"If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast"
About this Quote
The subtext is about youth as a scarce resource. “As a young man” is doing heavy lifting, implying that Paris is most potent when you’re broke enough to be porous to experience, ambitious enough to mistake hardship for romance, and restless enough to turn every café into a classroom. The phrase “moveable feast” is crucial: a feast suggests abundance, but moveable suggests impermanence. That tension is the point. Paris feeds you, then leaves you hungry in a productive way; the appetite becomes the souvenir.
Context sharpens the intent. Hemingway wrote A Moveable Feast decades later, looking back on the 1920s expatriate scene with equal parts tenderness and self-mythmaking. Postwar Paris becomes a moral alibi: a time when art felt urgent, friendship felt formative, and poverty could be narrated as purity. The sentence sells a version of cultural capital that’s also emotional insurance. Wherever life sends you, he implies, you’ll have an inner Paris to measure it against - and to escape into when the world turns dull.
Quote Details
| Topic | Nostalgia |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: A Moveable Feast (Ernest Hemingway, 1964)
Evidence: If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you, for Paris is a movable feast. (p. v (epigraph on title page)). Primary-source appearance: the sentence is printed as the epigraph on the title page/front matter of Hemingway’s posthumously published memoir A Moveable Feast (Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1964). Note that the book itself presents it as a stand-alone epigraph (commonly also described as “to a friend, 1950”), but the earlier underlying 1950 letter/utterance itself is not identified in the published book and is not located/verified here as a surviving, citable primary document. So the earliest verifiable publication is the 1964 book epigraph; claims about a 1950 letter or spoken remark are secondary unless the actual letter/transcript is produced. Other candidates (1) The Hemingway Collection (Ernest Hemingway, 2014) compilation97.9% ... If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life, it... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Hemingway, Ernest. (2026, February 26). If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-you-are-lucky-enough-to-have-lived-in-paris-as-35185/
Chicago Style
Hemingway, Ernest. "If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast." FixQuotes. February 26, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-you-are-lucky-enough-to-have-lived-in-paris-as-35185/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast." FixQuotes, 26 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-you-are-lucky-enough-to-have-lived-in-paris-as-35185/. Accessed 13 Mar. 2026.










