Top 54 Quotes & Sayings by Ernest Gaines

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American writer Ernest Gaines.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
Ernest Gaines

Ernest James Gaines was an American author whose works have been taught in college classrooms and translated into many languages, including French, Spanish, German, Russian and Chinese. Four of his works were made into television movies.

The sharecropper may lower his eyes, but not because he's less of a man. That's just a condition of society that such things exist.
Words mean nothing. Action is the only thing. Doing. That's the only thing.
I write to try to find out who I am. One of my main themes is manliness. I think I'm trying to figure out what manliness really is. — © Ernest Gaines
I write to try to find out who I am. One of my main themes is manliness. I think I'm trying to figure out what manliness really is.
Question everything. Every stripe, every star, every word spoken. Everything.
I write with as much objectivity as I can.
I suppose I started writing seriously at 16 years old. I thought I wrote a novel at 16 and sent it to New York! They sent it back because it wasn't novel.
There will always be men struggling to change, and there will always be those who are controlled by the past.
I try to write something that would interest anybody and keep them turning the page. You must have a plot and good storyline.
Grace under pressure isn't just about bullfighters and men at war. It's about getting up every day to face a job or a white boss you don't like but have to face to feed your children so they'll grow up to be a better generation.
I knew I wanted to be a writer and I knew if I had a wife and family, I would neglect something, and I was afraid it wouldn't be the writing.
I was raised by a lady that was crippled all her life but she did everything for me and she raised me. She washed our clothes, cooked our food, she did everything for us. I don't think I ever heard her complain a day in her life. She taught me responsibility towards my brother and sisters and the community.
I believe that the writer should tell a story. I believe in plot. I believe in creating characters and suspense.
What I miss today more than anything else - I don't go to church as much anymore - but that old-time religion, that old singing, that old praying which I love so much. That is the great strength of my being, of my writing.
I wanted to be a writer. I wanted to say something about home. — © Ernest Gaines
I wanted to be a writer. I wanted to say something about home.
All writers write about the past, and I try to make it come alive so you can see what happened.
A myth is an old lie that people believe in. White people believe that they're better than anyone else on earth - and that's a myth.
I think I'm a very religious person. I think I believe in God as much as any man does. I don't only believe in God, I know there's God.
In the beginning, I tried to be a more cosmopolitan writer, but I realized that I was a country boy, and I had to deal with things I knew about and where I came from.
The mark of fear is not easily removed.
Today I must write a paragraph or a page better than I did yesterday.
I had to see and feel and be with the thing that I wanted to write about.
Sometimes you got to hurt something to help something. Sometimes you have to plow under one thing in order for something else to grow.
Why is it that, as a culture, we are more comfortable seeing two men holding guns than holding hands?
When I'm sitting in the church alone, I can hear singing of the old people. I can hear their singing and I can hear their praying, and sometimes I hum one of their songs.
"You going back," she said. "You ain't going to run away from this, Grant."
Without love for my fellow man and respect for nature, to me, life is an obscenity.
"What for?" I said. "What for, Tante Lou? He treated me the same way he treated her. He wants me to feel guilty, just as he wants her to feel guilty. Well, I'm not feeling guilty, Tante Lou. I didn't put him there. I do everything I know how to do to keep people like him from going there. He's not going to make me feel guilty."
I have no more to say except this: We must live with our own conscience.
And I thought to myself, What am I doing? Am I reaching them at all? They are acting exactly as the old men did earlier. They are fifty years younger, maybe more, but doing the same thing those old men did who never attended school a day in their lives. Is it just a vicious circle? Am I doing anything?
I still don't even know if the sheriff will let me see him. And suppose he did; what then? What do I say to him? Do I know what a man is? Do I know how a man is supposed to die? I'm still trying to find out how a man should live. Am I supposed to tell someone how to die who has never lived?
If I were to give one piece of advice, I would say to never accept anything that you hear or see at face value. As a general rule of thumb, then the more you question, the better.
I have learned as much about writing about my people by listening to blues and jazz and spirituals as I have by reading novels.
I have learned as much about writing about my people by listening to blues and jazz and spirituals as I have from reading novels. The understatements in the tenor saxophone of Lester Young, the crystal, haunting, forever searching sounds of John Coltrane, and the softness and violence of Count Basie's big band - all have fired my imagination as much as anything in literature.
The Six Golden Rules of Writing: Read, read, read, and write, write, write.
...my heart may have been in it but my soul was not. — © Ernest Gaines
...my heart may have been in it but my soul was not.
You learn from music, from watching great athletes at work - how disciplined they are, how they move. You learn these things by watching a shortstop at work, how he concentrates on one thing at a time. You learn from classic music, from the blues and jazz, from bluegrass. From all this, you learn how to sustain a great line without bringing in unnecessary words.
But let us say he was (guilty). Let us for a moment say he was (guilty). What justice would there be to take his life? Justice, gentlemen? Why, I would just as soon put a hog in the electric chair as this.
Anytime a child is born, the old people look in his face and ask him if he's the One.
You've got to bend with the wind or you're broken.
In all my stories and novels, no one ever escapes Louisiana. Maybe that is because my soul never left Louisiana, although my body did go to California.
Nietzsche said without music, life would be a mistake. To me, without books, life would be a mistake.
We wait till now? Now, when we're old men, we get to be brave?
And that's all we are Jefferson, all of us on this earth, a piece of drifting wood. until we - each of us, individually- decide to become something else. I am still that piece of drifting wood, and those out there are no better. But you can be better.
Only when the mind is free has the body a chance to be free. Yes, they must believe, they must believe. Because I know what it means to be a slave. I am a slave.
We all have much more in common than we have difference. I would say that about people all over the world. They don't know how much in common that they have
He told us that most of us would die violently, and those who did not would be brought down to the level of beasts. — © Ernest Gaines
He told us that most of us would die violently, and those who did not would be brought down to the level of beasts.
The artist must be like a heart surgeon. He must approach something with sympathy, but with a sort of coldness and work and work until he finds some kind of perfection in his work. You can't have blood splashing all over the place. Things must be done very cleanly.
Now, about that mulatto teacher and me. There was no love there for each other. There was not even respect. We were enemies if anything. He hated me, and I knew it, and he knew I knew it. I didn't like him, but I needed him, needed him to tell me something that none of the others could or would.
Everything's been said, but it needs saying again.
I want you to show them the difference between what they think you are and what you can be.
Don't tell me to believe. Don't tell me to believe in the same God or laws that men believe in who commit these murders. Don't tell me to believe that God can bless this country and that men are judged by their peers. Who among his peers judged him? Was I there? Was the minister there? Was Harry Williams there? Was Farrell Jarreau? Was my aunt? Was Vivian? No, his peers did not judge him, and I will not believe.
I like the sound of people's voices, and I think what a man says can very well tell what he's thinking, whether he's lying or not.
We looked at each other, and I could see in those big reddened eyes that he was not going to scream. He was full of anger - and who could blame him? - but he was no fool. He needed me, and he wanted me here, if only to insult me.
How do people come up with a date and a time to take life from another man? Who made them God?
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