The Thorn Birds

by

Colleen McCullough

Father Ralph de Bricassart Character Analysis

Father Ralph de Bricassart begins as a young, ambitious priest exiled to rural Australia after offending a bishop. He presents a polished, charming exterior and quickly wins influence through charm, intelligence, and social skill. But beneath his composure lies a lifelong conflict between worldly ambition and private longing. Ralph genuinely cares for the Cleary family—especially Meggie—but he constantly weighs his emotional attachments against his ecclesiastical goals. His connection with Meggie becomes the defining tension of his life. He desires her, yet he repeatedly chooses power over intimacy, rising through Church ranks while privately haunted by the love and intimacy he has sacrificed to do so. Even as he becomes a Cardinal, Ralph cannot fully sever his bond with Meggie or the land. He clings to memories of her and pours unspoken love into Dane, not realizing that Dane is his son until after Dane’s tragic death. Ralph wants both sanctity and possession, but in the end, he gains neither, and his death brings peace only when he accepts what he has lost.

Father Ralph de Bricassart Quotes in The Thorn Birds

The The Thorn Birds quotes below are all either spoken by Father Ralph de Bricassart or refer to Father Ralph de Bricassart . For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Forbidden Love and Desire Theme Icon
).
Chapter 3 Quotes

He kept his resentment from showing in his face; this parish had been excellent for his self-control. If once he was offered the chance to rise out of the obscurity his temper had landed him in, he would not again make the same mistake. And if he played his cards well, this old woman might be the answer to his prayers.

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart , Mary Carson
Page Number: 68
Explanation and Analysis:

Curious, how many priests were handsome as Adonis, had the sexual magnetism of Don Juan. Did they espouse celibacy as a refuge from the consequences?

Related Characters: Mary Carson (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 70
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

“Why not? I’m tired of living, Ralph, and I’m going to stop.” Her hard eyes mocked. “Do you doubt me? For over seventy years I’ve done precisely what I wanted to do when I wanted to do it, so if Death thinks he’s the one to choose the time of my going, he’s very much mistaken. I’ll die when I choose the time, and no suicide, either. It’s our will to live keeps us kicking, Ralph; it isn’t hard to stop if we really want to. I’m tired, and I want to stop. Very simple.”

Related Characters: Mary Carson (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 180
Explanation and Analysis:

After you’ve read the will, you’ll understand what I mean. While I burn in Hell beyond the borders of this life I know now, you’ll still be in that life, but burning in a hell with fiercer flames than any God could possibly manufacture. Oh, my Ralph, I’ve gauged you to a nicety! If I never knew how to do anything else, I’ve always known how to make the ones I love suffer. And you’re far better game than my dear departed Michael ever was.

Related Characters: Mary Carson (speaker), Michael Carson , Father Ralph de Bricassart
Related Symbols: Mary’s Will
Page Number: 191
Explanation and Analysis:

Father Ralph moved restlessly. He had not stopped to shed his Requiem vestments, nor had he taken a chair; like a dark and beautiful sorcerer he stood half in the shadows at the back of the room, isolated, his hands hidden beneath the black chasuble, his face still, and at the back of the distant blue eyes a horrified, stunned resentment. There was not even going to be the longed-for chastisement of rage or contempt; Paddy was going to hand it all to him on a golden plate of goodwill, and thank him for relieving the Clearys of a burden.

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart , Mary Carson , Padraic Cleary
Related Symbols: Mary’s Will
Page Number: 211
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

Pain was forgotten, Church was forgotten, God was forgotten. He found her mouth, forced it open hungrily, wanting more and more of her, not able to hold her close enough to assuage the ghastly drive growing in him. She gave him her neck, bared her shoulders where the skin was cool, smoother and glossier than satin; it was like drowning, sinking deeper and deeper, gasping and helpless. Mortality pressed down on him, a great weight crushing his soul, liberating the bitter dark wine of his senses in a sudden flood. He wanted to weep; the last of his desire trickled away under the burden of his mortality, and he wrenched her arms from about his wretched body, sat back on his heels with his head sunken forward, seeming to become utterly absorbed in watching his hands tremble on his knees. Meggie, what have you done to me, what might you do to me if I let you?

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Meggie Cleary
Page Number: 266
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

“I don’t like Meggie. But if you really dislike Meghann so much, I’ll call you Meg.” […] “Come on, Meg, kiss me. It’s your turn to make love to me, and maybe you’ll like that better, eh?”

I never want to kiss you again as long as I live, she thought […] Meggie had grown up with men who never removed a layer of their clothes in the presence of women, but open-necked shirts showed hairy chests in hot weather. They were all fair men, and not offensive to her; this dark man was alien, repulsive. Ralph had a head of hair just as dark, but well she remembered that smooth, hairless brown chest.

