was a fine cryβloud and longβbut it had no bottom and it had no top, just circles and circles of sorrow.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
I want to feel what I feel. What's mine. Even if it's not happiness, whatever that means. Because you're all you've got.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Pain was greedy; it demanded all of her attention.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
It had been the longest time since she had had a rib-scraping laugh. She had forgotten how deep and down it could be. So different from the miscellaneous giggles and smiles she had learned to be content with these past few years.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
Correct what you can; learn from what you canβt.
β
β
Toni Morrison (God Help the Child)
β
For me, Art is the restoration of order. It may discuss all sort of terrible things, but there must be satisfaction at the end. A little bit of hunger, but also satisfaction.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
He can't value you more than you value yourself.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
It would be ten years before they saw each other again, and their meeting would be thick with birds.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
the loss pressed down on her chest and came up into her throat. it was a fine cry -- loud and long -- but it had no bottom and no top, just circles and circles of sorrow.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
A dead hydrangea is as intricate and lovely as one in bloom. Bleak sky is as seductive as sunshine, miniature orange trees without blossom or fruit are not defective; they are that.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Tar Baby (Vintage International))
β
They had stared at her with great uncomprehending eyes. Eyes that questioned nothing and asked everything. Unblinking and unabashed, they stared up at her. The end of the world lay in their eyes, and the beginning, and all the waste in between.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
I know what every colored woman in this country is doing... Dying. Just like me. But the difference is they dying like a stump. Me, Iβm going down like one of those redwoods. I sure did live in this world.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
If you are free, you need to free somebody else. If you have some power, then your job is to empower somebody else.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
How come it can't fly no better than a chicken?"
"Too much tail. All that jewelry weighs it down. Like vanity. Wanna fly, you got to give up the shit that weighs you down.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
When I write, I don't translate for white readers.... Dostoevski wrote for a Russian audience, but we're able to read him. If I'm specific, and I don't overexplain, then anyone can overhear me.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
In fact her maturity and blood kinship converted her passion to fever, so it was more affliction than affection. It literally knocked her down at night, and raised her up in the morning, for when she dragged herself off to bed, having spent another day without his presence, her heart beat like a gloved fist against her ribs. And in the morning, long before she was fully awake, she felt a longing so bitter and tight it yanked her out of a sleep swept clean of dreams.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
There's a difference between writing for a living and writing for
life. If you write for a living, you make enormous compromises....
If you write for life, you'll work hard; you'll do what's honest,
not what pays
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
They seemed to have taken all of their smoothly cultivated ignorance, their exquisitely learned self-hatred, their elaborately designed hopelessness and sucked it all up into a fiery cone of scorn that had burned for ages in the hollows of their mindsβ cooled βand spilled over lips of outrage, consuming whatever was in its path.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
How come it canβt fly no better than a chicken?β Milkman asked.
Too much tail. All that jewelry weighs it down. Like vanity. Canβt nobody fly with all that [stuff]. Wanna fly, you got to give up the [stuff] that weighs you down.β
The peacock jumped onto the hood of the Buick and once more spread its tail, sending the flashy Buick into oblivion.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
You know, they straightened out the Mississippi River in places, to make room for hourse and livable acreage. Occasionally the river floods these places. "Floods" is the word they use, but in fact it is not flooding; it is remembering. Remembering where it used to be. All water has a perfect memory and is forever trying to get back to where it was. Writers are like that: remembering where we were, that valley we ran through, what the banks were like, the light that was there and the route back to our original place. It is emotional memory--what the nerves and the skin remember as well as how it appeared. And a rush of imagination is our "flooding.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Each member of the family in his own cell of consciousness, each making his own patchwork quilt of reality - collecting fragments of experience here, pieces of information there. From the tiny impressions gleaned from one another, they created a sense of belonging and tried to make do with the way they found each other.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
But Jude,' she would say, 'you knew me. All those days and years, Jude, you knew me. My ways and my hands and how my stomach folded and how we tried to get Mickey to nurse and how about that time when the landlord said...but you said...and I cried, Jude. You knew me and had listened to the things I said in the night, and heard me in the bathroom and laughed at my raggedy girdle and I laughed too because I knew you too, Jude. So how could you leave me when you knew me?
