8 Quotes & Sayings By Mary Ruefle

Mary Ruefle was born in Los Angeles, California. After graduating with high honors from Stanford University in 1979 with a degree in English Literature, she moved to New York City to pursue writing full-time. She is the author of three novels and has written articles for "Vogue," "Elle," the "Washington Post," "Salon," and other publications. She is also a contributor to various magazines including "Glamour" and "Self."

1
I study nature so as not to do foolish things. Mary Ruefle
2
It looks like it’s wasting time, but literature is actually the ultimate time-saver — because it gives us access to a range of emotions and events that it would take you years, decades, millennia to try to experience directly. Literature is the greatest reality simulator – a machine that puts you through infinitely more situations than you can ever directly witness. Mary Ruefle
3
I have become an orchidwashed in on the salt white beach. Memory, what can I make of it nowthat might please you-this life, already wastedand still strewn with miracles? Mary Ruefle
4
In one sense, reading is a great waste of time. In another sense, it is a great extension of time, a way for one person to live a thousand and one lives in a single lifespan, to watch the great impersonal universe at work again and again, Mary Ruefle
5
A boy from Brooklyn used to cruise on summer nights. As soon as he’d hit sixty he’d hold his hand out the window, cupping it around the wind. He’d been assuredthis is exactly how a woman’s breast feels when you putyour hand around it and apply a little pressure. Now he knew, and he loved it. Night after night, again and again, untilthe weather grew cold and he had to roll the window up. For many years afterwards he was perpetually attemptingto soar. One winter’s night, holding his wife’s breastin his hand, he closed his eyes and wanted to weep. He loved her, but it was the wind he imagined now. As he grew older, he loved the word etcetera and refusedto abbreviate it. He loved sweet white butter. He oftenpretended to be playing the organ. On one of his last mornings, he noticed the shape of his face molded in the pillow. He shook it out, but the next morning it reappeared. . Mary Ruefle
6
Choice, and all its attendant energy, is a characteristic of youth. It is before one chooses that one feels desire and longing without fulfillment, which gives an edge to any artistic endeavor. Galway Kinnell recently said in an interview that a young poet has so many choices but an old poet must simply endure his chosen life. Mary Ruefle
7
It is not what a poem says with its mouth, it’s what a poem does with its eyes. Mary Ruefle