Quotes From "Sacred Hunger" By Barry Unsworth

1
The kind of truth that can be asserted by argument had lost all glamour, all lustre, for him, seeming no more now than another aspect of that ancient urge - much older than the desire for truth - to command attention, dominate one's fellows. Barry Unsworth
The mind is constituted to accept the god of the...
2
The mind is constituted to accept the god of the more powerful. If you have to choose between the god of the slave owner and the god of the enslaved, naturally you will choose the former .. . Barry Unsworth
The successful cannot be unhappy -- it was a contradiction...
3
The successful cannot be unhappy -- it was a contradiction in terms. Barry Unsworth
Doubt is the ally of hope, not its enemy, and...
4
Doubt is the ally of hope, not its enemy, and together they made all the blessing he had. Barry Unsworth
5
Money is sacred as everyone knows... So then must be the hunger for it and the means we use to obtain it. Once a man is in debt he becomes a flesh and blood form of money, a walking investment. You can do what you like with him, you can work him to death or you can sell him. This cannot be called cruelty or greed because we are seeking only to recover our investment and that is a sacred duty. Barry Unsworth
6
It is everyone's bounden duty to try to get more than they have got already. If you have got two shillin' you try to make it into four shillin' .. . there is no end to it. Barry Unsworth
7
Nothing a man suffers will prevent him from inflicting suffering on others. Indeed, it will teach him the way Barry Unsworth
8
Only way to live here is day by day, same as anywhere. Barry Unsworth
9
Wilson had been killed by everybody. It was this that made his death special, the children had been told. It was justice, it was all the people showing how much they hated this crime. Killing was justice when everybody joined in. Barry Unsworth
10
Sometimes in storm weather the shore had fluttered with disabled swallows. They crouched lower for his approach, without strength to escape. In his hands they pulsed with that same pulse. He had taken a bird and warmed it between his hands or inside his jacket, brought the life back until it was able to fly. Sometimes, released from his hands, they circled once around him before flying away; in gratitude, or so the child had believed--and the belief had survived all the man's science. Barry Unsworth