Henry Miller Quotes About Lying

We have collected for you the TOP of Henry Miller's best quotes about Lying! Here are collected all the quotes about Lying starting from the birthday of the Writer – December 26, 1891! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 13 sayings of Henry Miller about Lying. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • A book lying idle on a shelf is wasted ammunition.

    Henry Miller (1969). “Mémoires, Plaidoiries Et Documents”, p.23, New Directions Publishing
  • What does it matter how one comes by the truth so long as one pounces upon it and lives by it?

    Henry Miller (1966). “Tropic of Capricorn”
  • Life's wildest moment---she kneels on the sidewalk. Everything else she does is lies, lies.

  • I am thinking of one woman and the rest is blotto. I say I am thinking of her, but the truth is I am dying a stellar death. I am lying there like a sick star waiting for the light to go out. Years ago I lay on this same bed and I waited and waited to be born. Nothing happened. Except that my mother, in her Lutheran rage, threw a bucket of water over me. My mother, poor imbecile that she was, thought I was lazy. She didn't know that I had gotten caught in the stellar drift, that I was being pulverized to a black extinction out there in the farthest rim of the universe.

    Henry Miller (1966). “Tropic of Capricorn”
  • She may be lying in bed reading a book, she may be making love with a prize fighter, or she may be running like mad through a field of stubble, one shoe one, one shoe off, a man named Corn Cob pursuing her hotly. Wherever she is I am standing in complete darkness; her absence blots me out.

    Henry Miller (2007). “Sexus: The Rosy Crucifixion I”, p.7, Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
  • All the lies and evasions by which man has nourished himself civilization, in a word is the fruits of the creative artist. It is the creative nature of man which has refused to let him lapse back into that unconscious unity with life which characterizes the animal world from which he made his escape.

    Men  
    Henry Miller (2016). “The Wisdom of the Heart”, p.8, New Directions Publishing
  • We are all guilty of crime the great crime of not living life to the full. But we are all potentially free. We can stop thinking of what we have failed to do and do whatever lies within our power. What those powers that are in us may be no one has truly dared to imagine. That they are infinite we will realize the day we admit to ourselves that imagination is everything. Imagination is the voice of daring.

    Henry Miller (2007). “Sexus: The Rosy Crucifixion I”, p.341, Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
  • One can be absolutely truthful and sincere even though admittedly the most outrageous liar. Fiction and invention are of the very fabric of life.

    Henry Miller (1959). “The Henry Miller Reader”, p.247, New Directions Publishing
  • A book lying idle on a shelf is wasted ammunition. Like money, books must be kept in constant circulation... A book is not only a friend, it makes friends for you. When you have possessed a book with mind and spirit, you are enriched. But when you pass it on you are enriched threefold.

    Henry Miller (1969). “Mémoires, Plaidoiries Et Documents”, p.23, New Directions Publishing
  • Until he [man] has become fully human, until he learns to conduct himself as a member of the earth, he will continue to create gods who will destroy him. The tragedy of Greece lies not in the destruction of a great culture but in the abortion of a great vision.

    Men  
  • A book lying idle on a shelf is wasted ammunition. Like money, books must be kept in constant circulation. Lend and borrow to the maximum.

    Henry Miller (1969). “Mémoires, Plaidoiries Et Documents”, p.23, New Directions Publishing
  • The life of a creator is not the only life nor perhaps the most interesting which a man leads. There is a time for play and a time for work, a time for creation and a time for lying fallow. And there is a time, glorious too in its own way, when one scarcely exists, when one is a complete void. I mean-when boredom seems the very stuff of life.

    Men  
  • True strength lies in submission which permits one to dedicate his life, through devotion, to something beyond himself.

    Henry Miller (1962). “The Time of the Assassins: A Study of Rimbaud”, p.131, New Directions Publishing
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