James Joyce Quotation Collage by Dale Williams Barrigar

Greetings!

This is, above all, NOT some random collection of quotations randomly tossed together by some enigmatic and bored outsider from the American Midwest who’s (once again) too high on microdoses of magic mushrooms, edible marijuana, and too much green tea and Gabapentin. Instead, this is a very, very, very, very, very, very, very carefully curated, selected, shaped, arranged, and FORMED collage of quotations that can stand as its own separate work of art on many many many many levels, just as the collages of Picasso and Braque could do the same. I do not limit nor count my borrowings, said Montaigne, I weigh them.

As such, this tissue of words can be utilized primarily in one of two ways, or (preferably) in both-at-once ways. If you, the Reader, can think of other ways to use these (this), please feel free to freely do so at whatever levels or in whatever ways your mind or nerves can handle.

A: It can be used as an exceedingly useful summary of the entire life’s work of the Irish author James Joyce (and James Joyce himself WAS his work at a level that perhaps surpasses (almost) anyone else).

B: It can be used as a piece of twenty-first century wisdom writing (like an advice column for seekers) all in its own right.

James Joyce is one of the funniest writers who ever lived which is to say he’s one of the greatest comic writers who ever inhabited Planet Earth, as the brilliant genius Anthony Burgess never tired of pointing out to anyone who’d listen to him (and it was usually far fewer than you might imagine, even after a certain novel of his was made into an exceedingly famous motion picture which had almost nothing to do with the original novel at all).

Joyce also possessed (as do so many true comedians) incredible wisdom about life.

Read on 2 find out.

(FYI: this is also a companion piece to my forthcoming written work “Silence, Exile, and Cunning: a Credo, a Screed, a Missive, a Memoir.” I call it a “written work” because it doesn’t have a genre except perhaps for the ones enumerated in the title. It shall come forth tomorrow.)

“Shut your eyes and see.”

“Let my country die for me.”

“Love loves to love love.”

“First we feel. Then we fall.”

“As I walked along in the sun I remembered old Cotter’s words and tried to remember what had happened afterwards in the dream.”

“We walked along the North Strand Road till we came to the Vitriol Works and then turned to the right along the Wharf Road.”

“Meeting her a third time by accident he found courage to make an appointment. She came.”

“The sad quiet greyblue glow of the dying day came through the window and the open door, covering over and allaying quietly a sudden instinct of remorse in Stephen’s heart.”

“Think you’re escaping and run into yourself. Longest way round is the shortest way home.”

“The object of the artist is the creation of the beautiful. What the beautiful is is another question.”

“The heaventree of stars hung with humid nightblue fruit.”

“It is as painful perhaps to be awakened from a vision as to be born.”

“You can still die when the sun is shining.”

“I will not serve that in which I no longer believe and I will try to express myself in some mode of life or art as freely as I can.”

“The whole face is of an ascetic, inspired, whole souled, wonderfully passionate man. It is Christ, as the Man of Sorrows, his raiment red as of them that tread in the winepress. It is literally Behold the Man.”

“Old father, old artificer, stand me now and ever in good stead.”

Dale Williams Barrigar

(Image provided by DWB)

7 thoughts on “James Joyce Quotation Collage by Dale Williams Barrigar

  1. Dale

    Joyce, I think, made some of his works a challenge due to linear storytelling being a bore.

    The funniest people I know (known) never told jokes. That’s for Bob Hope and his writers.

    Thank you for the quotes. I recall a few but not all. In The Dead there was all kinds of humour, despite its tragedy. Like the comic loading of the coach. If I had to choose a greatest short story, it would be that one.

    Leila

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    • DWB's avatar DWB says:

      Leila

      How hilarious it is that the exact same word can elicit the exact opposite reaction in the exact same person depending on how it’s used and when it’s used.

      The word “writer” is one of my sacred cows, but when it’s used in the context of Bob Hope and his writers, it makes something in me want to throw stones at them – or at least rotten fruit.

      A perfect example of how, like anything else, “WRITER” can be the highest word, or the lowest word, depending upon how it’s used, when it’s used, and who it’s used for or about…And I think another reason Jim wrote that way is because he understood this about language (and reality)…

      Dale

      Liked by 1 person

    • DWB's avatar DWB says:

      ….I also want to cite the James Joyce essay written by Leila Allison which appeared on Literally Stories a while back: one of the most brilliant things written about Joyce in a long time and which inspired today’s and tomorrow’s entries about Joyce by DWB….

      Liked by 1 person

    • DWB's avatar DWB says:

      Hi Diane

      Yes, if you’ve read this, you’ve read some of James Joyce…a writer uniquely suited to being excerpted in this way, I do believe. Like with Van Gogh and a single painting, one can get a sense of who Joyce was through one tapestry of quotations like this, one reason being the density of his language. Thanks for reading and saying so!

      Dale

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Comedic, insightful, or inspiring? Certainly D, all the above. Thanks for sharing this wit and wisdom with us. I once read that Joyce’s wife once said, paraphrasing, My husband is a genius I just with he didn’t have such a dirty mind.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. mickbloor3's avatar mickbloor3 says:

    Me too. I’m an occasional collector of quotations. Enjoyed this. Afraid I also like toilet humour, so my favourite Joyce quote is:

    (following a loud fart) ‘Hark! Did an angel speak?’

    bw mick

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