Kary > Kary's Quotes

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  • #1
    Pablo Neruda
    “We the mortals touch the metals,
    the wind, the ocean shores, the stones,
    knowing they will go on, inert or burning,
    and I was discovering, naming all the these things:
    it was my destiny to love and say goodbye.”
    Pablo Neruda, Still Another Day

  • #2
    Oscar Wilde
    “Beauty is a form of Genius--is higher, indeed, than Genius, as it needs no explanation. It is one of the great facts of the world, like sunlight, or springtime, or the reflection in the dark waters of that silver shell we call the moon. It cannot be questioned. It has divine right of sovereignty. It makes princes of those who have it.”
    Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

  • #3
    George Orwell
    “It is Sunday afternoon, preferably before the war. The wife is already asleep in the armchair, and the children have been sent out for a nice long walk. You put your feet up on the sofa, settle your spectacles on your nose, and open the News of the World. Roast beef and Yorkshire, or roast pork and apple sauce, followed up by suet pudding and driven home, as it were, by a cup of mahogany-brown tea, have put you in just the right mood. Your pipe is drawing sweetly, the sofa cushions are soft underneath you, the fire is well alight, the air is warm and stagnant. In these blissful circumstances, what is it that you want to read about?

    Naturally, about a murder.”
    George Orwell, Decline of the English Murder

  • #4
    Marina Tsvetaeva
    “I’m kissing you now — across
    The gap of a thousand years.”
    Marina Tsvetaeva, My Poems...: Selected Poetry

  • #5
    Pablo Neruda
    “Our love was born
    outside the walls,
    in the wind,
    in the night,
    in the earth,
    and that's why the clay and the flower,
    the mud and the roots
    know your name.”
    Pablo Neruda

  • #6
    Pablo Neruda
    “I want to do with you what spring does with cherry trees.”
    Pablo Neruda

  • #7
    Pablo Neruda
    “I can write the saddest lines tonight.

    Write for example: ‘The night is fractured
    and they shiver, blue, those stars, in the distance’

    The night wind turns in the sky and sings.
    I can write the saddest lines tonight.
    I loved her, sometimes she loved me too.

    On nights like these I held her in my arms.
    I kissed her greatly under the infinite sky.

    She loved me, sometimes I loved her too.
    How could I not have loved her huge, still eyes.

    I can write the saddest lines tonight.
    To think I don’t have her, to feel I have lost her.

    Hear the vast night, vaster without her.
    Lines fall on the soul like dew on the grass.

    What does it matter that I couldn’t keep her.
    The night is fractured and she is not with me.

    That is all. Someone sings far off. Far off,
    my soul is not content to have lost her.

    As though to reach her, my sight looks for her.
    My heart looks for her: she is not with me


    The same night whitens, in the same branches.
    We, from that time, we are not the same.

    I don’t love her, that’s certain, but how I loved her.
    My voice tried to find the breeze to reach her.

    Another’s kisses on her, like my kisses.
    Her voice, her bright body, infinite eyes.

    I don’t love her, that’s certain, but perhaps I love her.
    Love is brief: forgetting lasts so long.

    Since, on these nights, I held her in my arms,
    my soul is not content to have lost her.

    Though this is the last pain she will make me suffer,
    and these are the last lines I will write for her.”
    Pablo Neruda

  • #8
    W. Somerset Maugham
    “She loved three things — a joke, a
    glass of wine, and a handsome man.”
    W. Somerset Maugham, The Moon and Sixpence

  • #9
    W. Somerset Maugham
    “I think I was a little disappointed in her. I expected then people to be more of a piece than I do now, and I was distressed to find so much vindictiveness in so charming a creature. I did not realize how motley are the qualities that go to make up a human being. Now I am well aware that pettiness and grandeur, malice and charity, hatred and love, can find place side by side in the same human heart.”
    W. Somerset Maugham, The Moon and Sixpence

  • #10
    Richard Brautigan
    “He learned about life at sixteen, first from Dostoevsky and then from the whores of New Orleans.”
    Richard Brautigan, Trout Fishing in America



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