“If, before every action, we were to begin by weighing up the consequences, thinking about them in earnest, first the immediate consequences, then the probable, then the possible, then the imaginable ones, we should never move beyond the point where our first thought brought us to a halt. The good and evil resulting from our words and deeds go on apportioning themselves, one assumes in a reasonably uniform and balanced way, throughout all the days to follow, including those endless days, when we shall not be here to find out, to congratulate ourselves or ask for pardon, indeed there are those who claim that this is the much talked of immortality.”
José Saramago“old photographs are very deceiving, they give us the illusion that we are alive in them, and it's not true, the person we are looking at no longer exists, and if that person could see us, he or she would not recognise him -- or herself in us, 'Who's that looking at me so sadly,' he or she would say.”
José Saramago, All the Names“Though I had come into the world on 16 November 1922, my official documents show that I was born two days later, on the 18th. It was thanks to this petty fraud that my family escaped from paying the fine for not having registered my birth at the proper legal time.”
Jose Saramago“I think the novel is not so much a literary genre, but a literary space, like a sea that is filled by many rivers. The novel receives streams of science, philosophy, poetry and contains all of these; it's not simply telling a story.”
Jose Saramago“I presume that nobody will deny the positive aspects of the North American cultural world. These are well known to all. But these aspects do not make one forget the disastrous effects of the industrial and commercial process of 'cultural lamination' that the USA is perpetrating on the planet.”
Jose Saramago“I am traveling less in order to be able to write more. I select my travel destinations according to their degree of usefulness to my work.”
Jose Saramago“In the end, I am quite normal. I don't have odd habits. I don't dramatize. Above all, I do not romanticize the act of writing. I don't talk about the anguish I suffer in creating. I do not have a fear of the blank page, writer's block, all those things that we hear about writers.”
Jose Saramago“It is economic power that determines political power, and governments become the political functionaries of economic power.”
Jose Saramago“Death is present every day in our lives. It's not that I take pleasure in the morbid fascination of it, but it is a fact of life.”
Jose Saramago“The attitude of insolent haughtiness is characteristic of the relationships Americans form with what is alien to them, with others.”
Jose Saramago“A human being is a being who is constantly 'under construction,' but also, in a parallel fashion, always in a state of constant destruction.”
José Saramago