Lucy > Lucy's Quotes

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  • #1
    Jean-Paul Sartre
    “I am going to outlive myself. Eat, sleep, sleep, eat. Exist slowly, softly, like these trees, like a puddle of water, like the red bench in the streetcar.”
    Jean-Paul Sartre, Nausea

  • #1
    Arundhati Roy
    “Some things come with their own punishments. Like bedrooms with built-in cupboards. They would all learn more about punishments soon. That they came in different sizes. That some were so big they were like cupboards with built-in bedrooms. You could spend your whole life in them, wandering through dark shelving.”
    Arundhati Roy, The God of Small Things

  • #2
    Clarice Lispector
    “…she wanted [her pupils] to know, through their Portuguese class, that the taste of a fruit is in the contact of the fruit with the palate and not in the fruit itself.”
    Clarice Lispector, An Apprenticeship or The Book of Pleasures

  • #3
    Virginia Woolf
    “How much better is silence; the coffee cup, the table. How much better to sit by myself like the solitary sea-bird that opens its wings on the stake. Let me sit here for ever with bare things, this coffee cup, this knife, this fork, things in themselves, myself being myself.”
    Virginia Woolf, The Waves

  • #4
    F. Scott Fitzgerald
    “So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”
    F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby

  • #6
    Alexis Wright
    “The groper hole was in an abyss, an ancient reef crater of a sea palace, a circular fish city full of underground caves where the huge fish liked to live. A place where they could have returned to from the land in ancient times like the palaeontologists say, or skies if they flew like the elders say in the Law of the Dreamtime. Millions of years ago, what was it like? Remember! Were skies blue then?”
    Alexis Wright, Carpentaria

  • #7
    Clarice Lispector
    “She believed in angels, and, because she believed, they existed”
    Clarice Lispector, The Hour of the Star

  • #8
    Hermann Hesse
    “. . . gentleness is stronger than severity, water is stronger than rock, love is stronger than force.”
    Hermann Hesse, Siddhartha

  • #9
    Hermann Hesse
    “It may be important to great thinkers to examine the world, to explain and despise it. But I think it is only important to love the world, not to despise it, not for us to hate each other, but to be able to regard the world and ourselves and all beings with love, admiration and respect.”
    Hermann Hesse, Siddhartha



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