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The human mind can bear plenty of reality but not too much intermittent gloom.
Margaret Drabble
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Margaret Drabble
Age: 85
Born: 1939
Born: June 5
Biographer
Editor
Literary Critic
Novelist
Playwright
Screenwriter
Writer
Sheffield
England
Bears
Reality
Human
Humans
Much
Intermittent
Mind
Gloom
Plenty
Bear
More quotes by Margaret Drabble
There are some writers who wrote too much. There are others who wrote enough. There are yet others who wrote nothing like enough to satisfy their admirers, and Jane Austen is certainly one of these.
Margaret Drabble
Perhaps the rare and simple pleasure of being seen for what one is compensates for the misery of being it.
Margaret Drabble
What foolsmiddle-classgirls are to expect other people to respect the same gods as themselves and E M Forster.
Margaret Drabble
I actually remember feeling delight, at two o'clock in the morning, when the baby woke for his feed, because I so longed to have another look at him.
Margaret Drabble
Why can't people be both flexible and efficient?
Margaret Drabble
I need words and print... I need print like an addict. I could live without it, perhaps. But I hope I never have to try.
Margaret Drabble
My anti-Americanism has become almost uncontrollable. It has possessed me, like a disease. It rises up in my throat like acid reflux, that fashionable American sickness. I now loathe the United States and what it has done to Iraq and the rest of the helpless world.
Margaret Drabble
Scenery can be a violent stimulant.
Margaret Drabble
If I knew what the meanings of my books were, I wouldn't have bothered to write them.
Margaret Drabble
The middle years, caught between children and parents, free of neither: the past stretches back too densely, it is too thickly populated, the future has not yet thinned out.
Margaret Drabble
I used to be a reasonably careless and adventurous person before I had children now I am morbidly obsessed by seat-belts and constantly afraid that low-flying aircraft will drop on my children's school.
Margaret Drabble
Nothing succeeds, they say, like success. And certainly nothing fails like failure.
Margaret Drabble
Some of what we read in classical literature is not relative to our condition, but then many women novelists and poets have turned it upside down and told the stories from the other point of view.
Margaret Drabble
Poverty, therefore, was comparative. One measured it by a sliding scale. One was always poor, in terms of those who were richer.
Margaret Drabble
Lord knows what incommunicable small terrors infants go through, unknown to all.
Margaret Drabble
I have switched on this modern laptop machine. And I have told myself that I must resist the temptation to start playing solitaire upon it.
Margaret Drabble
And there isn't any way that one can get rid of the guilt of having a nice body by saying that one can serve society with it, because that would end up with oneself as what? There simply doesn't seem to be any moral place for flesh.
Margaret Drabble
When nothing is sure, everything is possible.
Margaret Drabble
Nothing fails like failure
Margaret Drabble
Because if one has an image, however dim and romantic, of a journey's end, one may, in the end, surely reach it, after no matter how many detours and deceptions and abandonings of hope. And hope could never have been entirely abandoned, even in the worst days.
Margaret Drabble