William Faulkner Quotes About Desire

We have collected for you the TOP of William Faulkner's best quotes about Desire! Here are collected all the quotes about Desire starting from the birthday of the Writer – September 25, 1897! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 7 sayings of William Faulkner about Desire. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • When grown people speak of the innocence of children, they dont really know what they mean. Pressed, they will go a step further and say, Well, ignorance then. The child is neither. There is no crime which a boy of eleven had not envisaged long ago. His only innocence is, he may not be old enough to desire the fruits of it...his ignorance is, he does not know how to commit it...

    "The Reivers". Book by William Faulkner, 1962.
  • Man the sum of what have you. A problem in impure properties carried tediously to an unvarying nil: stalemate of dust and desire.

    William Faulkner (2011). “FAULKNER READER”, p.126, Modern Library
  • God created man and He created the world for him to live in and I reckon He created the kind of world He would have wanted to live in if He had been a man--the ground to walk on, the big woods, the trees and the water, and the game to live in it. And maybe He didn't put the desire to hunt and kill game in man but I reckon He knew it was going to be there, that man was going to teach it to himself, since he wasn't quite God himself yet.

    William Faulkner (2012). “A Rose for Emily and Other Stories: A Rose for Emily; The Hound; Turn About; That Evening Sun; Dry September; Delta Autumn; Barn Burning; An Odor of Verbena”, p.119, Random House
  • The past is never dead. It's not even past. All of us labor in webs spun long before we were born, webs of heredity and environment, of desire and consequence, of history and eternity. Haunted by wrong turns and roads not taken, we pursue images perceived as new but whose providence dates to the dim dramas of childhood, which are themselves but ripples of consequence echoing down the generations. The quotidian demands of life distract from this resonance of images and events, but some of us feel it always.

  • ...I give you the mausoleum of all hope and desire...I give it to you not that you may remember time, but that you might forget it now and then for a moment and not spend all of your breath trying to conquer it. Because no battle is ever won he said. They are not even fought. The field only reveals to man his own folly and despair, and victory is an illusion of philosophers and fools.

    The Sound and the Fury pt. 2 (1929)
  • Love in the young requires as little of hope as of desire to feed upon.

    William Faulkner (1985). “Light in August”, Vintage
  • They all talked at once, their voices insistent and contradictory and impatient, making of unreality a possibility, then a probability, then an incontrovertible fact, as people will when their desires become words.

    William Faulkner (2011). “FAULKNER READER”, p.117, Modern Library
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