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Author

Nathaniel Hawthorne

/nathaniel-hawthorne-quotes-and-sayings

128 Quotes
11 Works

Author Summary

About Nathaniel Hawthorne on QuoteMust

Nathaniel Hawthorne currently has 128 indexed quotes and 11 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

Mosses from an Old Manse Roger Malvin's Burial The American Notebooks The Birthmark and Other Stories The Blithedale Romance The House of the Seven Gables The Marble Faun The Prophetic Pictures The Scarlet Letter Young Goodman Brown Young Goodman Brown and Other Short Stories

Quotes

All quote cards for Nathaniel Hawthorne

"

Oh, glorious Art!" thus mused the enthusiastic painter, as he trod the street. "Thou art the image of the Creator's own. The innumerable forms that wander in nothingness start into being at thy beck. The dead live again. Thou recallest them to their old scenes, and givest their gray shadows the lustre of a better life, at once earthly and immortal. Thou snatchest back the fleeing moments of History. With thee, there is no Past; for at thy touch, all that is great becomes forever present; and illustrious men live through long ages in the visible performance of the very deeds which made them what they are.

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Nathaniel Hawthorne

The Prophetic Pictures

"

It was no wonder that they thus questioned one another's actual and bodily existence, and even doubted of their own. So strangely did they meet in the dim wood that it was like the first encounter in the world beyond the grave of two spirits who had been intimately connected in their former life, but now stood coldly shuddering in mutual dread, as not yet familiar with their state, nor wonted to the companionship of disembodied beings. Each a ghost, and awe-stricken at the other ghost.

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Technologies of easy travel "give us wings; they annihilate the toil and dust of pilgrimage; they spiritualize travel! Transition being so facile, what can be any man__ inducement to tarry in one spot? Why, therefore, should he build a more cumbrous habitation than can readily be carried off with him? Why should he make himself a prisoner for life in brick, and stone, and old worm-eaten timber, when he may just as easily dwell, in one sense, nowhere,__n a better sense, wherever the fit and beautiful shall offer him a home?

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Nathaniel Hawthorne

The House of the Seven Gables