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Nostalgia Quote by John Lancaster Spalding

"As memory may be a paradise from which we cannot be driven, it may also be a hell from which we cannot escape"

About this Quote

Memory is usually sold as a soft-focus sanctuary: childhood summers, lost loves, the comforting story you tell yourself about how you became you. Spalding flips that sentimental bargain into a moral warning. The line works because it refuses to let memory stay decorative. It makes memory architectural: a place you inhabit, not a scrapbook you browse. And once you accept that metaphor, the claustrophobia lands. Paradise and hell aren’t destinations you choose; they’re enclosures with locked gates.

Spalding, a late-19th-century American Catholic bishop, lived in an era obsessed with interior life and moral accounting: conscience, sin, redemption, the long echo of choices. In that context, “cannot be driven” hints at the inviolable core of the self, something no external authority can confiscate. It’s a defiant claim about human dignity: even poverty, illness, or political upheaval can’t evict you from the private refuge of recollection.

Then comes the twist: the same sovereignty is also a life sentence. “Cannot escape” implies memory’s punitive power - guilt that keeps replaying, grief that won’t resolve, humiliation that stays fresh decades later. The subtext is theological without being preachy: you carry your own judgment seat. There’s no exile from the mind, no border checkpoint where you can leave your past behind.

The quote endures because it captures a modern psychological truth before the vocabulary existed. Trauma, nostalgia, rumination, identity - Spalding compresses all of it into one clean, double-edged sentence.

Quote Details

TopicNostalgia
SourceHelp us find the source
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Spalding, John Lancaster. (2026, January 15). As memory may be a paradise from which we cannot be driven, it may also be a hell from which we cannot escape. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/as-memory-may-be-a-paradise-from-which-we-cannot-143114/

Chicago Style
Spalding, John Lancaster. "As memory may be a paradise from which we cannot be driven, it may also be a hell from which we cannot escape." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/as-memory-may-be-a-paradise-from-which-we-cannot-143114/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"As memory may be a paradise from which we cannot be driven, it may also be a hell from which we cannot escape." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/as-memory-may-be-a-paradise-from-which-we-cannot-143114/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

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John Lancaster Spalding (1840 - 1916) was a notable figure from USA.

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