Quote
"Remembrance wakes with all her busy train, Swells at my breast, and turns the past to pain."
"To turn from history to memory is to move from the disciplined effort to marshal evidence about the “truth” of the past to the slippery terrain on which individuals and groups invent traditions and record partisan versions of the past on the basis of which they seek to construct particular conditions in the present. “Memory,” Pierre Nora writes, is life, borne by living societies founded in its name. It remains in permanent evolution, open to the dialectic of remembering and forgetting, unconscious of its successive deformations, vulnerable to manipulation and appropriation. . . . [H]istory on the other hand, is the reconstruction . . . of what is no longer. . . . History, because it is an intellectual and secular production, calls for analysis and criticism. . . . At the heart of history is a critical discourse that is antithetical to . . . memory."

Memory is the faculty of the mind by which data or information is encoded, stored, and retrieved when needed. It is the retention of information over time for the purpose of influencing future action. If past events could not be remembered, it would be impossible for language, relationships, or personal identity to develop. Memory loss is usually described as forgetfulness or amnesia.
"Remembrance wakes with all her busy train, Swells at my breast, and turns the past to pain."
"I have the most ill-regulated memory. It does those things which it ought not to do and leaves undone the things it ought to have done."
"Memory, for me, is often a home where the furniture has been rearranged one too many times."
"Out of mind as soon as out of sight."
"To live in hearts we leave behind, Is not to die."
"Vague memories hang about the mind like cobwebs."