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Rabbit, Run (Rabbit Angstrom, #1) Rabbit, Run by John Updike
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Rabbit, Run Quotes Showing 1-30 of 82
“If you have the guts to be yourself, other people'll pay your price.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“Everybody who tells you how to act has whiskey on their breath.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“You do things and do things and nobody really has a clue.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“But it is just two lovers, holding hands and in a hurry to reach their car, their locked hands a starfish leaping through the dark.”
Updike, John, Rabbit, Run
“There is this quality, in things, of the right way seeming wrong at first.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“...hate suits him better than forgiveness. Immersed in hate, he doesn't have to do anything; he can be paralyzed, and the rigidty of hatred makes a kind of shelter for him.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“I once did something right. I played first-rate basketball. I really did. And after you're first-rate at something, no matter what, it kind of takes the kick out of being second-rate.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“…he is unlike the other customers. They sense it too, and look at him with hard eyes, eyes like little metal studs pinned into the white faces of young men [...] In the hush his entrance creates, the excessive courtesy the weary woman behind the counter shows him amplifies his strangeness. He orders coffee quietly and studies the rim of the cup to steady the sliding in his stomach. He had thought, he had read, that from shore to shore all America was the same. He wonders, Is it just these people I’m outside or is it all America?”
Updike, John, Rabbit, Run
“The difficulty with humorists is that they will mix what they believe with what they don’t—whichever seems likelier to win an effect.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“The thing about her is, she’s good-natured. He knew it the second he saw her standing by the parking meters. He could just tell from the soft way her belly looked. With women, you keep bumping against them, because they want different things, they’re a different race. Either they give, like a plant, or scrape, like a stone. In all the green world nothing feels as good as a woman’s good nature.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“The fullness ends when we give Nature her ransom, when we make children for her. Then she is through with us, and we become, first inside, and then outside, junk. Flower stalks.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“What is this? He has a sensation of touching glass. He doesn't know if they are talking about nothing or making code for the deepest meanings.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“As if pity is, as he has been taught, not a helpless outcry but a powerful tide that could redeem the world...”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
tags: pity
“He tries to picture how it will end, with an empty baseball field, a dark factory, and then over a brook in a dirt road, he doesn’t know. He pictures a huge vacant field of cinders and his heart goes hollow.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“...but with his mother there's no question of liking him they're not even in a way separate people he began in her stomach and if she gave him life she can take it away and if he feels that withdrawal it will be the grave itself.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“A woman once of some height, she is bent small, and the lingering strands of black look dirty in her white hair. She carries a cane, but in forgetfulness, perhaps, hangs it over her forearm and totters along with it dangling loose like an outlandish bracelet. Her method of gripping her gardener is this: he crooks his right arm, pointing his elbow toward her shoulder, and she shakily brings her left forearm up within his and bears down heavily on his wrist with her lumpish freckled fingers. Her hold is like that of a vine to a wall; one good pull will destroy it, but otherwise it will survive all weathers.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“It frightens him to think of her this way. It makes her seem, in terms of love, so vast.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“Dabbling in the sandbox gives Rabbit a small headache. Over at the pavilion the rubber thump of Roofball and the click of checkers call to his memory, and the forgotten smell of that narrow plastic ribbon you braid bracelets and whistlechains out of and of glue and of the sweat on the handles on athletic equipment is blown down by a breeze laced with children's murmuring. He feels the truth: the thing that has left his life has left irrevocably; no search would recover it. No flight would reach it. It was here, beneath the town, in these smells and these voices, forever behind him. The fullness ends when we give Nature her ransom, when we make children for her. Then she is through with us, and we become, first inside, and then outside, junk. Flower stalks.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“Laws aren't ghosts in this country, they walk around with the smell of earth on them.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“I warned you, he says, I warned you, Harry, but youth is deaf. Youth is careless.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“They’ve not forgotten him: worse, they never heard of him.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“It's the strange thing about you mystics, how often your little ecstasies wear a skirt.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“The clangor of the body shop comes up softly. It's noise comforts him, tells him he is hidden and safe, that while he hides men are busy nailing the world down, and toward the disembodied sounds his heart makes in darkness a motion of love.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“Sun and moon, sun and moon, time goes.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“With his white collar he forges god’s name on every word he speaks”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“Nelson! Stop that this minute!" She turns rigid in the glider but does not rise to see what is making the boy cry. Eccles, sitting by the screen, can see. The Fosnacht boy stands by the swing, holding two red plastic trucks. Angstrom's son, some inches shorter, is batting with an open hand toward the bigger boy's chest, but does not quite dare to move forward a step and actually strike him...Nelson's face turns up toward the porch and he tries to explain, "Pilly have - Pilly -" But just trying to describe the injustice gives it unbearable force, and as if struck from behind he totters forward and slaps the thief's chest and receives a mild shove that makes him sit on the ground. He rolls on his stomach and spins in the grass, revolved by his own incoherent kicking. Eccles' heart seems to twist with the child's body; he knows so well the propulsive power of a wrong, the way the mind batters against it and each futile blow sucks the air emptier until it seems the whole frame of blood and bone must burst in a universe that can be such a vacuum.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“Do you think God wants a waterfall to be a tree?”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“Right and wrong aren't dropped from the sky. We. We make them. Against misery. Invariably, Harry, invariably--he grows confident of his ability to negotiate long words--misery follows their disobedience. Not our own, often at first not our own.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“Yes, well, years. Some die young; some are born old.”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run
“Sleep this night is not a dark haunted domain the mind must consciously set itself to invade, but a cave inside himself, into which he shrinks while the claws of the bear rattle like rain outside. Sunshine,”
John Updike, Rabbit, Run

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