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
There, in the center of that silence was not eternity but the death of time and a loneliness so profound the word itself had no meaning. For loneliness assumed the absence of other people, and the solitude she found in that desperate terrain had never admitted the possibility of other people. She wept then. Tears for the deaths of the littlest things: the castaway shoes of children; broken stems of marsh grass battered and drowned by the sea; prom photographs of dead women she never knew; wedding rings in pawnshop windows; the tiny bodies of Cornish hens in a nest of rice.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
Nothing could be taken for granted. Women who loved you tried to cut your throat, while women who didn't even know your name scrubbed your back. Witches could sound like Katharine Hepburn and your best friend could try to strangle you. Smack in the middle of an orchid there might be a blob of jello and inside a Mickey Mouse doll, a fixed and radiant star.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
The death of self-esteem can occur quickly, easily in children, before their ego has βlegs,β so to speak. Couple the vulnerability of youth with indifferent parents, dismissive adults, and a world, which, in its language, laws, and images, re-enforces despair, and the journey to destruction is sealed.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Listen, baby, people do funny things. Specially us. The cards are stacked against us and just trying to stay in the game, stay alive and in the game, makes us do funny things. Things we can't help. Things that make us hurt one another. We don't even know why.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
Never did he once consider directing his hatred toward the hunters. Such an emotion would have destroyed him ... His subconscious knew what his min did not guess-that hating them would have consumed him, burned him up like a piece of soft coal, leaving only flakes of ash and a question mark of smoke.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Is there no context for our lives? No song, no literature, no poem full of vitamins, no history connected to experience that you can pass along to help us start strong? You are an adult. The old one, the wise one. Stop thinking about saving your face. Think of our lives and tell us your particularized world. Make up a story. Narrative is radical, creating us at the very moment it is being created. We will not blame you if your reach exceeds your grasp; if love so ignites your words they go down in flames and nothing is left but their scald. Or if, with the reticence of a surgeon's hands, your words suture only the places where blood might flow. We know you can never do it properly - once and for all. Passion is never enough; neither is skill. But try. For our sake and yours forget your name in the street; tell us what the world has been to you in the dark places and in the light. Don't tell us what to believe, what to fear. Show us belief s wide skirt and the stitch that unravels fear's caul. You, old woman, blessed with blindness, can speak the language that tells us what only language can: how to see without pictures. Language alone protects us from the scariness of things with no names. Language alone is meditation.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Nobel Lecture In Literature, 1993)
β
...Sula was wrong. Hell ain't things lasting forever. Hell is change." Not only did men leave and children grow up and die, but even the misery didn't last. One day she wouldn't even have that. This very grief that had twisted her into a curve on the floor and flayed her would be gone. She would lose that too.
Why, even in hate here I am thinking of what Sula said.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
True the Black woman did the housework, the drudgery; true, she reared the children, often alone, but she did all of that while occupying a place on the job market, a place her mate could not get or which his pride would not let him accept.And she had nothing to fall back on: not maleness, not whiteness, not ladyhood, not anything. And out of the profound desolation of her reality she may very well have invented herself.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
This is the time for every artist in every genre to do what he or she does loudly and consistently. It doesn't matter to me what your position is. You've got to keep asserting the complexity and the originality of life, and the multiplicity of it, and the facets of it. This is about being a complex human being in the world, not about finding a villain. This is no time for anything else than the best that you've got.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Whose house is this? Whose night keeps out the light In here? Say, who owns this house? Itβs not mine. I dreamed another, sweeter, brighter With a view of lakes crossed in painted boats; Of fields wide as arms open for me. This house is strange. Its shadows lie. Say, tell me, why does its lock fit my key?
β
β
Toni Morrison (Home)
β
It sounded old. Deserve. Old and tired and beaten to death. Deserve. Now it seemed to him that he was always saying or thinking that he didn't deserve some bad luck, or some bad treatment from others. He'd told Guitar that he didn't "deserve" his family's dependence, hatred, or whatever. That he didn't even "deserve" to hear all the misery and mutual accusations his parents unloaded on him. Nor did he "deserve" Hagar's vengeance. But why shouldn't his parents tell him their personal problems? If not him, then who? And if a stranger could try to kill him, surely Hagar, who knew him and whom he'd thrown away like a wad of chewing gum after the flavor was goneββshe had a right to try to kill him too.
