Catherine Drinker Bowen quotes:

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  • In writing biography, fact and fiction shouldn't be mixed. And if they are, the fictional points should be printed in red ink, the facts printed in black ink.

  • Chamber music - a conversation between friends.

  • Writers seldom choose as friends those self-contained characters who are never in trouble, never unhappy or ill, never make mistakes and always count their change when it is handed to them.

  • If art has a purpose, it is to interpret life, reproduce it in fresh visions.

  • It is a great, a pleasant thing to have a friend with whom to walk, untroubled, through the woods, by the stream, saying nothing, at peace--the heart all clean and quiet and empty, ready for the spirit that may choose to be its guest.

  • There is a marvelous turn and trick to British arrogance; its apparent unconsciousness makes it twice as effectual.

  • Writing, I think, is not apart from living. Writing is a kind of double living The writer experiences everything twice. Once in reality and once in that mirror which waits always before or behind.

  • History is, in its essence, exciting; to present it as dull is, to my mind, stark and unforgivable misrepresentation.

  • Great artists treasure their time with a bitter and snarling miserliness.

  • I have noted that, barring accidents, artists whose powers wear best and last longest are those who have trained themselves to work under adversity. Great artists treasure their time with a bitter and snarling miserliness.

  • Writing, I think, is not apart from living. Writing is a kind of double living. The writer experiences everything twice. Once in reality and once in that mirror which waits always before or behind.

  • A woman's biography - with about eight famous historical exceptions - so often turns out to be the story of a man and the woman who helped his career.

  • All the others arts are lonely. We paint alone--my picture, my interpretation of the sky. My poem, my novel. But in music--ensemble music, not soloism--we share. No altruism this, for we receive tenfold what we give.

  • For your born writer, nothing is so healing as the realization that he has come upon the right word.

  • What the writer needs is an empty day ahead.

  • Writing is not apart from living. Writing is a kind of double living.

  • Biographers, by their very nature, want to know everything about everybody, dead or alive.

  • Many a man who has known himself at ten forgets himself utterly between ten and thirty.

  • Artists often think they are going to die before their time. They seem to possess a heightened sense of the passing of the hours.

  • What pioneer ever had chart and a lighthouse to steer by?

  • your concert-goer, though he feed upon symphony as a lamb upon milk, is no true lover if he play no instrument. Your true lover does more than admire the muse; he sweats a little in her service.

  • One of the marks of true genius is a quality of abundance. A rich, rollicking abundance, enough to give indigestion to ordinary people. Great artists turn it out in rolls, in swatches. They cover whole ceilings with paintings, they chip out a mountainside in stone, they write not one novel but a shelf full. It follows that some of their work is better than other. As much as a third of it may be pretty bad. Shall we say this unevenness is the mark of their humanity - of their proud mortality as well as of their immortality?

  • People who carry a musical soul about them are, I think, more receptive than others. They smile more readily. One feels in them a pleasant propensity toward the lesser sins, a pleasing readiness also to admit the possibility that on occasion they may be in the wrong--they may be mistaken.

  • Writers seldom choose as friends those self-contained characters who are never in trouble, never unhappy or ill, never make mistakes, and always count their change when it is handed to them.

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