Quotes by Joyce, James




James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (February 2, 1882 January 13, 1941) was an expatriate Irish writer and poet, widely considered to be one of the most influential writers of the 20th century. He is best known for his short story collection Dubliners (1914), and his novels A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916), Ulysses (1922), and Finnegans Wake (1939)..


"All things are inconstant except the faith in the soul, which changes all things and fills their inconstancy with light, but though I seem to be driven out of my country as a misbeliever I have found no man yet with a faith like mine."

Joyce, James on faith    Share

"When I heard the word stream uttered with such a revolting primness, what I think of is urine and not the contemporary novel. And besides, it isn't new, it is far from the dernier cri. Shakespeare used it continually, much too much in my opinion, and there's Tristam Shandy, not to mention the Agamemnon."

Joyce, James on fiction    Share

"While you have a thing it can be taken from you... but when you give it, you have given it. No robber can take it from you. It is yours then for ever when you have given it. It will be yours always. That is to give."

Joyce, James on giving
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"You forget that the kingdom of heaven suffers violence: and the kingdom of heaven is like a woman."

Joyce, James on heaven    Share

"He comes into the world God knows how, walks on the water, gets out of his grave and goes up off the Hill of Howth. What drivel is this?"

Joyce, James on jesus christ    Share

"What did that mean, to kiss? You put your face up like that to say goodnight and then his mother put her face down. That was to kiss. His mother put her lips on his cheek; her lips were soft and they wetted his cheek; and they made a tiny little noise: kiss. Why did people do that with their two faces?"

Joyce, James on kisses and kissing    Share

"Writing in English is the most ingenious torture ever devised for sins committed in previous lives. The English reading public explains the reason why."

Joyce, James on language    Share

"Welcome, O life! I go to encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience and to forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated conscience of my race."

Joyce, James on life    Share

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"Love (understood as the desire of good for another) is in fact so unnatural a phenomenon that it can scarcely repeat itself, the soul being unable to become virgin again and not having energy enough to cast itself out again into the ocean of another's soul."

Joyce, James on love
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"Mistakes are the portals of discovery."

Joyce, James on mistakes
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"A man's errors are his portals of discovery."

Joyce, James on mistakes
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"Whatever else is unsure in this stinking dunghill of a world a mother's love is not."

Joyce, James on mothers
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"I think a child should be allowed to take his father's or mother's name at will on coming of age. Paternity is a legal fiction."

Joyce, James on names
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"I shall write a book some day about the appropriateness of names. Geoffrey Chaucer has a ribald ring, as is proper and correct, and Alexander Pope was inevitably Alexander Pope. Colley Cibber was a silly little man without much elegance and Shelley was very Percy and very Bysshe."

Joyce, James on names    Share

"A nation is the same people living in the same place."

Joyce, James on nations    Share

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"Christopher Columbus, as everyone knows, is honored by posterity because he was the last to discover America."

Joyce, James on world
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"Poetry, even when apparently most fantastic, is always a revolt against artifice, a revolt, in a sense, against actuality."

Joyce, James on poetry and poets    Share

"Art is the human disposition of sensible or intelligible matter for an esthetic end."

Joyce, James on art    Share

"Our civilization, bequeathed to us by fierce adventurers, eaters of meat and hunters, is so full of hurry and combat, so busy about many things which perhaps are of no importance, that it cannot but see something feeble in a civilization which smiles as it refuses to make the battlefield the test of excellence."

Joyce, James on buddhism    Share

"No pen, no ink, no table, no room, no time, no quiet, no inclination."

Joyce, James on writers and writing    Share

"There is no heresy or no philosophy which is so abhorrent to the church as a human being."

Joyce, James on churches    Share

"All Moanday, Tearday, Wailsday, Thumpsday, Frightday, Shatterday. "

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Joyce, James - 89px-Revolutionary_Joyce.jpeg - James Joyce ca. 1918   Photos >>