“You can ask me anything you like about my work, but I'll never talk about myself.”
As quoted by Valerie Lawson, in an interview: "The Mystic Life of P.L. Travers" (7 May 2003) http://www.abc.net.au/rn/relig/ark/stories/s844311.htm
“You can ask me anything you like about my work, but I'll never talk about myself.”
As quoted by Valerie Lawson, in an interview: "The Mystic Life of P.L. Travers" (7 May 2003) http://www.abc.net.au/rn/relig/ark/stories/s844311.htm
“Mary Poppins herself had flown away, but the gifts she had brought would remain for always..”
Source: Mary Poppins Opens the Door (1943), Ch. 8 "The Other Door"
Source: Mary Poppins (1934), Ch. 1 "East-Wind"
Hamadryad, the King Cobra in Ch. 10 "Full-Moon"
Mary Poppins (1934)
As quoted in No Word for Time: The Way of the Algonquin People (2001) by Evan T. Pritchard
The Paris Review interview (1982)
Context: My Zen master, because I’ve studied Zen for a long time, told me that every one (and all the stories weren’t written then) of the Mary Poppins stories is in essence a Zen story. And someone else, who is a bit of a Don Juan, told me that every one of the stories is a moment of tremendous sexual passion, because it begins with such tension and then it is reconciled and resolved in a way that is gloriously sensual. … A great friend of mine at the beginning of our friendship (he was himself a poet) said to me very defiantly, “I have to tell you that I loathe children’s books.” And I said to him, “Well, won’t you just read this just for my sake?” And he said grumpily, “Oh, very well, send it to me.” I did, and I got a letter back saying: “Why didn’t you tell me? Mary Poppins with her cool green core of sex has me enthralled forever.”
"The World of the Hero" (1976)
"What the Bee Knows" in Parabola : The Magazine of Myth and Tradition, Vol. VI, No. 1 (February 1981); later published in What the Bee Knows : Reflections on Myth, Symbol, and Story (1989)
The Paris Review interview (1982)
The Paris Review interview (1982)
“It is only through the ordinary that the extraordinary can make itself perceived.”
The Paris Review interview (1982)
As quoted in The New York Times (2 July 1978)
“We'll never forget you, Mary Poppins!”
Source: Mary Poppins Opens the Door (1943), Ch. 8 "The Other Door"
The Paris Review interview (1982)
Source: Myth, Symbol, and Meaning in Mary Poppins (2007), Ch. 2, p. 39
From "I Never Wrote for Children," by P. L. Travers, in the New York Times Magazine, July 2, 1978.
From "Personal View," by P. L. Travers, in the Sunday Times (London), issue 8575, December 11, 1988.