Apparently he though he deserved only to be loved--from a distance, though--and given what he wanted. And in return he would be...what? Pleasant? Generous? Maybe all he was really saying was: I am not responsible for your pain; share your happiness with me but not your unhappiness.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
See? See what you can do? Never mind you canβt tell one letter from another, never mind you born a slave, never mind you lose your name, never mind your daddy dead, never mind nothing. Here, this here, is what a man can do if he puts his mind to it and his back in it. Stop sniveling,β [the land] said. βStop picking around the edges of the world. Take advantage, and if you canβt take advantage, take disadvantage. We live here. On this planet, in this nation, in this county right here. Nowhere else! We got a home in this rock, donβt you see! Nobody starving in my home; nobody crying in my home, and if I got a home you got one too! Grab it. Grab this land! Take it, hold it, my brothers, make it, my brothers, shake it, squeeze it, turn it, twist it, beat it, kick it, kiss it, whip it, stomp it, dig it, plow it, seed it, reap it, rent it, buy it, sell it, own it, build it, multiply it, and pass it on β can you hear me? Pass it on!
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
All of that art-for-artβs-sake stuff is BS,β she declares. βWhat are these people talking about? Are you really telling me that Shakespeare and Aeschylus werenβt writing about kings? All good art is political! There is none that isnβt. And the ones that try hard not to be political are political by saying, βWe love the status quo.β Weβve just dirtied the word βpolitics,β made it sound like itβs unpatriotic or something.β Morrison laughs derisively. βThat all started in the period of state art, when you had the communists and fascists running around doing this poster stuff, and the reaction was βNo, no, no; thereβs only aesthetics.β My point is that is has to be both: beautiful and political at the same time. Iβm not interested in art that is not in the world. And itβs not just the narrative, itβs not just the story; itβs the language and the structure and whatβs going on behind it. Anybody can make up a story.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
Whitepeople believed that whatever the manners, under every dark skin was a jungle. Swift unnavigable waters, swinging screaming baboons, sleeping snakes, red gums ready for their sweet white blood. In a way, he thought, they were right. The more coloredpeople spent their strength trying to convince them how gentle they were, how clever and loving, how human, the more they used themselves up to persuade whites of something Negroes believed could not be questioned, the deeper and more tangled the jungle grew inside. But it wasnβt the jungle blacks brought with them to this place from the other (livable) place. It was the jungle whitefolks planted in them. And it grew. It spread. In, through and after life, it spread, until it invaded the whites who had made it. Touched them every one. Changed and altered them. Made them bloody, silly, worse than even they wanted to be, so scared were they of the jungle they had made. The screaming baboon lived under their own white skin; the red gums were their own.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
I didn't plan on either children or writing. Once I realized that writing satisfied me in some enormous way, I had to make adjustments. The writing was always marginal in terms of time when the children were small. But it was major in terms of my head. I always thought that women could do a lot of things. All the women I knew did nine or ten things at one time. I always understood that women worked, they went to church, they managed their houses, they managed somebody else's houses, they raised their children, they raised somebody else's children, they taught. I wouldn't say it's not hard, but why wouldn't it be? All important things are hard.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
It hit her like a sledgehammer, and it was then that she knew what to feel. A liquid trail of hate flooded her chest.
Knowing that she would hate him long and well filled her with pleasant anticipation, like when you know you are going to fall in love with someone and you wait for the happy signs. Hating BoyBoy, she could get on with it, and have the safety, the thrill, the consistency of that hatred as long as she wanted or needed it to define and strengthen her or protect her from routine vulnerabilities.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
Barack intrigued me. He was not like anyone Iβd dated before, mainly because he seemed so secure. He was openly affectionate. He told me I was beautiful. He made me feel good. To me, he was sort of like a unicornβunusual to the point of seeming almost unreal. He never talked about material things, like buying a house or a car or even new shoes. His money went largely toward books, which to him were like sacred objects, providing ballast for his mind. He read late into the night, often long after Iβd fallen asleep, plowing through history and biographies and Toni Morrison, too. He read several newspapers daily, cover to cover. He kept tabs on the latest book reviews, the American League standings, and what the South Side aldermen were up to. He could speak with equal passion about the Polish elections and which movies Roger Ebert had panned and why.
