DORIS LESSING QUOTES IV

British author (1919-2013)

I think when people look back at our time, they will be amazed at one thing more than any other. It is this--that we do know more about ourselves now than people did in the past. But that very little of it has been put into effect. There has been this great explosion of information about ourselves. The information is the result of mankind's still infant ability to look at itself objectively. It concerns our behaviour patterns. The sciences in question are sometimes called the behavioural sciences and are about how we function in groups and as individuals, not about how we like to think we behave and function, which is often very flattering. But about how we can be observed to be behaving when observed as dispassionately as when we observe the behaviour of other species. These social or behavioural sciences are precisely the result of our capacity to be detached and unflattering about ourselves. There is this great mass of new information from universities, research institutions and from gifted amateurs, but our ways of governing ourselves haven't changed. Our left hand does not know--does not want to know--what our right hand does. This is what I think is the most extraordinary thing there is to be seen about us, as a species, now. And people to come will marvel at it, as we marvel at the blindness and inflexibility of our ancestors.

DORIS LESSING

Prisons We Choose to Live Inside


I am increasingly afflicted by vertigo where words mean nothing.

DORIS LESSING

The Golden Notebook


All things come alike to all;
there is one event to the righteous,
and to the wicked;
to the good and to the clean, and to the unclean;
to him that sacrificeth,
and to him that sacrificeth not.

DORIS LESSING

Ecclesiastes or, The Preacher


All political movements are like this -- we are in the right, everyone else is in the wrong. The people on our own side who disagree with us are heretics, and they start becoming enemies. With it comes an absolute conviction of your own moral superiority. There's oversimplification in everything, and a terror of flexibility.

DORIS LESSING

"A Notorious Life", Salon, November 11, 1997

Tags: politics


My major aim was to shape a book which would make its own comment, a wordless statement: to talk through the way it was shaped.

DORIS LESSING

introduction, The Golden Notebook


Sometimes I pick up a book and I say: Well, so you've written it first, have you? Good for you. O.K., then I won't have to write it.

DORIS LESSING

The Golden Notebook


I don't think that Women's Liberation will change much though -- not because there is anything wrong with their aims, but because it is already clear that the whole world is being shaken into a new pattern by the cataclysms we are living through: probably by the time we are through, if we do get through at all, the aims of Women's Liberation will look very small and quaint.

DORIS LESSING

Partisan Review, 1973


Very few people really care about freedom, about liberty, about the truth, very few. Very few people have guts, the kind of guts on which a real democracy has to depend. Without people with that sort of guts a free society dies or cannot be born.

DORIS LESSING

The Golden Notebook

Tags: freedom


Some books are not read in the right way because they have skipped a stage of opinion, assume a crystallization of information in society which has not yet taken place.

DORIS LESSING

Partisan Review, 1973


Often the mass emotions are those which seem the noblest, best and most beautiful. And yet, inside a year, five years, a decade, five decades, people will be asking, "How could you have believed that?" because events will have taken place that will have banished the said mass emotions to the dustbin of history.

DORIS LESSING

Prisons We Choose to Live Inside

Tags: emotion


There are no laws for the novel. There never have been, nor can there ever be.

DORIS LESSING

attributed, Writers on Writing


What he, the writer, is asking is impossible. Why should he expect this extraordinary being, the perfect critic (who does occasionally exist), why should there be anyone else who comprehends what he is trying to do? After all, there is only one person spinning that particular cocoon, only one person whose business it is to spin it.

DORIS LESSING

Partisan Review, 1973


I think novelists perform many useful tasks for their fellow citizens, but one of the most valuable is this: to enable us to see ourselves as others see us.

DORIS LESSING

Prisons We Choose to Live Inside

Tags: literature


Women's emotions are still fitted for a kind of society that no longer exists. My deep emotions, my real ones, are to do with my relationship with a man. One man. But I don't live that kind of life, and I know few women who do. So what I feel is irrelevant and silly.

DORIS LESSING

The Golden Notebook

Tags: women


People who have lived through a war know that as it approaches, an at first secret, unacknowledged, elation begins, as if an almost inaudible drum is beating ... an awful, illicit, violent excitement is abroad. Then the elation becomes too strong to be ignored or overlooked: then everyone is possessed by it.

DORIS LESSING

Prisons We Choose to Live Inside

Tags: war


People who love literature have at least part of their minds immune from indoctrination. If you read, you can learn to think for yourself.

DORIS LESSING

attributed, Grammar Girl's 101 Words Every High School Graduate Needs to Know


I think people are always looking for gurus. It's the easiest thing in the world to become a guru. It's quite terrifying. I once saw something fascinating here in New York. It must have been in the early seventies--guru time. A man used to go and sit in Central Park, wearing elaborate golden robes. He never once opened his mouth, he just sat. He'd appear at lunchtime. People appeared from everywhere, because he was obviously a holy man, and this went on for months. They just sat around him in reverent silence. Eventually he got fed up with it and left. Yes. It's as easy as that.

DORIS LESSING

The Paris Review, spring 1988


When I was starting out, science fiction was a little genre over there, which only a few people read. But now -- where are you going to put, for example, Salman Rushdie? Or any of the South American writers? Most people get by calling them magical realists.

DORIS LESSING

interview, The San Francisco Chronicle, January 15, 2006

Tags: science fiction


I lived in a brilliantly lit haze, shifting and flickering according to my changing desires. Of course, that is only a description of being young.

DORIS LESSING

The Golden Notebook

Tags: youth


No one's noticed. So much is destroyed, we can't be bothered.

DORIS LESSING

The Paris Review, spring 1988