FastSaying
Between the wish and the thing the world lies waiting.
Cormac McCarthy
living
Related Quotes
We were considered rich because all the people around us were living in one- or two-room shacks.
— Cormac McCarthy
Living
People
US
I never had any doubts about my abilities. I knew I could write. I just had to figure out how to eat while doing this.
[
Cormac McCarthy's Venomous Fiction
, New York Times, April 19, 1992]
— Cormac McCarthy
ability
author-quotes
creative-process
They crossed before the sun and vanished one by one and reappeared again and they were black in the sun and they rode out of that vanished sea like burnt phantoms with the legs of the animals kicking up the spume that was not real and they were lost in the sun and lost in the lake and they shimmered and slurred together and separated again and they were augmented by planes in lurid avatars and began to coalesce and there began to appear above them in the dawn-broached sky a hellish likeness of their ranks riding huge and inverted and the horses' legs incredibly elongate trampling down the high thin cirrus and the howling antiwarriors pendant from their mounts immense and chimeric and the high wild cries carrying that flat and barren pan like the cries of souls broke through some misweave in the weft of things into the world below.
— Cormac McCarthy
scenery
This is my child, he said. I wash a dead man's brains out of his hair. That is my job.
— Cormac McCarthy
brain
child
death
There is but one world and everything that is imaginable is necessary to it. For this world also which seems to us a thing of stone and flower and blood is not a thing at all but is a tale. And all in it is a tale and each tale the sum of all lesser tales and yet these are also the selfsame tale and contain as well all else within them. So everything is necessary. Every least thing. This is the hard lesson. Nothing can be dispensed with. Nothing despised. Because the seams are hid from us, you see. The joinery. The way in which the world is made. We have no way to know what could be taken away. What omitted. We have no way to tell what might stand and what might fall. And those seams that are hid from us are of course in the tale itself and the tale has no abode or place of beind except in the telling only and there it lives and makes its home and therefore we can never be done with the telling. Of the telling there is no end. And . . . in whatever . . . place by whatever . . . name or by no name at all . . . all tales are one. Rightly heard all tales are one.
— Cormac McCarthy
ecology
imagination
story