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Iris Murdoch
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Iris Murdoch

poet, philosopher, novelist, prose writer, biographer, professor, writer

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1919  – 1999

Dame Jean Iris Murdoch was an Irish and British novelist and philosopher. Murdoch is best known for her novels about good and evil, sexual relationships, morality, and the power of the unconscious. Her first published novel, Under the Net (1954), was selected in 1998 as one of Modern Library's 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century. Her 1978 novel The Sea, The Sea won the Booker Prize. In 1987, she was made a Dame by Queen Elizabeth II for services to literature. In 2008, The Times ranked Murdoch twelfth on a list of "The 50 greatest British writers since 1945".

All Quotes by Iris Murdoch

“In almost every marriage there is a selfish and an unselfish partner. A pattern is set up and soon becomes inflexible, of one person always making the demands and one person always giving way.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Art is the final cunning of the human soul which would rather do anything than face the gods.”
— Iris Murdoch
“We can only learn to love by loving.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Every man needs two women: a quiet home-maker, and a thrilling nymph.”
— Iris Murdoch
“The cry of equality pulls everyone down.”
— Iris Murdoch
“All art is a struggle to be, in a particular sort of way, virtuous.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Happiness is a matter of one's most ordinary and everyday mode of consciousness being busy and lively and unconcerned with self.”
— Iris Murdoch
“One doesn't have to get anywhere in a marriage. It's not a public conveyance.”
— Iris Murdoch
“We live in a fantasy world, a world of illusion. The great task in life is to find reality.”
— Iris Murdoch
“We live in a fantasy world, a world of illusion. The great task in life is to find reality.”
— Iris Murdoch
“He felt neither guilt nor distress at the pleasure with which he was now filled by the proximity of this young creature, and when he discovered in himself even physical symptoms of his inclination he did not take fright, but continued cheerfully and serenely to see Nick whenever the ordinary run of his duties suggested it, congratulating himself upon the newly achieved solidity and rational calm of his spiritual life.”
— Iris Murdoch
“The chief requirement of the good life... is to live without any image of oneself.”
— Iris Murdoch
“We can only learn to love by loving.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Love is the extremely difficult realisation that something other than oneself is real. Love, and so art and morals, is the discovery of reality.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Only lies and evil come from letting people off.”
— Iris Murdoch
“So we live; a spirit that broods and hovers over the continual death of time, the lost meaning, the unrecaptured moment, the unremembered face, until the final chop that ends all our moments and plunges that spirit back into the void from which it came.”
— Iris Murdoch
“There is no substitute for the comfort supplied by the utterly taken-for-granted relationship.”
— Iris Murdoch
“I think being a woman is like being Irish... Everyone says you're important and nice, but you take second place all the same.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Being good is just a matter of temperament in the end.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Happiness is a matter of one's most ordinary everyday mode of consciousness being busy and lively and unconcerned with self. To be damned is for one's ordinary everyday mode of consciousness to be unremitting agonising preoccupation with self.”
— Iris Murdoch
“People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy the whole time to have such things about us.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Almost anything that consoles us is a fake.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Writing is like getting married. One should never commit oneself until one is amazed at one's luck.”
— Iris Murdoch
“All art is the struggle to be, in a particular sort of way, virtuous.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Bereavement is a darkness impenetrable to the imagination of the unbereaved.”
— Iris Murdoch
“To eat, teeth must meet.”
— Iris Murdoch
“The sin of pride may be a small or a great thing in someone's life, and hurt vanity a passing pinprick or a self-destroying or even murderous obsession. Possibly, more people kill themselves and others out of hurt vanity than out of envy, jealousy, malice or desire for revenge.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Whit Meynell was a sociologist; he had got into an intellectual muddle early on in life and never managed to get out.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Stuart was not dismayed by his sexual feelings about the boy.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Art is the final cunning of the human soul which would rather do anything than face the gods.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Perhaps misguided moral passion is better than confused indifference.”
— Iris Murdoch
“The cry of equality pulls everyone down.”
— Iris Murdoch
“But fantasy kills imagination, pornography is death to art.”
— Iris Murdoch
“I daresay anything can be made holy by being sincerely worshipped.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Perhaps when distant people on other planets pick up some wave-length of ours all they hear is a continuous scream.”
— Iris Murdoch
“The notion that one will not survive a particular catastrophe is, in general terms, a comfort since it is equivalent to abolishing the catastrophe.”
— Iris Murdoch
“A bad review is even less important than whether it is raining in Patagonia.”
— Iris Murdoch
“The only satisfied rationalists today are blinkered scientists or Marxists.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Serious reflexion about one's own character will often induce a curious sense of emptiness; and if one knows another person well, one may sometimes intuit a similar void in him. (This is one of the strange privileges of friendship.)”
— Iris Murdoch
“All metaphysical theories are inconclusively vulnerable to positivist attack.”
— Iris Murdoch
“The role of philosophy might be said to be to extend and deepen the self-awareness of mankind.”
— Iris Murdoch
“The novel, the novel proper that is, is about people's treatment of each other, and so it is about human values.”
— Iris Murdoch
“We know that the real lesson to be taught is that the human person is precious and unique; but we seem unable to set it forth except in terms of ideology and abstraction.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Love is the difficult realization that something other than oneself is real.”
— Iris Murdoch
“Time, like the sea, unties all knots.”
— Iris Murdoch