“Do as you’re told, Meg! Kiss me.”

Related Characters: Luke O’Neill (speaker), Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 330
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

“You will not leave, Ralph, and you know it well. You belong to the Church, you always have and you always will. The vocation for you is a true one. We shall pray now, and I shall add the Rose to my prayers for the rest of my life. Our Dear Lord sends us many griefs and much pain during our progress to eternal life. We must learn to bear it, I as much as you.”

Related Characters: Archbishop Vittorio di Contini-Verchese (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 359
Explanation and Analysis:

The grizzling scrap of humanity responsible for all this lay in a wicker bassinet by the far wall, not a bit appreciative of their attention as they stood around her and peered down. She yelled her resentment, and kept on yelling. In the end the nurse lifted her, bassinet and all, and put her in the room designated as her nursery.

“There’s certainly nothing wrong with her lungs.” Archbishop Ralph smiled, sitting on the edge of the bed and taking Meggie’s pale hand.

“I don’t think she likes life much,” Meggie said with an answering smile. How much older he looked! As fit and supple as ever, but immeasurably older. She turned her head to Anne and Luddie, and held out her other.

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Ludwig (“Luddie”) Mueller , Justine Cleary , Dane Cleary , Anne Mueller
Page Number: 376
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

Oh, dear God, dear God! No, not dear God! What’s God ever done for me, except deprive me of Ralph? We’re not too fond of each other, God and I. And do You know something, God? You don’t frighten me the way You used to. How much I feared You, Your punishment! All my life I’ve trodden the straight and narrow, from fear of You. And what’s it got me? Not one scrap more than if I’d broken every rule in Your book. You’re a fraud, God, a demon of fear. You treat us like children, dangling punishment. But You don’t frighten me anymore. Because it isn’t Ralph I ought to be hating, it’s You.

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 394
Explanation and Analysis:

Because at last he understood that what he had aimed to be was not a man. Not a man, never a man; something far greater, something beyond the fate of a mere man. Yet after all his fate was here under his hands, struck quivering and alight with him, her man. A man, forever a man. Dear Lord, couldst Thou not have kept this from me? I am a man, I can never be God; it was a delusion, that life in search of godhead. Are we all the same, we priests, yearning to be God? We abjure the one act which irrefutably proves us men.

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Meggie Cleary
Page Number: 409-410
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

Fee laughed. It came out as a snort, but it was a genuine laugh. Grown pallid with age and encroaching cataracts, her eyes rested on Meggie’s startled face, grim and ironic. “Do you take me for a fool, Meggie? I don’t mean Luke O’Neill. I mean Dane is the living image of Ralph de Bricassart.”

Related Characters: Fiona Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart , Luke O’Neill , Meggie Cleary , Dane Cleary , Frank Cleary
Page Number: 484
Explanation and Analysis:

“Each of us has something within us which won’t be denied, even if it makes us scream aloud to die. We are what we are, that’s all. Like the old Celtic legend of the bird with the thorn in its breast, singing its heart out and dying. Because it has to, it’s driven to. We can know what we do wrong even before we do it, but self-knowledge can’t affect or change the outcome, can it? Everyone singing his own little song, convinced it’s the most wonderful song the world has ever heard. Don’t you see? We create our own thorns, and never stop to count the cost. All we can do is suffer the pain, and tell ourselves it was well worth it.”

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Related Symbols: The Thorn Bird
Page Number: 508
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 17 Quotes

“I’m going to be a priest,” said Dane. “I’m going to enter His service completely, offer everything I have and am to Him, as His priest. Poverty, chastity and obedience. He demands no less than all from His chosen servants. It won’t be easy, but I’m going to do it.”

The look in her eyes! As if he had killed her, ground her into the dust beneath his foot. That he should have to suffer this he hadn’t known, dreaming only of her pride in him, her pleasure at giving her son to God. They said she’d be thrilled, uplifted, completely in accord. Instead she was staring at him as if the prospect of his priesthood was her death sentence.

Related Characters: Dane Cleary (speaker), Meggie Cleary , Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 550-551
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

Dane’s eyes, yet not Dane’s eyes. Looking at her; bewildered, full of pain, helpless.

“I have no son,” he said, “but among the many, many things I learned from yours was that no matter how hard it is, my first and only allegiance is to Almighty God.”

“Dane was your son too,” said Meggie.

He stared at her blankly. “What?”

“I said, Dane was your son too. When I left Matlock Island I was pregnant. Dane was yours, not Luke O’Neill’s.”

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Dane Cleary , Luke O’Neill
Page Number: 646
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 19 Quotes

The tension began to leave her; the worst of it was over. “What I like—no, love—about you the most is that you give me such a good run for my money I never do quite catch up.”

