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Patrick White
inspiration

Patrick White

1912 – 1990

5Quotes
5Themes
78Years

About Patrick White

" Born in London to Australian parents and educated at Cheltenham College and Cambridge, he settled in rural New South Wales after World War II with his Greek-Australian partner Manoly Lascaris. His major novels — including *Voss* (1957), *Riders in the Chariot* (1961), *The Solid Mandala* (1966), and *The Eye of the Storm* (1973) — are dense, demanding works that seek the spiritual and mythological beneath the material surface of Australian life. He was openly gay in an era when homosexuality was criminalized in Australia, and used the Nobel Prize money to establish the Patrick White Literary Award for neglected Australian authors.

The truth has to be made plausible before it is believed.

Patrick White

Quick Facts

Born
1912
Died
1990
Lifespan
78 years
Domain
inspiration
Quotes
5 collected
Key Themes
TruthHappinessAuthenticitySelf-KnowledgeMemory

Patrick White's Famous Quotes

5 quotes

The truth has to be made plausible before it is believed.

The Vivisector (1970)

Truth

Life is not always what one wants it to be, but to make the best of it as it is, is the only way of being happy.

The Solid Mandala (1966)

Happiness

A writer must be true to his temperament.

Voss (1957)

Authenticity

To understand oneself is the classic form of consolation; to delude oneself is the romantic.

The Twyborn Affair (1979)

Self-Knowledge

The past is a country from which we have all emigrated.

Flaws in the Glass: A Self-Portrait (1981)

Memory

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Frequently Asked Questions

Patrick White (1912–1990) was an Australian novelist who in 1973 became the first Australian to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature, cited for his "epic and psychological narrative art which has introduced a new continent into literature." Born in London to Australian parents and educated at Cheltenham College and Cambridge, he settled in rural New South Wales after World War II with his Greek-Australian partner Manoly Lascaris. His major novels — including *Voss* (1957), *Riders in the Chariot* (1961), *The Solid Mandala* (1966), and *The Eye of the Storm* (1973) — are dense, demanding works that seek the spiritual and mythological beneath the material surface of Australian life. He was openly gay in an era when homosexuality was criminalized in Australia, and used the Nobel Prize money to establish the Patrick White Literary Award for neglected Australian authors. Patrick White lived 1912 – 1990.