17 Quotes & Sayings By Barbara Pym

Barbara Pym was born in 1916 and in 1934 became a war bride in London after meeting and marrying an RAF officer. After the war, her marriage dissolved and in 1950 she married Stephen Pym, an Oxford scholar. She began writing fiction in 1946 and published her first novel The Bellman of Angel's in 1957. Over the next forty years, she published twenty-nine books, mostly novels, including Caroline and John (1955), The Mark of the Horse Lord (1961), A Girl Named Digby (1963), The Birthday Girl (1965), and The Bellman of Bannockburn (1967) Read more

She died in 1992.

She knew exactly how she ought to feel, for she...
1
She knew exactly how she ought to feel, for she was well read in our greater and lesser English poets, but the unfortunate fact was that she did not really like being kissed at all. Barbara Pym
But at least it made one realize that life still...
2
But at least it made one realize that life still held infinite possibilities for change. Barbara Pym
3
I stretched out my hand towards the little bookshelf where I kept cookery and devotional books, the most comfortable bedside reading. Barbara Pym
4
Prue hadn't really been in love with Fabian. Indeed, it was obvious that at times she found him both boring and irritating. But wasn't that what so many marriages were - finding a person boring and irritating and yet loving him? Who could imagine a man who was never boring, or irritating? Barbara Pym
5
We, my dear Mildred, are the observers of life. Let other people get married by all means, the more the merrier.. .. Let Dora marry if she likes. She hasn't your talent for observation. Barbara Pym
6
It was the ring on the left hand that people at the Old Girls' Reunion looked for. Often, in fact nearly always, it was an uninteresting ring, sometimes no more than the plain gold band or the very smallest and dimmest of diamonds. Perhaps the husband was also of this variety, but as he was not seen at this female gathering he could only be imagined, and somehow I do not think we ever imagined the husbands to be quite so uninteresting as they probably were. Barbara Pym
7
Oh, this coming back to an empty house, ' Rupert thought, when he had seen her safely up to her door. People - though perhaps it was only women - seemed to make so much of it. As if life itself were not as empty as the house one was coming back to. Barbara Pym
8
Letty allowed her to ramble on while she looked around the wood, remembering its autumn carpet of beech leaves and wondering if it could be the kind of place to lie down in and prepare for death when life became too much to be endured. Barbara Pym
9
Once outside the magic circle the writers became their lonely selves, pondering on poems, observing their fellow men ruthlessly, putting people they knew into novels; no wonder they were without friends. Barbara Pym
10
You know Mildred would never do anything wrong or foolish. I reflected a little sadly that this was only too true and hoped I did not appear too much that kind of person to others. Virtue is an excellent thing and we should all strive after it, but it can sometimes be a little depressing. Barbara Pym
11
He certainly is very charming, but he makes me feel slightly ill at ease–almost as if I were a woman manquée, if there could be such a thing–you know, something lacking in me."" Oh, well, that's hardly his fault."" No, " Dulcie agreed. "Mine, of course. Barbara Pym
12
I realised that one might love him secretly with no hope of encouragement, which can be very enjoyable for the young or inexperienced. Barbara Pym
13
It seemed so much safer and more comfortable to live in the lives of other people - to observe their joys and sorrows with detachment as if one were watching a film or a play. Barbara Pym
14
The conversation did not go very well and I began telling him about the people with their trays in the great cafeteria and suggesting that it would have done us more good to go there to be put in mind of our own mortality. Barbara Pym
15
One did not drink sherry before the evening, just as one did not read a novel in the morning. Barbara Pym
16
How absurd and delicious it is to be in love with somebody younger than yourself. Everybody should try it. Barbara Pym