Alan Bennett famous quotes
Last updated: Sep 5, 2024
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The best moments in reading are when you come across something - a thought, a feeling, a way of looking at things - which you had thought special and particular to you. And now, here it is, set down by someone else, a person you have never met, someone even who is long dead. And it is as if a hand has come out, and taken yours
-- Alan Bennett -
Books are not about passing time. They're about other lives. Other worlds. Far from wanting time to pass, one just wishes one had more of it. If one wanted to pass the time one could go to New Zealand.
-- Alan Bennett -
Life is rather like a tin of sardines - we're all of us looking for the key.
-- Alan Bennett -
A bookshelf is as particular to its owner as are his or her clothes; a personality is stamped on a library just as a shoe is shaped by the foot.
-- Alan Bennett -
A book is a device to ignite the imagination.
-- Alan Bennett -
The appeal of reading, she thought, lay in its indifference: there was something undeferring about literature. Books did not care who was reading them or whether one read them or not. All readers were equal, herself included. Literature, she thought, is a commonwealth; letters a republic.
-- Alan Bennett -
Reading is untidy, discursive and perpetually inviting.
-- Alan Bennett -
Sometimes there is no next time, no time-outs, no second chances. Sometimes it’s now or never.
-- Alan Bennett -
I was an only child. I lost both my parents. By the time I was twenty I was bald. I'm homosexual. In the way of circumstances and background to transcend I had everything an artist could possibly want. It was practically a blueprint.
-- Alan Bennett -
The days weren't long enough for the reading she wanted to do.
-- Alan Bennett -
Above literature?' said the Queen. 'Who is above literature? You might as well say one was above humanity.
-- Alan Bennett -
You don't put your life into your books, you find it there.
-- Alan Bennett -
If you think squash is a competitive activity, try flower arranging.
-- Alan Bennett -
We started off trying to set up a small anarchist community, but people wouldn't obey the rules.
-- Alan Bennett -
Definition of a classic: a book everyone is assumed to have read and often thinks they have.
-- Alan Bennett -
History is a commentary on the various and continuing incapabilities of men. What is history? History is women following behind with the bucket.
-- Alan Bennett -
Children always assume the sexual lives of their parents come to a grinding halt at their conception.
-- Alan Bennett -
What she was finding also was how one book led to another, doors kept opening wherever she turned and the days weren't long enough for the reading she wanted to do.
-- Alan Bennett -
That's a bit like asking a man crawling across the Sahara whether he would prefer Perrier or Malvern water.
-- Alan Bennett -
Clichés can be quite fun. That's how they got to be clichés.
-- Alan Bennett -
The nearest my parents came to alcohol was at Holy Communion and they utterly overestimated its effects. However bad the weather, Dad never drove to church because Mam thought the sacrament might make him incapable on the return journey.
-- Alan Bennett -
Why is it always the "intelligent" people who are socialists?
-- Alan Bennett -
Deluded liberal that I am, I persist in thinking that those with a streak of sexual unorthodoxy ought to be more tolerant of their fellows than those who lead an entirely godly, righteous and sober life. Illogically, I tend to assume that if you ( Philip Larkin) dream of caning schoolgirls bottoms, it disqualifies you from dismissing half the nation as work-shy.
-- Alan Bennett -
Mark my words, when a society has to resort to the lavatory for its humour, the writing is on the wall.
-- Alan Bennett -
There's very little in the substance of [THE LADY IN THE VAN] which is not fact though some adjustments have had to be made. Over the years Miss Shepherd was visited by a succession of social workers so the character in the play is a composite figure. . . . A composite too are the neighbours, Pauline and Rufus, though I have made Rufus a publisher in remembrance of my neighbour, the late Colin Haycraft, the proprietor of Duckworth's.
-- Alan Bennett -
You always know when you're going to arrive. If you go by car, you don't. Apart from anything else, I prefer cycling. It puts you in a good mood, I find.
-- Alan Bennett -
Standards are always out of date. That's what makes them standards.
-- Alan Bennett -
Life is like a box of sardines and we are all looking for the key.
-- Alan Bennett -
The longer I practise medicine, the more convinced I am there are only two types of cases: those that involve taking the trousers off and those that don't.
-- Alan Bennett -
I turned down a knighthood. It would be like having to wear a suit every day of your life.
-- Alan Bennett -
I tried to explain to her the significance of the great poet, but without much success, The Waste Land not figuring very largely in Mam's scheme of things. "The thing is," I said finally, "he won the Nobel Prize." "Well," she said, with that unerring grasp of inessentials which is the prerogative of mothers, "I'm not surprised. It was a beautiful overcoat.
-- Alan Bennett -
Polly: Education with socialists, it's like sex, all right as long as you don't have to pay for it.
-- Alan Bennett -
I'm not good at precise, coherent argument. But plays are suited to incoherent argument, put into the mouths of fallible people.
