William Faulkner Quotes About Earth

We have collected for you the TOP of William Faulkner's best quotes about Earth! Here are collected all the quotes about Earth 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 2 sayings of William Faulkner about Earth. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • True poetry is not of earth, 'T is more of Heaven by its birth.

  • Thank God you can flee, can escape from that massy five-foot-thick maggot-cheesy solidarity which overlays the earth, in which men and women in couples are ranked like ninepins.

    Men  
    William Faulkner (1951). “Absalom, Absalom!”
  • ...I would think how words go straight up in a thin line, quick and harmless, and how terribly doing goes along the earth, clinging to it, so that after a while the two lines are too far apart for the same person to straddle from one to the other; and that sin and love and fear are just sounds that people who never sinned nor loved nor feared have for what they never had and cannot have until they forget the words.

    William Faulkner (1985). “Novels, 1930-1935”, Library of America
  • And we'd sit in the dry leaves that whispered a little with the slow respiration of our waiting and with the slow breathing of the earth and the windless october, the rank smell of the lantern fouling the brittle air, listening to the dog and the echo of louis' voice dying away

    William Faulkner “The Sound and the Fury”, W. W. Norton & Company
  • The last sound on the worthless earth will be two human beings trying to launch a homemade spaceship and already quarreling about where they are going next.

    1959 Speech to UNESCO Commission, in the NewYork Times, 3 Oct.
  • He made the earth first and peopled it with dumb creatures, and then He created man to be His overseer on the earth and to hold suzerainty over the earth and the animals on it in His name, not to hold for himself and his descendants inviolable title forever, generation after generation, to the oblongs and squares of the earth, but to hold the earth mutual and intact in the communal anonymity of brotherhood, and all the fee He asked was pity and humility and sufferance and endurance and the sweat of has face for bread.

    Men  
    Francis Lee Utley, William Faulkner, Lynn Z. Bloom, Arthur F. Kinney (1971). “Bear, man, and God: eight approaches to William Faulkner's The bear”, Random House Inc
  • Never be afraid to raise your voice for honesty and truth and compassion against injustice and lying and greed. If people all over the world...would do this, it would change the earth.

    Truth   Honesty   Lying  
  • So, never be afraid. Never be afraid to raise your voice for honesty and truth and compassion, against injustice and lying and greed. If you, not just you in this room tonight, but in all the thousands of other rooms like this one about the world today and tomorrow and next week, will do this, not as a class or classes, but as individuals, men and women, you will change the earth.

    Honesty   Lying   Men  
  • I feel like a wet seed wild in the hot blind earth.

    William Faulkner (1964). “As I Lay Dying”, GoodBook Classics
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