Highlights from A Month in the Country
As I said in my initial post, “not much happens” in A Month in the Country by J.L. Carr, “but more than enough happens to be interesting.” 📚
Here’s what I highlighted as I read:
Then, like all people who give in too easily, he began to grub up a few restrictive clauses to recover face.
Must one excuse their defective sensibility towards their fellows because they are engrossed with God?
“People tire of color and shapes which stay in the same place. And they always believe that they have more time than they will have and that, someday, they’ll come on a weekday and have a proper look.” I should have said “we”—I’m just the same.
By nature we are creatures of hope, always ready to be deceived again, caught by the marvel that might be wrapped in the grubbiest brown paper parcel.
But that goes for most of us, doesn’t it? We look blankly at each other.
Now you know all about me. Go away: I’ve forgotten you already.
it was he who suggested that we were eating disposable archaeology.
You know how it is when a tricky job is going well because you’re doing things the way they should be done, when you’re working in rhythm and feel a reassuring confidence that everything’s unraveling naturally and all will be right in the end.
I would like to have examined it: I mean to say, almost everything has some purpose.
it had never occurred to me that too big a house might have the same appalling drawbacks as too small a one,
Our jobs are our private fantasies, our disguises, the cloak we can creep inside to hide.
like all truly great works of art, hammering you with its whole before beguiling you with its parts.
But there are times when man and earth are one, when the pulse of living beats strong, when life is brimming with promise and the future stretches confidently ahead like that road to the hills.
It is now or never; we must snatch at happiness as it flies.
because people one doesn’t care for, even dislike, make most of us feel uneasy when they appeal against their sentence.
We can ask and ask but we can’t have again what once seemed ours for ever—the way things looked, that church alone in the fields, a bed on a belfry floor, a remembered voice, the touch of a hand, a loved face. They’ve gone and you can only wait for the pain to pass.



















