Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Colson Whitehead

Quote by Colson Whitehead

Work

The Underground Railroad

Browse quotes and source details for this work. more

Author

Colson Whitehead
Colson Whitehead

Colson Whitehead is an American novelist known for his distinctive literary style and profound insights into historical themes. His works cover a range of topics from slavery to modern urban life, with his 'New York Trilogy' and 'The Underground Railroad' being particularly notable. more

You May Also Like

“उसका मेरे लिए प्यार बस एक भ्रम था, जबकि मेरा प्यार सच्चा और स्पष्ट था। मैं हर संभव कोशिश करती रही, लेकिन उसके संदेहपूर्ण नज़रों ने मुझे हमेशा ये सोचने पर मजबूर कर दिया कि मैं कहाँ कमी कर रही हूँ। असल में, इसका मतलब सिर्फ इतना था कि आप कभी भी उस व्यक्ति के लिए पर्याप्त नहीं हो सकते, जो आपको चाहता ही नहीं।”

“The silence itself becomes an empty canvas, onto which any fantasy can be painted. When every last Palestinian journalist has been killed, maybe there will never have been any Palestinian journalists at all. Maybe they will have all been terrorists or supporters of terrorists or whatever adjacency to terror is sufficient to scare off those who, in possession of something approximating a soul, might otherwise look upon such obvious assassination and say: This is wrong. Absent an act to describe and the language to describe it, we are capable of believing nothing, or multiple contradictory things, or anything at all.”

“Let me tell you the rules of exploration and discovery. Number one: Question everything you're told. Nothing is true just because someone says it is. Number two: Gather information from as many sources as you can. Your mom isn't offering much... fine. But where else can you dig? Your terrain is much bigger than you think. And number three: You could be wrong. Do you know that Darwin was shockingly wrong about heredity? Everyone can come to the wrong conclusion. And if you do, you'll be in a good company.”

“Like, no one ever actually knows what the right thing to do is. I mean, you can think that you know what’s right, and you can tell yourself that you know, but at the point that you make your choice, like, in the moment, you’re never really certain. You just hope. You just act and you hope for the best, and maybe it turns out that you did the right thing, or maybe it turns out that you didn’t—in which case, all you can say is that at least you tried. But, like, the wrong thing to do, that’s often much clearer. Wrong is, like, easier to see than right, a lot of the time. It’s more definite—like, this is the line I know I will not cross, this is what I absolutely will not do.’ ‘Yeah,’ said Mira. ‘I see that.’ ‘So anyway,’ Shelley went on, ‘this is what I was thinking: that, like, the real choices that you make in your life, the really difficult, defining choices, are never between what’s right and what’s easy. They’re between what’s wrong and what’s hard.”

“To prove others wrong, pursue your interests and responsibilities – never use anger and sadness as motivation.” “অন্যদের ভুল প্রমাণ করতে, আপনার আগ্রহ এবং দায়িত্ব অনুসরণ করুন – রাগ এবং দুঃখকে অনুপ্রেরণা হিসাবে ব্যবহার করবেন না।”