β
β
Michelle Obama (Becoming)
β
This soil is bad for certain kinds of flowers. Certain seeds it will not nurture, certain fruit it will not bear, and when the land kills of its own volition, we acquiesce and say the victim had no right to live. We are wrong, of course, but it doesn't matter. It's too late. At least on the edge of my town, among the garbage and the sunflowers of my town, it's much, much, much too late.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
All of us--all who knew her--felt so wholesome after we cleaned ourselves on
her. We were so beautiful when we stood astride her ugliness. Her simplicity
decorated us, her guilt sanctified us, her pain made us glow with health, her
awkwardness made us think we had a sense of humor. Her inarticulateness made us
believe we were eloquent. Her poverty kept us generous. Even her waking dreams
we used--to silence our own nightmares.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
I used to think to think it was my rememory. You know. Some things you forget. Other things you never do. But it's not. Places, places are still there. If a house burns down, it's gone, but the place--the picture of it--stays, and not just in my rememory, but out there, in the world. What I remember is a picture floating around out there outside my head. I mean, even if I don't think it, even if I die, the picture of what I did, or knew, or saw is still out there. Right in the place where it happened.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
The systematic looting of language can be recognized by the tendency of its users to forgo its nuanced, complex, mid-wifery properties for menace and subjugation. Oppressive language does more than represent violence; it is violence; does more than represent the limits of knowledge; it limits knowledge. Whether it is obscuring state language or the faux-language of mindless media; whether it is the proud but calcified language of the academy or the commodity driven language of science; whether it is the malign language of law-without-ethics, or language designed for the estrangement of minorities, hiding its racist plunder in its literary cheek - it must be rejected, altered and exposed. It is the language that drinks blood, laps vulnerabilities, tucks its fascist boots under crinolines of respectability and patriotism as it moves relentlessly toward the bottom line and the bottomed-out mind. Sexist language, racist language, theistic language - all are typical of the policing languages of mastery, and cannot, do not permit new knowledge or encourage the mutual exchange of ideas.
- Toni Morrison, Nobel Lecture, 1993
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Nobel Lecture In Literature, 1993)
β
Toni Morrison said, "The function of freedom is to free someone else," and if you are no longer wracked or in bondage to a person or a way of life, tell your story. Risk freeing someone else. Not everyone will be glad that you did. Members of your family and other critics may wish you had kept your secrets. Oh, well, what are you going to do? Get it all down. Let it pour out of you and onto the page. Write an incredibly shitty, self-indulgent, whiny, mewling first draft. Then take out as many of the excesses as you can.
β
β
Anne Lamott (Bird by Bird)
β
I'm me," she whispered. "Me"
Nel didn't know quite what she meant, but on the other hand she knew exactly what she meant.
"I'm me. I'm not their daughter. I'm not Nel. I'm me. Me."
Every time she said the word me there was a gathering in her like power, like joy, like fear. Back in bed with her discovery, she stared out the window at the dark leaves of the horse chestnut.
"Me," she murmured. And then, sinking deeper into the quilts, "I want... I want to be... wonderful. Oh, Jesus, make me wonderful.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Sula)
β
Where do you get the right to decide our lives? I'll tell you where. From that little hog's gut that hangs between your legs. Well, let me tell you something... you will need more than that. I don't know where you will get it or who will give it to you, but mark my words, you will need more than that.... You are a sad, pitiful, stupid, selfish, hateful man. I hope your little hog's gut stands you in good stead, and you take good care of it, because you don't have anything else.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
β
I laughed but before I could agree with the hairdressers that she was crazy, she said, 'What's the world for if you can't make it up the way you want it?'
" 'The way I want it?'
" 'Yeah. The way you want it. Don't you want it to be something more than what it is?'
" 'What'st eh point? I can't change it.'
" 'That's the point. If you don't, it will change you and it'll be your fault cause you let it. I let it. And messed up my life.'
" 'Mess it up how?'
" 'Forgot it.'
" 'Forgot?'
" 'Forgot it was mine. My life. I just ran up and down the streets wishing I was somebody else.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Jazz (Beloved Trilogy, #2))
β
I did not want to write this book as a way of explaining the humanity of Vietnamese. Toni Morrison says in Beloved that to have to explain yourself to white people distorts you because you start from a position of assuming your inhumanity or lack of humanity in other peopleβs eyes. Rather than writing a book that tries to affirm humanity, which is typically the position that minority writers are put into, the book starts from the assumption that we are human, and then goes on to prove that weβre also inhuman at the same time.