-- Alan Bennett -
There is no such thing as a good script, onlya good film, and I'm conscious that my scripts often read better than they play.
-- Alan Bennett -
It's the one species I wouldn't mind seeing vanish from the face of the earth. I wish they were like the White Rhinosix of them left in the Serengeti National Park, and all males.
-- Alan Bennett -
Memories are not shackles, Franklin, they are garlands.
-- Alan Bennett -
If you find yourself born in Barnsley and then set your sights on being Virginia Woolf it is not going to be roses all the way.
-- Alan Bennett -
Schweitzer in the Congo did not derive more moral credit than Larkin did for living in Hull.
-- Alan Bennett -
Our father the novelist; my husband the poet. He belongs to the ages - just don't catch him at breakfast. Artists, celebrated for their humanity, they turn out to be scarcely human at all.
-- Alan Bennett -
Kafka could never have written as he did had he lived in a house. His writing is that of someone whose whole life was spent in apartments, with lifts, stairwells, muffled voices behind closed doors, and sounds through walls. Put him in a nice detached villa and he'd never have written a word.
-- Alan Bennett -
At the drabber moments of my life (swilling some excrement from the steps, for instance, or rooting with a bent coat-hanger down a blocked sink) thoughts occur like 'I bet Tom Stoppard doesn't have to do this' or There is no doubt David Hare would have deputed this to an underling'.
-- Alan Bennett -
What I'm above all primarily concerned with is the substance of life, the pith of reality. If I had to sum up my work, I suppose that's it really: I'm taking the pith out of reality.
-- Alan Bennett -
Remember. You are a physician. You are not a policeman nor are you a minister of religion. You must take people as they come. Remember, too that though you will generally know more about the condition than the patient, it is the patient who has the condition and this if nothing else bestows on him or her a kind of wisdom. You have the knowledge but that does not entitle you to be superior. Knowledge makes you the servant not the master.
-- Alan Bennett -
Philip Larkin used to cheer himself up by looking in the mirror and saying the line from Rebecca, 'I am Mrs de Winter now!
-- Alan Bennett -
An article on playwrights in the Daily Mail , listed according to Hard Left, Soft Left, Hard Right, Soft Right and Centre. I am not listed. I should probably come under Soft Centre.
-- Alan Bennett -
Here I sit, alone at 60, Bald and fat and full of sin Cold the seat, and loud the cistern As I read the (Harpic) (Lysol) tin
-- Alan Bennett -
One reads for pleasure...it is not a public duty.
-- Alan Bennett -
[talking about the Holocaust] 'But to put something in context is a step towards saying it can be understood and that it can be explained. And if it can be explained that it can be explained away.' 'But this is History. Distance yourselves. Our perspective on the past alters. Looking back, immediately in front of us is dead ground. We don't see it, and because we don't see it this means that there is no period so remote as the recent past. And one of the historian's jobs is to anticipate what our perspective of that period will be... even on the Holocaust.
-- Alan Bennett -
I dont know whether you've ever looked into a miner's eyes for any length of time, that is. Because it is the loveliest blue you've ever seen. I think perhaps that's why I live in Ibiza, because the blue of the Mediterranean, you see, reminds me of the blue of the eyes of those Doncaster miners.
-- Alan Bennett -
There are more microbes per person than the entire population of the world. Imagine that. Per person. This means that if the time scale is diminished in proportion to that of space it would be quite possible for the whole story of Greece and Rome to be played out between farts.
-- Alan Bennett -
Nature played a cruel trick on her by giving her a waxed mustache.
-- Alan Bennett -
So boring you fall asleep halfway through her name.
-- Alan Bennett -
Your whole life is on the other side of the glass. And there is nobody watching.
-- Alan Bennett -
Those who have known the famous are publicly debriefed of their memories, knowing as their own dusk falls that they will only be remembered for remembering someone else.
-- Alan Bennett -
If I am doing nothing, I like to be doing nothing to some purpose. That is what leisure means.
-- Alan Bennett -
Life is generally something that happens elsewhere.
-- Alan Bennett -
Had your forefathers, Wigglesworth, been as stupid as you are, the human race would never have succeeded in procreating itself.
-- Alan Bennett -
I don't talk very well. With writing, you've time to get it right. Also I've found the more I talk the less I write, and if I didn't write no one would want me to talk anyway.
-- Alan Bennett -
But then books, as I'm sure you know, seldom prompt a course of action. Books generally just confirm you in what you have, perhaps unwittingly, decided to do already. You go to a book to have your convictions corroborated. A book, as it were, closes the book.
-- Alan Bennett -
...she felt about reading what some writers felt about writing: that it was impossible not to do it and that at this late stage of her life she had been chosen to read as others were chosen to write.
-- Alan Bennett -
[B]riefing is not reading. In fact it is the antithesis of reading. Briefing is terse, factual and to the point. Reading is untidy, discursive and perpetually inviting. Briefing closes down a subject, reading opens it up.
