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Author

Wendell Berry

/wendell-berry-quotes-and-sayings

218 Quotes
27 Works

Author Summary

About Wendell Berry on QuoteMust

Wendell Berry currently has 218 indexed quotes and 27 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

A Place on Earth Andy Catlett: Early Travels Another Turn of the Crank Bringing it to the Table: On Farming and Food Citizenship Papers Entries Farming: a hand book Fidelity Given Hannah Coulter It All Turns on Affection: The Jefferson Lecture and Other Essays Jayber Crow Nathan Coulter Remembering Sabbaths Sex, Economy, Freedom, and Community: Eight Essays The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays of Wendell Berry The Collected Poems, 1957-1982 The Gift of Good Land: Further Essays Cultural and Agricultural The Hidden Wound The Long-Legged House The Mad Farmer Poems The Selected Poems of Wendell Berry The Unsettling of America: Culture and Agriculture What Are People for Essays By Wendell B What Are People For?

Quotes

All quote cards for Wendell Berry

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The Peace of Wild ThingsWhen despair for the world grows in meand I wake in the night at the least soundin fear of what my life and my children__ lives may be,I go and lie down where the wood drakerests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.I come into the peace of wild thingswho do not tax their lives with forethoughtof grief. I come into the presence of still water.And I feel above me the day-blind starswaiting with their light. For a timeI rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

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Wendell Berry

The Selected Poems of Wendell Berry

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At this point, I want to say point-blank what I hope is already clear: though agrarianism proposes that everybody has agrarian responsibilities, it does not propose that everybody should be a farmer or that we do not need cities. Nor does it propose that every product be a necessity. Furthermore, any thinkable human economy would have to grant to manufacturing an appropriate and honorable place. Agrarians would insist only that any manufacturing enterprise should be formed and scaled to fit the local landscape, the local ecosystem, and the local community, and that it should be locally owned and employ local people. They would insist, in other words, that the shop or factory owner should not be an outsider, but rather a sharer in the fate of the place and the community. The deciders should live with the results of their decisions.

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Wendell Berry

The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays

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Odd as I am sure it will appear to some, I can think of no better form of personal involvement in the cure of the environment than that of gardening. A person who is growing a garden, if he is growing it organically, is improving a piece of the world. He is producing something to eat, which makes him somewhat independent of the grocery business, but he is also enlarging, for himself, the meaning of food and the pleasure of eating.

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Wendell Berry

The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays

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As a people, we have been tolled farther and farther away from the facts of what we have done by the romanticizers, whose bait is nothing more than the wishful insinuation that we have done no harm. Speaking a public language of propaganda, uninfluenced by the real content of our history which we know only in a deep and guarded privacy, we are still in the throes of the paradox of the __entleman and soldier._ However conscious it may have been, there is no doubt in my mind that all this moral and verbal obfuscation is intentional. Nor do I doubt that its purpose is to shelter us from the moral anguish implicit in our racism__n anguish that began, deep and mute, in the minds of Christian democratic freedom-loving owners of slaves.

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I sat down in a chair by the bed. The house got altogether still again, and I thought he was asleep. Just ever so quietly I reached over and laid my hand on his shoulder.He said, 'I love you too, Hannah."He didn't last long after that. Death had become his friend. They say that people, if they want to, can let themselves slip away when the time comes. I think that is what Nathan did. He was not false or greedy. When the time came to go, he went.

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Finally Bill Mixter would lower his head, lay his bow upon the strings, and draw out the first notes of a tune, and the others would come in behind him. The music, while it lasted, brought a new world into being. They would play some tunes they had learned on the radio, but their knowledge was far older than that and they played too the music that was native to the place, or that the people of the place were native to. Just the names of the tunes were a kind of music; they cal l back the music to my mind still, after so many years: "Sand Riffle," "Last Gold Dollar," "Billy in the Low Ground," "Gate to Go Through," and a lot of others. "A fiddle, now, is an atmospheric thing," said Burley Coulter. The music was another element filling the room and pouring out through the cracks. When at last they'd had their fill and had gone away, the shop felt empty, the silence larger than before.

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Wendell Berry

Jayber Crow

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Agriculture must mediate between nature and the human community, with ties and obligations in both directions. To farm well requires an elaborate courtesy toward all creatures, animate and inanimate. It is sympathy that most appropriately enlarges the context of human work. Contexts become wrong by being too small - too small, that is, to contain the scientist or the farmer or the farm family or the local ecosystem or the local community - and this is crucial.

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Wendell Berry

Bringing it to the Table: On Farming and Food

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[My grandfather] returned to what he called __tudying._ He sat looking down at his lap, his left hand idle on the chair arm, his right scratching his head, his white hair gleaming in the lamplight. I knew that when he was studying he was thinking, but I did not know what about. Now I have aged into knowledge of what he thought about. He thought of his strength and endurance when he was young, his merriment and joy, and how his life__ burdens had then grown upon him. He thought of that arc of country that centered upon Port William as he first had known it in the years just after the Civil War, and as it had changed, and as it had become; and how all that time, which would have seemed almost forever when he was a boy, now seemed hardly anytime at all. He thought of the people he remembered, now dead, and of those who had come and gone before his knowledge, and of those who would come after, and of his own place in that long procession.

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Wendell Berry

Andy Catlett: Early Travels