β
β
Viet Thanh Nguyen (The Sympathizer)
β
You looked at them and wondered why the were so ugly; you looked closely and could not find the source. Then you realized that it came from conviction, their conviction. It was as though some mysterious all-knowing master had given each one a cloak of ugliness to wear, and they had each accepted it without question. The mast had said, "You are ugly people." They had looked about themselves and saw nothing to contradict the statement; saw, in fact, support for it leaning at them from every billboard, every movie, every glance. "Yes," they had said. "You are right.
β
β
Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
β
Jump, if you want to, βcause Iβll catch you, girl. Iβll catch you βfore you fall. Go as far inside as you need to, Iβll hold your ankles. Make sure you get back out. Iβm not saying this because I need a place to stay. Thatβs the last thing I need. I told you, Iβm a walking man, but I been heading in this direction for seven years. Walking all around this place. Upstate, downstate, east, west; I been in territory ainβt got no name, never staying nowhere long. But when I got here and sat out there on the porch, waiting for you, well, I knew it wasnβt the place I was heading toward; it was you. We can make a life, girl. A life.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Beloved)
β
Iβm crazy about this City.
Daylight slants like a razor cutting the buildings in half. In the top half I see looking faces and itβs not easy to tell which are people, which the work of stonemasons. Below is shadow where any blasΓ© thing takes place: clarinets and lovemaking, fists and the voices of sorrowful women. A city like this one makes me dream tall and feel in on things. Hep. Itβs the bright steel rocking above the shade below that does it. When I look over strips of green grass lining the river, at church steeples and into the cream-and-copper halls of apartment buildings, Iβm strong. Alone, yes, but top-notch and indestructible-like the City in 1926 when all the wars are over and there will never be another one. The people down there in the shadow are happy about that. At last, at last, everythingβs ahead. The smart ones say so and people listening to them and reading what they write down agree: Here comes the new. Look out.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Jazz)
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It's a nice big fat philosophical question, about: how do you get through? Sometimes you don't survive whole, you just survive in part. But the grandeur of life is that attempt. It's not about that solution. It is about being as fearless as one can, and behaving as beautifully as one can, under completely impossible circumstances. It's that, that makes it elegant. Good is just more interesting, more complex, more demanding. Evil is silly, it may be horrible, but at the same time it's not a compelling idea. It's predictable. It needs a tuxedo, it needs a headline, it needs blood, it needs fingernails. It needs all that costume in order to get anybody's attention. But the opposite, which is survival, blossoming, endurance, those things are just more compelling intellectually if not spiritually, and they certainly are spiritually. This is a more fascinating job. We are already born, we are going to die. So you have to do something interesting that you respect in between.
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Toni Morrison
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Young people, Lord. Do they still call it infatuation? That magic ax that chops away the world in one blow, leaving only the couple standing there trembling? Whatever they call it, it leaps over anything, takes the biggest chair, the largest slice, rules the ground wherever it walks, from a mansion to a swamp, and its selfishness is its beauty. Before I was reduced to singsong, I saw all kinds of mating. Most are two-night stands trying to last a season. Some, the riptide ones, claim exclusive right to the real name, even though everybody drowns in its wake. People with no imagination feed it with sexβthe clown of love. They donβt know the real kinds, the better kinds, where losses are cut and everybody benefits. It takes a certain intelligence to love like thatβsoftly, without props. But the world is such a showpiece, maybe thatβs why folks try to outdo it, put everything they feel onstage just to prove they can think up things too: handsome scary things like fights to the death, adultery, setting sheets afire. They fail, of course. The world outdoes them every time. While they are busy showing off, digging other peopleβs graves, hanging themselves on a cross, running wild in the streets, cherries are quietly turning from greed to red, oysters are suffering pearls, and children are catching rain in their mouths expecting the drops to be cold but theyβre not; they are warm and smell like pineapple before they get heavier and heavier, so heavy and fast they canβt be caught one at a time. Poor swimmers head for shore while strong ones wait for lightningβs silver veins. Bottle-green clouds sweep in, pushing the rain inland where palm trees pretend to be shocked by the wind. Women scatter shielding their hair and men bend low holding the womenβs shoulders against their chests. I run too, finally. I say finally because I do like a good storm. I would be one of those people in the weather channel leaning into the wind while lawmen shout in megaphones: βGet moving!