-- Alan Bennett -
One of the hardest things for boys to learn is that a teacher is human. One of the hardest things for a teacher to learn is not to try and tell them.
-- Alan Bennett -
The Breed never dies. Sapper, Buchan, Dornford Yates, practitioners in that school of Snobbery withViolence that runs like a thread of good-class tweed through twentieth-century literature.
-- Alan Bennett -
Cloisters, ancient libraries ... I was confusing learning with the smell of cold stone.
-- Alan Bennett -
Why do we not care to acknowledge them? The cattle, the body count. We still don't like to admit the war was even partly our fault because so many of our people died. A photograph on every mantlepiece. And all this mourning has veiled the truth. It's not so much lest we forget, as lest we remember. Because you should realise the Cenotaph and the Last Post and all that stuff is concerned, there's no better way of forgetting something than by commemorating it.
-- Alan Bennett -
I saw someone peeing in Jermym Street the other day. I thought, is this the end of civilization as we know it? Or is it simply someone peeing in Jermyn Street?
-- Alan Bennett -
We were put to Dickens as children but it never quite took. That unremitting humanity soon had me cheesed off.
-- Alan Bennett -
I'm all in favour of free expression provided it's kept rigidly under control.
-- Alan Bennett -
The majority of people perform well in a crisis and when the spotlight is on them; it's on the Sunday afternoons of this life, when nobody is looking, that the spirit falters.
-- Alan Bennett -
To play Trivial Pursuit with a life like mine could be said to be a form of homeopathy.
-- Alan Bennett -
But most men regard their life as a poem that women threaten. They may not have two spondees to rub together but they still want to pen their saga untrammelled by life-threatening activities like trailing round Sainsbury's, emptying the dishwasher or going to the nativity play.
-- Alan Bennett -
I'm for the freedom of expression, given that it will be under strict control.
-- Alan Bennett -
We have fish and chips, which W. and I fetch from the shop in Settle market-place. Some local boys come in and there is a bit of chat between them and the fish-fryer about whether the kestrel under the counter is for sale....Only when I mention it to W. does he explain Kestrel is now a lager. I imagine the future is going to contain an increasing number of incidents like this, culminating with a man in a white coat saying to one kindly, "And now can you tell me the name of the Prime Minister?
-- Alan Bennett -
I have never understood disliking for war. It panders to instincts already catered for within the scope of any respectable domestic establishment.
-- Alan Bennett -
... Once I start a book I finish it. That was the way one was brought up. Books, bread and butter, mashed potato - one finishes what's on one's plate. That's always been my philosophy.
-- Alan Bennett -
Authors, she soon decided, were probably best met within the pages of their novels, and were as much creatures of the reader's imagination as the characters in their books. Nor did they seem to think one had done them a kindness by reading their writings. Rather they had done one the kindness by writing them.
-- Alan Bennett -
Have you ever thought, headmaster, that your standards might perhaps be a little out of date? Of course they're out of date. Standards are always out of date. That is what makes them standards.
-- Alan Bennett -
I write plays about things that I can't resolve in my mind. I try to root things out.
-- Alan Bennett -
Were we closer to the ground as children, or is the grass emptier now?
-- Alan Bennett -
I've never seen the point of the sea, except where it meets the land. The shore has a point. The sea has none.
-- Alan Bennett -
I lack what the English call character, by which they mean the power to refrain.
-- Alan Bennett -
Books are not about passing the time. They're about other lives. Other worlds.
-- Alan Bennett -
At eighty things do not occur; they recur.
-- Alan Bennett -
It's subjunctive history. You know, the subjunctive? The mood used when something may or may not have happened. When it is imagined.
-- Alan Bennett -
All the effort went into getting there and then I had nothing left. I thought I'd got somewhere, then I found I had to go on.
-- Alan Bennett -
To read is to withdraw.To make oneself unavailable. One would feel easier about it if the pursuit inself were less...selfish.
-- Alan Bennett -
It seems to me the mark of a civilized society that certain privileges should be taken for granted such as education, health care and the safety to walk the streets.
-- Alan Bennett -
I'm not "happy" but I'm not unhappy about it.
-- Alan Bennett -
One recipe for happiness is to have to sense of entitlement.' To this she added a star and noted at the bottom of the page: 'This is not a lesson I have ever been in a position to learn.
-- Alan Bennett -
To begin with, it's true, she read with trepidation and some unease. The sheer endlessness of books outfaced her and she had no idea how to go on; there was no system to her reading, with one book leading to another, and often she had two or three on the go at the same time.
-- Alan Bennett -
God doesn't do notes, either. Did Jesus Christ say, "Can I be excused the Crucifixion?" No!
-- Alan Bennett -
It was the kind of library he had only read about in books.
-- Alan Bennett -
I suppose I'm the only person who remembers one of the most exciting of his ballets-it's the fruit of an unlikely collaboration between Nijinsky on the one hand and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle on the other.
-- Alan Bennett
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