Edward Abbey Quotes About Heart

We have collected for you the TOP of Edward Abbey's best quotes about Heart! Here are collected all the quotes about Heart starting from the birthday of the Author – January 29, 1927! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 13 sayings of Edward Abbey about Heart. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • It's all still there in heart and soul. The walk, the hills, the sky, the solitary pain and pleasure-they will grow larger, sweeter, lovelier in the days and years to come.

    Edward Abbey (1984). “Beyond the Wall: Essays from the Outside”, p.49, Macmillan
  • Places: a cold, bleak, lonely day on the rim at Muley Point, Utah. And the heart-cracking loveliness of the blood-smeared, bitter, incomprehensible slaughterhouse of a world.

    "A Voice Crying in the Wilderness".
  • Music clouds the intellect but clarifies the heart.

    Edward Abbey (2015). “A Voice Crying in the Wilderness”, p.40, RosettaBooks
  • Within minutes my 115-mile walk through the desert hills becomes a thing apart, a disjunct reality on the far side of a bottomless abyss, immediately beyond physical recollection.But it's all still there in my heart and soul. The walk, the hills, the sky, the solitary pain and pleasure-they will grow larger, sweeter, lovelier in the days to come, like a treasure found and then, voluntarily, surrendered. Returned to the mountains with my blessing. It leaves a golden glowing on the mind.

  • I am happy to be a regional writer. My region is the American West, old Mexico, West Virginia, New York, Europe, Australia, the human heart, and the male groin.

    Edward Abbey (2015). “A Voice Crying in the Wilderness”, p.30, RosettaBooks
  • In this glare of brilliant emptiness, in this arid intensity of pure heat, in the heart of a weird solitude, great silence and grand desolution, all things recede to distrances out of reach, relecting light but impossible to touch, annihilating all thought and all that men have made to a spasm of whirling dust far out on the golden desert.

    Men  
    Edward Abbey (1968). “Desert solitaire: a season in the wilderness”
  • Orthodoxy is a relaxation of the mind accompanied by a stiffening of the heart.

    Edward Abbey (2015). “A Voice Crying in the Wilderness”, p.12, RosettaBooks
  • I suppose each of us has his own fantasy of how he wants to die. I would like to go out in a blaze of glory, myself, or maybe simply disappear someday, far out in the heart of the wilderness I love, all by myself, alone with the Universe and whatever God may happen to be looking on. Disappear - and never return. That's my fantasy.

    Edward Abbey (2006). “Postcards from Ed: Dispatches and Salvos from an American Iconoclast”
  • Men come and go, cities rise and fall, whole civilizations appear and disappear-the earth remains, slightly modified. The earth remains, and the heartbreaking beauty where there are no hearts to break....I sometimes choose to think, no doubt perversely, that man is a dream, thought an illusion, and only rock is real. Rock and sun.

    Real  
  • I wish to be an inspector of volcanoes. I want to study cloud formations and memorize the wind and learn by heart the habits of the ponderosa pine.

  • If, as some say, evil lies in the hearts and not the institutions of men, then there's hardly a distinction worth making between, say, Hitler's Germany and Rebecca's Sunnybrook Farm.

    Men  
    Edward Abbey (2015). “A Voice Crying in the Wilderness”, p.21, RosettaBooks
  • This is the most beautiful place on Earth. There are many such places. Every man, every woman, carries in heart and mind the image of the ideal place, the right place, the one true home, known or unknown, actual or visionary.

    Edward Abbey (1988). “Desert Solitaire”, p.1, University of Arizona Press
  • We need wilderness because we are wild animals. Everyone needs a place where he can go to go crazy in peace. For the terror, freedom, and delirium. Because we need brutality and raw adventure, because men and women first learned to love in, under, and all around trees, because we need for every pair of feet and legs about ten leagues of naked nature, crags to leap from, mountains to measure by, deserts to finally die in when the heart fails.

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