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In the blur of the photograph, time leaves its gleaming, snail-like track.
Wright Morris
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Wright Morris
Age: 88 †
Born: 1910
Born: January 6
Died: 1998
Died: April 25
Critic
Novelist
Photographer
Poet
Writer
Central City
Nebraska
Wright Marion Morris
Snail
Blur
Leaves
Photograph
Track
Time
Like
Gleaming
More quotes by Wright Morris
Writes have an island, a center of refuge, within themselves. It is the mind's anchorage, the soul's Great Good Place.
Wright Morris
We're in the world of communications more and more, tough we're in communication less and less.
Wright Morris
We make to ourselves pictures of facts. The picture is a model of reality
Wright Morris
The man who walks alone is soon trailed by the F.B.I.
Wright Morris
The past is useless. That explains why it is past.
Wright Morris
Cats don't belong to people. They belong to places.
Wright Morris
Everyone in California is from somewhere else.
Wright Morris
As the style of Faulkner grew out of his rage--out of the impotence of his rage--the style of Hemingway grew out of the depth andnuance of his disenchantment.
Wright Morris
I prefer a taken to a made photograph.
Wright Morris
When writing is good, everything is symbolic, but symbolic writing is seldom good.
Wright Morris
Writing has made me rich-not in money but in a couple hundred characters out there, whose pursuits and anguish and triumphs I've shared. I am unspeakably grateful at the life I have come to lead.
Wright Morris
However much [photographs] may lie, they do so with the raw materials of truth.
Wright Morris
The imagination made us human, but being human, becoming more human, is a greater burden than we imagined. We have no choice but to imagine ourselves more human than we are.
Wright Morris
The photograph, after all, is just a photograph. Words will determine its meaning and status.
Wright Morris
The camera eye is the one in the middle of our forehead, combining how we see with what there is to be seen.
Wright Morris
The man who comes to writing late, but is in essence a writer, may sometimes gain as much as he has lost: his experience of life has given him a subject, he is spared the youthful writer's self-torment and soul-searching.
Wright Morris
[We] make images to see clearly: then we see clearly what we have made.
Wright Morris
The vast number of photographers, feeding on anything visible, overgraze the landscape the way cattle overgraze their pasture.
Wright Morris
Images proliferate. Am I wrong in being reminded of printing money in a period of wild inflation? Do we know what we are doing? Are we able to evaluate what we have done?
Wright Morris
After many months of writing, it occured to me that it might be possible to photograph, in the flesh, what I was attempting to capture in words. I bought a Rolleiflex camera and began to take pictures of objects or structures that were used and abused by human hands
Wright Morris