His shoulders shook. “Then look at the future this way, Herzchen. Living in the same house with me might afford you the opportunity to see how it can be done.” He kissed her brows, her cheeks, her eyelids. “I would have you no other way than the way you are, Justine. Not a freckle of your face or a cell of your brain.”

Related Characters: Rainer Moerling Hartheim (speaker), Justine Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart , Meggie Cleary
Page Number: 691
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire The Thorn Birds LitChart as a printable PDF.
The Thorn Birds PDF

Father Ralph de Bricassart Quotes in The Thorn Birds

The The Thorn Birds quotes below are all either spoken by Father Ralph de Bricassart or refer to Father Ralph de Bricassart . For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Forbidden Love and Desire Theme Icon
).
Chapter 3 Quotes

He kept his resentment from showing in his face; this parish had been excellent for his self-control. If once he was offered the chance to rise out of the obscurity his temper had landed him in, he would not again make the same mistake. And if he played his cards well, this old woman might be the answer to his prayers.

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart , Mary Carson
Page Number: 68
Explanation and Analysis:

Curious, how many priests were handsome as Adonis, had the sexual magnetism of Don Juan. Did they espouse celibacy as a refuge from the consequences?

Related Characters: Mary Carson (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 70
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

“Why not? I’m tired of living, Ralph, and I’m going to stop.” Her hard eyes mocked. “Do you doubt me? For over seventy years I’ve done precisely what I wanted to do when I wanted to do it, so if Death thinks he’s the one to choose the time of my going, he’s very much mistaken. I’ll die when I choose the time, and no suicide, either. It’s our will to live keeps us kicking, Ralph; it isn’t hard to stop if we really want to. I’m tired, and I want to stop. Very simple.”

Related Characters: Mary Carson (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 180
Explanation and Analysis:

After you’ve read the will, you’ll understand what I mean. While I burn in Hell beyond the borders of this life I know now, you’ll still be in that life, but burning in a hell with fiercer flames than any God could possibly manufacture. Oh, my Ralph, I’ve gauged you to a nicety! If I never knew how to do anything else, I’ve always known how to make the ones I love suffer. And you’re far better game than my dear departed Michael ever was.

Related Characters: Mary Carson (speaker), Michael Carson , Father Ralph de Bricassart
Related Symbols: Mary’s Will
Page Number: 191
Explanation and Analysis:

Father Ralph moved restlessly. He had not stopped to shed his Requiem vestments, nor had he taken a chair; like a dark and beautiful sorcerer he stood half in the shadows at the back of the room, isolated, his hands hidden beneath the black chasuble, his face still, and at the back of the distant blue eyes a horrified, stunned resentment. There was not even going to be the longed-for chastisement of rage or contempt; Paddy was going to hand it all to him on a golden plate of goodwill, and thank him for relieving the Clearys of a burden.

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart , Mary Carson , Padraic Cleary
Related Symbols: Mary’s Will
Page Number: 211
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

Pain was forgotten, Church was forgotten, God was forgotten. He found her mouth, forced it open hungrily, wanting more and more of her, not able to hold her close enough to assuage the ghastly drive growing in him. She gave him her neck, bared her shoulders where the skin was cool, smoother and glossier than satin; it was like drowning, sinking deeper and deeper, gasping and helpless. Mortality pressed down on him, a great weight crushing his soul, liberating the bitter dark wine of his senses in a sudden flood. He wanted to weep; the last of his desire trickled away under the burden of his mortality, and he wrenched her arms from about his wretched body, sat back on his heels with his head sunken forward, seeming to become utterly absorbed in watching his hands tremble on his knees. Meggie, what have you done to me, what might you do to me if I let you?

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Meggie Cleary
Page Number: 266
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

“I don’t like Meggie. But if you really dislike Meghann so much, I’ll call you Meg.” […] “Come on, Meg, kiss me. It’s your turn to make love to me, and maybe you’ll like that better, eh?”

I never want to kiss you again as long as I live, she thought […] Meggie had grown up with men who never removed a layer of their clothes in the presence of women, but open-necked shirts showed hairy chests in hot weather. They were all fair men, and not offensive to her; this dark man was alien, repulsive. Ralph had a head of hair just as dark, but well she remembered that smooth, hairless brown chest.

“Do as you’re told, Meg! Kiss me.”

Related Characters: Luke O’Neill (speaker), Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 330
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

“You will not leave, Ralph, and you know it well. You belong to the Church, you always have and you always will. The vocation for you is a true one. We shall pray now, and I shall add the Rose to my prayers for the rest of my life. Our Dear Lord sends us many griefs and much pain during our progress to eternal life. We must learn to bear it, I as much as you.”

