"A simple grateful thought turned heavenwards is the most perfect prayer"
About this Quote
Lessing’s line sounds like a devotional bumper sticker until you hear the contrarian thrum underneath it. She strips prayer of its usual pageantry - doctrine, language, performance - and redefines it as a private mental motion: a “simple grateful thought” that turns “heavenwards.” The elegance is tactical. By shrinking prayer to its smallest unit, she makes it hard to gatekeep. No priestly vocabulary required, no proof of piety, no public display. Just attention and gratitude, aimed outward.
The subtext is Lessing’s skepticism toward institutions that claim to mediate the sacred. Gratitude here isn’t submission; it’s a form of clarity. In a century that watched ideology harden into brutality, Lessing often returned to the ways belief can become coercive - political, religious, even psychological. This sentence quietly refuses that coercion. It suggests the “most perfect” prayer is one that can’t be commandeered, because it happens before dogma gets its hands on it.
“Turned heavenwards” is also doing interesting double duty. It can mean literally toward God, but it also reads as a directional metaphor: upward, beyond the self, away from grievance. Lessing isn’t selling comfort; she’s offering a discipline. The prayer is “perfect” not because it earns reward, but because it recalibrates the mind - an inner act that resists cynicism without needing to pretend the world is gentle.
The subtext is Lessing’s skepticism toward institutions that claim to mediate the sacred. Gratitude here isn’t submission; it’s a form of clarity. In a century that watched ideology harden into brutality, Lessing often returned to the ways belief can become coercive - political, religious, even psychological. This sentence quietly refuses that coercion. It suggests the “most perfect” prayer is one that can’t be commandeered, because it happens before dogma gets its hands on it.
“Turned heavenwards” is also doing interesting double duty. It can mean literally toward God, but it also reads as a directional metaphor: upward, beyond the self, away from grievance. Lessing isn’t selling comfort; she’s offering a discipline. The prayer is “perfect” not because it earns reward, but because it recalibrates the mind - an inner act that resists cynicism without needing to pretend the world is gentle.
Quote Details
| Topic | Gratitude |
|---|
More Quotes by Doris
Add to List