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Toni Morrison (Love)
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Their conversation is like a gently wicked dance: sound meets sound, curtsies, shimmies, and retires. Another sound enters but is upstaged by still another: the two circle each other and stop. Sometimes their words move in lofty spirals; other times they take strident leaps, and all of it is punctuated with warm-pulsed laughterβlike the throb of a heart made of jelly. The edge, the curl, the thrust of their emotions is always clear to Frieda and me. We do not, cannot, know the meanings of all their words, for we are nine and ten years old. So we watch their faces, their hands, their feet, and listen for truth in timbre.
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Toni Morrison (The Bluest Eye)
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Paul D did not answer because she didn't expect or want him to, but he did know what she meant. Listening to the doves in Alfred, Georgia, and having neither the right nor the permission to enjoy it because in that place mist, doves, sunlight, copper dirt, moon - everything belonged to the men who had the guns. Little men, some of them, big men too, each one of whom he could snap like a twig if he wanted to. Men who knew that their manhood lay in their guns and were not even embarrassed by the knowledge that without fox would laugh at them. And these "men" who made even vixen laugh could, if you let them, stop you from hearing doves or loving moonlight. So you protected yourself and loved small. Picked the tiniest stars out of the sky to own; lay down with head twisted in order to see the loved one over the rim of the trench before you slept. Stole shy glances at her between the trees at chain-up. Glass blades, salamanders, spiders, woodpeckers, beetles, a kingdom of ants. Anything bigger wouldn't do. A woman, a child, a brother - a big love like that would split you wide open in Alfred, Georgia. He knew exactly what she meant: to get to a place where you could love anything you chose - not to need permission for desire - well now, THAT was freedom.
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Toni Morrison (Beloved)
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When warm weather came, Baby Suggs, holy, followed by every black man, woman, and child who could make it through, took her great heart to the Clearing--a wide-open place cut deep in the woods nobody knew for what at the end of the path known only to deer and whoever cleared the land in the first place. In the heat of every Saturday afternoon, she sat in the clearing while the people waited among the trees.
After situating herself on a huge flat-sided rock, Baby Suggs bowed her head and prayed silently. The company watched her from the trees. They knew she was ready when she put her stick down. Then she shouted, 'Let the children come!' and they ran from the trees toward her.
Let your mothers hear you laugh,' she told them, and the woods rang. The adults looked on and could not help smiling.
Then 'Let the grown men come,' she shouted. They stepped out one by one from among the ringing trees.
Let your wives and your children see you dance,' she told them, and groundlife shuddered under their feet.
Finally she called the women to her. 'Cry,' she told them. 'For the living and the dead. Just cry.' And without covering their eyes the women let loose.
It started that way: laughing children, dancing men, crying women and then it got mixed up. Women stopped crying and danced; men sat down and cried; children danced, women laughed, children cried until, exhausted and riven, all and each lay about the Clearing damp and gasping for breath. In the silence that followed, Baby Suggs, holy, offered up to them her great big heart.
She did not tell them to clean up their lives or go and sin no more. She did not tell them they were the blessed of the earth, its inheriting meek or its glorybound pure.
She told them that the only grace they could have was the grace they could imagine. That if they could not see it, they would not have it.
Here,' she said, 'in this here place, we flesh; flesh that weeps, laughs; flesh that dances on bare feet in grass. Love it. Love it hard...
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Toni Morrison (Beloved)
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It's nice when grown people whisper to each other under the covers. Their ecstasy is more a leaf-sigh than bray and the body is the vehicle, not the point. They reach, grown people, for something beyond, way beyond and way, way down underneath tissue. They are remembering while they whisper the carnival dolls they won and the Baltimore boats they never sailed on. The pears they let hang on the limb because if they plucked them, they would be gone from there and who else would see that ripeness if they took it away for themselves? How could anybody passing by see them and imagine for themselves what the flavour would be like? Breathing and murmuring under covers both of them have washed and hung out on the line, in a bed they chose together and kept together nevermind one leg was propped on a 1916 dictionary, and the mattress, curved like a preacher's palm asking for witnesses in His name's sake, enclosed them each and every night and muffled their whispering, old-time love. They are under the covers because they don't have to look at themselves anymore; there is no stud's eye, no chippie glance to undo them. They are inward toward the other, bound and joined by carnival dolls and the steamers that sailed from ports they never saw. That is what is beneath their undercover whispers.
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Toni Morrison (Jazz (Beloved Trilogy, #2))