Related Characters: Archbishop Vittorio di Contini-Verchese (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 359
Explanation and Analysis:

The grizzling scrap of humanity responsible for all this lay in a wicker bassinet by the far wall, not a bit appreciative of their attention as they stood around her and peered down. She yelled her resentment, and kept on yelling. In the end the nurse lifted her, bassinet and all, and put her in the room designated as her nursery.

“There’s certainly nothing wrong with her lungs.” Archbishop Ralph smiled, sitting on the edge of the bed and taking Meggie’s pale hand.

“I don’t think she likes life much,” Meggie said with an answering smile. How much older he looked! As fit and supple as ever, but immeasurably older. She turned her head to Anne and Luddie, and held out her other.

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Ludwig (“Luddie”) Mueller , Justine Cleary , Dane Cleary , Anne Mueller
Page Number: 376
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

Oh, dear God, dear God! No, not dear God! What’s God ever done for me, except deprive me of Ralph? We’re not too fond of each other, God and I. And do You know something, God? You don’t frighten me the way You used to. How much I feared You, Your punishment! All my life I’ve trodden the straight and narrow, from fear of You. And what’s it got me? Not one scrap more than if I’d broken every rule in Your book. You’re a fraud, God, a demon of fear. You treat us like children, dangling punishment. But You don’t frighten me anymore. Because it isn’t Ralph I ought to be hating, it’s You.

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 394
Explanation and Analysis:

Because at last he understood that what he had aimed to be was not a man. Not a man, never a man; something far greater, something beyond the fate of a mere man. Yet after all his fate was here under his hands, struck quivering and alight with him, her man. A man, forever a man. Dear Lord, couldst Thou not have kept this from me? I am a man, I can never be God; it was a delusion, that life in search of godhead. Are we all the same, we priests, yearning to be God? We abjure the one act which irrefutably proves us men.

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Meggie Cleary
Page Number: 409-410
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

Fee laughed. It came out as a snort, but it was a genuine laugh. Grown pallid with age and encroaching cataracts, her eyes rested on Meggie’s startled face, grim and ironic. “Do you take me for a fool, Meggie? I don’t mean Luke O’Neill. I mean Dane is the living image of Ralph de Bricassart.”

Related Characters: Fiona Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart , Luke O’Neill , Meggie Cleary , Dane Cleary , Frank Cleary
Page Number: 484
Explanation and Analysis:

“Each of us has something within us which won’t be denied, even if it makes us scream aloud to die. We are what we are, that’s all. Like the old Celtic legend of the bird with the thorn in its breast, singing its heart out and dying. Because it has to, it’s driven to. We can know what we do wrong even before we do it, but self-knowledge can’t affect or change the outcome, can it? Everyone singing his own little song, convinced it’s the most wonderful song the world has ever heard. Don’t you see? We create our own thorns, and never stop to count the cost. All we can do is suffer the pain, and tell ourselves it was well worth it.”

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Related Symbols: The Thorn Bird
Page Number: 508
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 17 Quotes

“I’m going to be a priest,” said Dane. “I’m going to enter His service completely, offer everything I have and am to Him, as His priest. Poverty, chastity and obedience. He demands no less than all from His chosen servants. It won’t be easy, but I’m going to do it.”

The look in her eyes! As if he had killed her, ground her into the dust beneath his foot. That he should have to suffer this he hadn’t known, dreaming only of her pride in him, her pleasure at giving her son to God. They said she’d be thrilled, uplifted, completely in accord. Instead she was staring at him as if the prospect of his priesthood was her death sentence.

Related Characters: Dane Cleary (speaker), Meggie Cleary , Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number: 550-551
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

Dane’s eyes, yet not Dane’s eyes. Looking at her; bewildered, full of pain, helpless.

“I have no son,” he said, “but among the many, many things I learned from yours was that no matter how hard it is, my first and only allegiance is to Almighty God.”

“Dane was your son too,” said Meggie.

He stared at her blankly. “What?”

“I said, Dane was your son too. When I left Matlock Island I was pregnant. Dane was yours, not Luke O’Neill’s.”

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Dane Cleary , Luke O’Neill
Page Number: 646
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 19 Quotes

The tension began to leave her; the worst of it was over. “What I like—no, love—about you the most is that you give me such a good run for my money I never do quite catch up.”

His shoulders shook. “Then look at the future this way, Herzchen. Living in the same house with me might afford you the opportunity to see how it can be done.” He kissed her brows, her cheeks, her eyelids. “I would have you no other way than the way you are, Justine. Not a freckle of your face or a cell of your brain.”

Related Characters: Rainer Moerling Hartheim (speaker), Justine Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart , Meggie Cleary
Page Number: 691
Explanation and Analysis: