16 Quotes & Sayings By Tony Hendra

Tony Hendra has lived all his life in the West of Scotland. After serving in the British Army, he started a career as an industrial designer. He holds a first class honors degree in Graphic Design, and has worked as an industrial designer for various companies including John Lewis, Marks & Spencer, and Asda. He is now self employed as a graphic design consultant to other companies Read more

He has written seven books including his autobiography Hiding Place (2015) and two novels, The King's Bill (2016) and The Riddle of Bloodstone (2017). Tony lives with his wife, daughter and grandson on the Isle of Bute.

History was a way to live extra lives, to cheat...
1
History was a way to live extra lives, to cheat the limits of flesh and blood, to roll the rock back from the tomb and free the resurrected dead. Tony Hendra
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History was not simply a catalogue of the dead and buried and benighted, but rather a vast new world to be pioneered; ..if you approached the past generously, so to speak–its people as humans, not facts, as modern in their time as we were in ours, who thought and felt as we do, the dead would live again, our equals, not our old-fashioned, hopelessly unenlightened, and backward inferiors. Humanity, to be fully known, had to be seen as changeless as well as ever changing. Tony Hendra
You see, dear– I think there are two types of...
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You see, dear– I think there are two types of people in the world. Those who divide the world up into two kinds of people... and those who don't. Tony Hendra
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People are always changing themselves and their world, dear. Very few of the changes are new. We rather confuse change and newness, I think. What is truly new never changes."" You speak in riddles, aged progenitor."" The world worships a certain kind of newness. People are always talking about a new car, or a new drink or p-p-play or house, but these things are not truly new, are they? They begin to get old the minute you acquire them. New is not in things. New is within us. The truly new is something that is new forever: you. Every morning of your life and every evening, every moment is new. You have never lived this moment before and you never will again. In this sense the new is also the eternal. Tony Hendra
5
Feelings trap us in the self, Tony dear. Doing a thing because you feel wonderful about it–even a work of charity–is in the end a selfish act. We perform the work not to feel wonderful but to know and love the other. It's the same with your romance. You may not feel your love, but God is still your loved one, your other. Tony Hendra
6
Like the rest of Holy Week, Easter is also a terrific story. It starts as tragedy: the hero broken and bloody, against all expectation dead, his followers' joyful hope in him entombed with his corpse, the rock rolled into place, sealing their despair. But the curtain doesn't fall there. The next morning at dawn they discover the rock has been rolled back. The tomb is empty, the body's gone! A missing corpse? Great stuff. A whisper of comedy. Now a touch of farce as Mary Magdalen and the guys chase frantically around looking for help, or the corpse, when suddenly, out of nowhere, up it pops–alive! Of course it's Jesus, who's done the impossible and beaten death. And they're so amazed they think he's the gardener! It's a payoff way beyond the Hollywood ending: all the flooding emotion and uplift of a tragedy followed by all the bubbling joy and optimism of a comedy. Is that possible? Not just to live happily ever after but to die–and still live happily ever after? It's the most audacious claim of Christianity, the one element that marks the brand indelibly, that trumps the claims of all other major faiths. Tony Hendra
7
It was a music of the spirit, seeking peace, not emotional release, expressing the hunger of the soul rather than the heart. A way of sequencing notes so ancient it might be music's mother lode, its Fertile Crescent. It wouldn't have grated, I felt, on the ears of ancient Greeks or Egyptians or Mesopotamians or Sumerians–or even on the august auditory equipment of the Buddha or Lao-tzu. Tony Hendra
8
The Offices rerooted me in a tradition where, monk or not, I would always be at home. From long ago I knew the power of their repetition, the incantatory force of the Psalms. But they had an added power now. As a kid, the psalmist (or psalmists) had seemed remote to me, the Psalms long prayers which sometimes rose to great poetry but often had simply to be endured. For a middle-aged man, the psalmists' moods and feelings came alive. One of the voices sounded a lot like a modern New Yorker, me or people I knew: a manic-depressive type A personality sometimes up, more often down, sometimes resigned, more often pissed off, railing about his sneaky enemies and feckless friends, always bitching to the Lord about the rotten hand he'd been dealt. That good old changelessness. . Tony Hendra
It sounds to me, dear, as if your satirist is...
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It sounds to me, dear, as if your satirist is a bit like a monk. They both take a rather dim view of the world, and both try to do something abou Tony Hendra
10
The only way to know God, the only way to know the other, is to listen. Listening is reaching out into that unknown other self, surmounting your walls and theirs; listening is the beginning of understanding, the first exercise of Tony Hendra
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Remember: God's grief at the unspeakable things we do to one another is beyond measuring, but so is His mercy. It might seem a terrible thing to say to people who've lost and suffered so much at the hands of hatred and violence. But true courage is not to hate our enemy, any more than to fight and kill him. To love him, to love in the teeth of his hate–that is real bravery. That ought to earn people m-m-medals. Tony Hendra
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All evil begins with this belief: that another’s existence is less precious than mine. Tony Hendra
13
Needing attention is a p-p-powerful force in the world, isn't it?"" Absolutely. Most people would think of it as a very natural need. Almost a right."" By 'natural' you mean 'm-m-morally neutral'?"" Touché."" Without God, people find it very hard to know who they are or why they exist. But if others pay attention to them, praise them, write about them, discuss them, they think they've found the answers to both questions."" If they don't believe in God, you can't blame them."" True, dear. But it still makes for an empty, unhappy person.".." Are you saying, Father Joe, that in the matter of motives, or even morally, there's not ultimately much difference between me and my targets?"" I'm afraid not, dear. If the result is that you only have a personality other people shape. If you really exist only in other people's minds."" I think you've just described celebrity."" I've just described pride, dear. . Tony Hendra
14
The spiritual muscles I hadn't used for decades began to acquire some tone, and since they were Catholic muscles too, it was natural to look for a church to work out in. It was hard. Appalling though the predations exacted on the monastic liturgy were, they were nothing compared to the desecration exacted on the secular. Latin was gone entirely, replaced by dull, oppressive, anchorman English, slavishly translated from its sonorous source to be as plain and "direct" as possible. It didn't seem to have occurred to the well-meaning vandals who'd thrown out baby, bath, and bathwater that all ritual is a reaching out to the unknowable and can be accomplished only by the noncognitive: evocation, allusion, metaphor, incantation–the tools of the poet. Tony Hendra
15
If my belief in the God-force-principle-thing had faltered from time to time, it was completely reaffirmed that morning when I considered how completely brilliant a creation was fermentation. From decay came a pleasure sublime enough to keep decay at bay. Only for a few minutes, perhaps, but some minutes are like no others. Tony Hendra