Rickmasters > Rickmasters's Quotes

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  • #1
    G.K. Chesterton
    “He felt strange and vivid value in all the earth around him, in the grass under his feet; he felt the love of life in all living things.”
    G.K. Chesterton, The Man Who Was Thursday: A Nightmare

  • #2
    Philip Roth
    “Yes, alone we are, deeply alone, and always, in store for us, a layer of loneliness even deeper. There is nothing we can do to dispose of that. No, loneliness shouldn’t surprise us, as astonishing to experience as it may be. You can try yourself inside out, but all you are then is inside out and lonely instead of inside in and lonely. My stupid, stupid Merry dear, stupider even that your stupid father, not even blowing up buildings helps. It’s lonely if there are buildings and it’s lonely if there are buildings and it’s lonely if there are no buildings. There is no protest to be lodged against loneliness⎯not all the bombing campaigns in history have made a dent in it. The most lethal of manmade explosives can’t touch it. Stand in awe not of Communism, my idiot child, but of ordinary, everyday loneliness.”
    Philip Roth, American Pastoral

  • #3
    Don DeLillo
    “That clean but lonely feeling when there are no other cars. The traffic lights changing just for you.”
    Don DeLillo, Libra

  • #4
    Mervyn Peake
    “But there were also times when she cried out in the darkness biting her lips - cried out against the substance of her age: for it was now that she should be young; now above all other times, with the wisdom in her, the wisdom that was frittered away in her 'teens', set aside in her twenties, now, lying there, palpable and with forty summers gone. She clenched her hands together. What good was wisdom; what good was anything when the fawn is fled from the grove?”
    Mervyn Peake, Titus Alone
    tags: juno

  • #5
    Mervyn Peake
    “The sun sank with a sob and darkness waded in from all horizons so that the sky contracted and there was no more light left in the world, when, at this very moment of annihilation, the moon, as though she had been waiting for her cue, sailed up the night.”
    Mervyn Peake, Titus Alone

  • #6
    Don DeLillo
    “People stress the violence. That's the smallest part of it. Football is brutal only from a distance. In the middle of it there's a calm, a tranquility. The players accept pain. There's a sense of order even at the end of a running play with bodies strewn everywhere. When the systems interlock, there's a satisfaction to the game that can't be duplicated. There's a harmony.”
    Don DeLillo, End Zone

  • #7
    William Blake
    “The bird a nest, the spider a web, man friendship.”
    William Blake

  • #8
    Euripides
    “Do not mistake the rule of force
    for true power. Men are not shaped by force.”
    Euripides, The Bacchae

  • #9
    Euripides
    “Talk sense to a fool and he calls you foolish.”
    Euripides, The Bacchae

  • #10
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “Nostalgia in reverse, the longing for yet another strange land, grew especially strong in spring.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Mary

  • #11
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “He was powerless because he had no precise desire, and this tortured him because he was vainly seeking something to desire. He could not even make himself stretch out his hand to switch on the light. The simple transition from intention to action seemed an unimaginable miracle.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Mary

  • #12
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “...memory can restore to life everything except smells, although nothing revives the past so completely as a smell that was once associated with it.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Mary

  • #13
    Paul Auster
    “We exist for ourselves, perhaps, and at times we even have a glimmer of who we are, but in the end we can never be sure, and as our lives go on, we become more and more opaque to ourselves, more and more aware of our own incoherence. No one can cross the boundary into another – for the simple reason that no one can gain access to himself.”
    Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy



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