37 Quotes & Sayings By Robert Graves

Born in the year 1877, Graves was a prolific author of poetry, fiction, and non-fiction. His best known work is I, Claudius, which was turned into an award-winning 1970s miniseries. Graves was born in Wales and died in New Zealand in 1985.

1
When the immense drugged universe explodes In a cascade of unendurable colour And leaves us gasping naked, This is no more than the ectasy of chaos: Hold fast, with both hands, to that royal love Which alone, as we know certainly, restores Fragmentation into true being. Ecstasy of Chaos Robert Graves
There’s no money in poetry, but there’s no poetry in...
2
There’s no money in poetry, but there’s no poetry in money, either Robert Graves
About this business of being a gentleman: I paid so...
3
About this business of being a gentleman: I paid so heavily for the fourteen years of my gentleman’s education that I feel entitled, now and then, to get some sort of return. Robert Graves
I was thinking,
4
I was thinking, "So, I’m Emperor, am I? What nonsense! But at least I'll be able to make people read my books now. Robert Graves
5
England looked strange to us returned soldiers. We could not understand the war-madness that ran wild everywhere, looking for a pseudo-military outlet. The civilians talked a foreign language. I found serious conversation with my parents all but impossible. Robert Graves
The conversation was like the sort one has in dreams–mad...
6
The conversation was like the sort one has in dreams–mad but interesting. Robert Graves
There is no money in poetry, but then there is...
7
There is no money in poetry, but then there is no poetry in money. Robert Graves
8
I am supposed to be an utter fool and the more I read the more of a fool they think me. Robert Graves
9
To resist the social pressure now put even on one's leisure time, requires a tougher upbringing and a more obstinate willfulness about going one's own way, than ever before. Robert Graves
10
Fact is not truth, but a poet who willfully defies fact cannot achieve truth. Robert Graves
11
But that so many scholars are barbarians does not much matter so long as a few of them are ready to help with their specialized knowledge the few independent thinkers, that is to say the poets, who try to to keep civilization alive. Robert Graves
12
Most men–it is my experience–are neither virtuous nor scoundrels, good-hearted nor bad-hearted. They are a little of one thing and a little of the other and nothing for any length of time: ignoble mediocrities. Robert Graves
13
I have done many impious things--no great ruler can do otherwise. I have put the good of the Empire before all human considerations. To keep the Empire free from factions I have had to commit many crimes. Robert Graves
14
...but [I] had sworn on the very day of my demobilization never to be under anyone’s orders for the rest of my life. Somehow I must live by writing. Robert Graves
15
But give thanks, at least, that you still have Frost's poems; and when you feel the need of solitude, retreat to the companionship of moon, water, hills and trees. Retreat, he reminds us, should not be confused with escape. And take these poems along for good luck! Robert Graves
16
But godhead is, after all, a matter of fact, not a matter of opinion: if a man is generally worshipped as a god then he is a god. And if a god ceases to be worshipped he is nothing. Robert Graves
17
Claudius, you're luckier than you realize. Guard your appointment jealously. Don't let anyone usurp it."" What do you mean, girl?"" I mean that people don't kill their butts. They are cruel to them, they frighten them, they rob them, but they don't kill them. Robert Graves
18
Because the world is in a sick condition and we are all somehow infected, against our will, even if we think we are whole in mind and soul and body. Robert Graves
19
Swinburne, by the way, when a very young man, had gone to Walter Savage Landor, then a very old man, and been given the poet’s blessing he asked for; and Landor when a child had been patted on the head by Dr Samuel Johnson; and Johnson when a child had been taken to London to be touched by Queen Anne for scrofula, the King’s evil; and Queen Anne when a child... Robert Graves
20
Love and honor. They are the two great things, and now they’re dimmed and blighted. Today, love is just sex and sentimentality. Love is really a recognition of truth, a recognition of another person’s integrity and truth in a way that is compatible with – that makes both of you light up when you recognize the quality in the other. That’s what love is. It’s a recognition of singularity… And love is giving and giving and giving … not looking for any return. Until you do that, you can’t love. . Robert Graves
21
Genius' was a word loosely used by expatriot Americans in Paris and Rome, between the Versailles Peace treaty and the Depression, to cover all varieties of artistic, literary and musical experimentalism. A useful and readable history of the literary Thirties is Geniuses Together by Kay Boyle-Joyce, Hemingway, Scott Fitzgerald, Pound, Eliot and the rest. They all became famous figures but too many of them developed defects of character-ambition, meanness, boastfulness, cowardice or inhumanity-that defrauded their early genius. Experimentalism is a quality alien to genius. It implies doubt, hope, uncertainty, the need for group reassurance; whereas genius works alone, in confidence of a foreknown result. Experiments are useful as a demonstration of how not to write, paint or compose if one's interest lies in durable rather than fashionable results; but since far more self-styled artists are interested in frissons á la mode rather than in truth, it is foolish to protest. Experimentalism means variation on the theme of other people's uncertainties. . Robert Graves
22
It was inevitable under a monarchy, however benevolent the monarch. The old virtues disappear. Independence and frankness are at a discount. Complacent anticipation of the monarch's wishes is then the greatest of all virtues. One must either be a good monarch like yourself, or a good courtier like myself–either an Emperor or an idiot. Robert Graves
23
Religious fanaticism is the most dangerous form of insanity. Robert Graves
24
To know only one thing well is to have a barbaric mind: civilization implies the graceful relation of all varieties of experience to a central human system of thought. Robert Graves
25
This seems to me a philosophical question, and therefore irrelevant, question. A poet's destiny is to love. Robert Graves
26
Poets can't march in protest or do that sort of thing. I feel that's against the rules, and pointless. If mankind wants a great big final bang, that's what it'll get. One should never protest against anything unless it's going to have an effect. None of those marches do. One should either be silent or go straight to the top. Robert Graves
27
You don't want captains in the army who know too much or think too much. Robert Graves
28
I love, therefore I am. Robert Graves
29
A perfect poem is impossible. Once it has been written the world would end. Robert Graves
30
I don't really feel my poems are mine at all. I didn't create them out of nothing. I owe them to my relations with other people. Robert Graves
31
There's no money in poetry but then there's no poetry in money either. Robert Graves
32
There should be two main objectives in ordinary prose writing: to convey a message and to include in it nothing that will distract the reader's attention or check his habitual pace of reading - he should feel that he is seated at ease in a taxi not riding a temperamental horse through traffic. Robert Graves
33
What we now call 'finance' is, I hold, an intellectual perversion of what began as warm human love. Robert Graves
34
Marriage, like money, is still with us; and, like money, progressively devalued. Robert Graves
35
There's no money in poetry, but then there's no poetry in money, either. Robert Graves
36
If there's no money in poetry, neither is there poetry in money. Robert Graves