Top 15 Quotes & Sayings by Gabrielle Roy

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Canadian author Gabrielle Roy.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Gabrielle Roy

Gabrielle Roy was a Canadian author from St. Boniface, Manitoba and one of the major figures in French Canadian literature.

The more the heart is sated with joy, the more it becomes insatiable.
One knows less about one's own destiny than about anything else on earth.
The main engagement of the writer is towards truthfulness; therefore he must keep his mind and his judgement free. — © Gabrielle Roy
The main engagement of the writer is towards truthfulness; therefore he must keep his mind and his judgement free.
My great hope would be that Quebec would realize itself fully as a distinct part of Canada, and stay Canadian, bringing to Canada a part of its richness.
poverty is like a pain, dormant and unbearable as long as you don't move about too much. You grow used to it, you end up by paying no attention to it. But once you presume to bring it out in the daylight, it becomes terrifying, you see it at last in all its squalor and you shrink from exposing it to the sun.
Could we ever know each other in the slightest without the arts?
Curiosity ran unchecked through him, like the wind outside through the deserted streets, along the canal, around the little wooden houses, everywhere, as far as the mountain.
it's a funny life. Either you don't make a red cent and you have all the time in the world, or else you get double the money and you don't have a moment to spend a penny of it.
The main engagement of the writer is towards truthfulness; therefore he must keep his mind and his judgment free.
Of all things that can happen to us, triumph is the most difficult to endure when we are alone. Deprived of witnesses, it shrinks at once.
The more the heart is nourished with happiness, the more it is insatiable.
The life of a writer is tragic: the more we advance, the farther there is to go and the more there is to say, the less time there is to say it.
Ideas often last but a day; feelings, dreams almost forever.
I felt the vulnerability, the fragility of the children of the world, and how it was, nonetheless, on their frail shoulders that we loaded the weight of our weary hopes and eternal new beginnings.
Every life is a tragedy, but far more the writer's life, because the more he has to see, the more deeply he understands and feels about life, the less time he has to put it down.
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