10 Quotes & Sayings By Galen Beckett

Galen Beckett is a writer, journalist, and teacher. His writing appears in The New York Times, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic Monthly, and The New York Review of Books. He is a frequent contributor to O magazine and the author of five books, including The Last Days of Ptolemaic Egypt. He lives in New York City.

1
...it seems to me that sometimes-or perhaps I might venture most of the time-occurrences have no cause at all. New stars appear and old ones vanish. Short hats become popular again. Things are as they are and do as they please for absolutely no reason at all. Galen Beckett
Besides, Mrs. Quesnt, did it never occur to you that...
2
Besides, Mrs. Quesnt, did it never occur to you that we are not changing at all-that rather, we are simply becoming more ourselves? Galen Beckett
3
So she is pretty and he is rich. No doubt society will judge it an excellent match. I know my father does thus a woman he found intolerable for his son is in turn found ideal for his associate. strange isn't it how it's the direction we are viewed from that makes us attractive or abhorrent Galen Beckett
4
I speak this way because I know how perilous speech can be.... A saber might be stopped by a shield. A bullet might be dodged by a stroke of luck. But you can't dodge a word. If one is flung at you it will hit its mark unerringly. No Garritt there's nothing in the world more dangerous than talk. Galen Beckett
5
When twelve who wander stand as one Through the door the dark will come. The key will be revealed in turn– Unlock the way and you shall learn... Galen Beckett
6
I will not deny that my heart has long occupied itself with the most tender feelings for another. So strong were these impulses that I indulged myself by thinking that if I could not have him whom I admired whom I will admit it now when I would not before I loved then I would never want another. However those are sentiments best saved for one of Lily's romances. The heart is a far more practical thing and in its life is happily capable of more than a single attachment. . Galen Beckett
7
Like a necktie or a bouquet of flowers, an idea was best if one did not fuss with it too much Galen Beckett
8
When all of life becomes crowded with profound and weighty matters, making time to engage in trivial things becomes an even greater priority. Galen Beckett
9
How resilient was the body, to return to its prior form so quickly! Yet the mind was formed of a less pliable substance. The emptiness in her thoughts would not be so easily filled. Instead there was a hollowness among them-a place she had reserved for future joys which now would never arrive. Galen Beckett