Diana Trilling Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Diana Trilling's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Literary critic Diana Trilling's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 20 quotes on this page collected since July 21, 1905! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • We lived our lives as if life was forever. To live one's life without a sense of time is to squander it.

    Forever   Our Lives   Ifs  
    Diana Trilling (1993). “The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling”, Harcourt
  • Touch a university with hostile hands and the blood you draw is prompt, copious, and real.

    Real   Blood   Hands  
    Diana Trilling (1977). “We Must March My Darlings: A Critical Decade”, Harcourt
  • In the bad sixties, when drugs came into widespread use among adolescents and when Scarsdale mothers developed the habit of not asking about each others children for fear of what they'd hear, one knew that they were speaking-or not speaking, keeping their unhappy silence-on behalf of stricken motherhood everywhere in the country.

    Diana Trilling (1981). “Mrs. Harris: the death of the Scarsdale diet doctor”, Harcourt
  • My career as a critic still lay in the future but unconsciously I may have been preparing for it. They were not easy companions, these intellectuals I was now getting to know. They were overbearing and arrogant, excessively competitive; they lacked magnanimity and often they lacked common courtesy. But they were intellectually energetic and - this particularly attracted me - they were proof against cant.

    Careers   Arrogant   May  
    Diana Trilling (1993). “The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling”, Harcourt
  • Privacy, after all, was the most relative of privileges. It was granted us by society under ungenerous conditions, the most fundamental of them that whether for pain or profit, by design or accident, we not call public attention to ourselves.

    Pain   Design   Attention  
    Diana Trilling (1981). “Mrs. Harris: the death of the Scarsdale diet doctor”, Harcourt
  • Long-married couples balance their checkbooks as a substitute for love-making, or they refuse each other love by protesting one another's financial error or excess.

    Diana Trilling (1981). “Mrs. Harris: the death of the Scarsdale diet doctor”, Harcourt
  • Unrecognized alcoholism is the ruling pathology among writers and intellectuals.

    Diana Trilling (1993). “The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling”, Harcourt
  • At best-which is to say, even where our knowledge of a case comes to us only through courtroom evidence-it is difficult for the legal process to keep us at a sanitizing distance from crimes of passion.

    Diana Trilling (1981). “Mrs. Harris: the death of the Scarsdale diet doctor”, Harcourt
  • Whoever had known sexual jealousy, that most destructive of emotions-and this would be so for men no less than women-had known madness and had now to know sympathy for someone who had been carried by jealousy this one terrible step too far, to murder.

    Jealousy   Men   Steps  
  • I learned early in life that to laugh before breakfast was to cry before dinner.

    Diana Trilling (1993). “The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling”, Harcourt
  • The distinction that Jews have themselves always made between Jews of German origin and Jews of East European origin is as stringent as that between Boston Brahmin and Boston lace-curtain Irish, though much finer.

    Boston   East   Lace  
    Diana Trilling (1981). “Mrs. Harris: the death of the Scarsdale diet doctor”, Harcourt
  • Behind the contained and orderly lives we lead as members of the respectable middle class there's a terrible human capacity that may one day overwhelm any of us.

    Class   One Day   May  
    Diana Trilling (1981). “Mrs. Harris: the death of the Scarsdale diet doctor”, Harcourt
  • Writers are what they write, also what they fail to write.

    Diana Trilling (1993). “The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling”, Harcourt
  • I regard the whole of my life as having been lived in an anxious world.

    Women   World   Anxious  
    Diana Trilling (1993). “The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling”, Harcourt
  • Where there are children, people become neighbors; they don't merely hold property adjacent to one another.

    Diana Trilling (1981). “Mrs. Harris: the death of the Scarsdale diet doctor”, Harcourt
  • Surely going to bed with a man before marriage was the most courageous act of my life.

  • There's much to be said for challenging fate instead of ducking behind it.

  • [On Marilyn Monroe:] I think my response to her death was the common one: it came to me with the impact of a personal deprivation but I also felt it as I might a catastrophe in history or in nature; there was less in life, there was less of life, because she had ceased to exist. In her loss life itself had been injured.

    Death   Loss   Thinking  
    Diana Trilling (1964). “Claremont essays”
  • Ideology is the sterner face of myth and we're a myth-making people.

    People   Faces   Myth  
    Diana Trilling (1981). “Mrs. Harris: the death of the Scarsdale diet doctor”, Harcourt
  • Wit isn't a useful instrument of defense; it may make a short-run appeal, but it creates a backlash- one saw this in the Hiss case and the Oppenheimer hearings; certainly one saw it in the trial of Oscar Wilde.

    Running   Saws   Defense  
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We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 20 quotes from the Literary critic Diana Trilling, starting from July 21, 1905! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
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