Julia > Julia's Quotes

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  • #1
    Anaïs Nin
    “I am only responsible for my own heart, you offered yours up for the smashing my darling. Only a fool would give out such a vital organ”
    Anais Nin

  • #2
    Margaret Atwood
    “The desire to be loved is the last illusion
    Give it up and you will be free.”
    Margaret Atwood

  • #3
    Zubair Ahsan
    “And I shall seek you endlessly, for
    I am a moth, and you’re my flame

    Knowing that I’ll burn at your touch
    I return, for you’re a fire; untamed”
    Zubair Ahsan

  • #4
    Zubair Ahsan
    “The Moth and Its Beloved

    Ask the moth the beauty of the candle
    And it will burn without a confession
    There is a secret to its longing
    For it feels no fear or hesitation

    The moth is too much in love with the flame Yet it does not appear under the sun
    For the moon’s light is far too feeble, and
    It gave up on its pursuit of the sun

    Just a sight of a candle is enough
    To remind it of its real beloved
    So it settles for that candle in reach,
    Revels in its heat, and asks to be burned”
    Zubair Ahsan, Of Endeavours Blue

  • #5
    Kelly Barnhill
    “A story can tell the truth...but a story can also lie. Stories can bend and twist and obfuscate. Controlling stories is power indeed.”
    Kelly Barnhill, The Girl Who Drank the Moon

  • #6
    Kelly Barnhill
    “Everything you see is in the process of making or unmaking or dying or living. Everything is in a state of change.”
    Kelly Barnhill, The Girl Who Drank the Moon

  • #7
    Kelly Barnhill
    “Knowledge is power, but it is a terrible power when it is hoarded and hidden.”
    Kelly Barnhill, The Girl Who Drank the Moon

  • #8
    Anne Carson
    “To feel anything
    deranges you. To be seen
    feeling anything strips you
    naked. In the grip of it
    pleasure or pain doesn’t
    matter. You think what
    will they do what new
    power will they acquire if
    they see me naked like
    this.
    If they see you
    feeling. You have no idea
    what. It’s not about them.
    To be seen is the penalty.”
    Anne Carson, Red Doc>

  • #9
    Franz Kafka
    “I think we ought to read only the kind of books that wound or stab us. If the book we're reading doesn't wake us up with a blow to the head, what are we reading for? So that it will make us happy, as you write? Good Lord, we would be happy precisely if we had no books, and the kind of books that make us happy are the kind we could write ourselves if we had to. But we need books that affect us like a disaster, that grieve us deeply, like the death of someone we loved more than ourselves, like being banished into forests far from everyone, like a suicide. A book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us. That is my belief.”
    Franz Kafka

  • #10
    Charles Dickens
    “Such is the influence which the condition of our own thoughts, exercises, even over the appearance of external objects. Men who look on nature, and their fellow-men, and cry that all is dark and gloomy, are in the right; but the sombre colours are reflections from their own jaundiced eyes and hearts. The real hues are delicate, and need a clearer vision.”
    Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist

  • #11
    Marcel Proust
    “There are perhaps no days of our childhood we lived so fully as those we believe we left without having lived them, those we spent with a favorite book.”
    Marcel Proust, Days of Reading

  • #12
    Alessandro Baricco
    “It's a strange grief… to die of nostalgia for something you you will never live.”
    Alessandro Baricco, Silk

  • #13
    Virginia Woolf
    “My brain hums with scraps of poetry and madness.”
    Virginia Woolf, Selected Letters

  • #14
    Susan Sontag
    “My library is an archive of longings.”
    Susan Sontag, As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks, 1964-1980

  • #15
    Maya Angelou
    “Any book that helps a child to form a habit of reading, to make reading one of his deep and continuing needs, is good for him.”
    Maya Angelou

  • #16
    Lemony Snicket
    “A library is like an island in the middle of a vast sea of ignorance, particularly if the library is very tall and the surrounding area has been flooded.”
    Lemony Snicket, Horseradish: Bitter Truths You Can't Avoid

  • #17
    Leo Tolstoy
    “Rummaging in our souls, we often dig up something that ought to have lain there unnoticed.”
    Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina

  • #18
    Victor Hugo
    “He never went out without a book under his arm, and he often came back with two.”
    Victor Hugo, Les Misérables

  • #19
    Victor Hugo
    “To learn to read is to light a fire; every syllable that is spelled out is a spark.”
    Victor Hugo

  • #20
    Victor Hugo
    “Reason is intelligence taking exercise. Imagination is intelligence with an erection.”
    Victor Hugo

  • #21
    Marcel Proust
    “Ever since I had ceased to see actors solely as the depositories, in their diction and acting ability, of an artistic truth, they had begun to interest me in their own right; with the feeling that I was watching the characters from some old comic novel, I was amused to see the naïve heroine of a play, her attention drawn to the new face of some young duke who had just taken his seat in the theatre, listen abstractedly to the declaration of love the juvenile lead was addressing to her, while he, through the rolling passion of this declaration, was in turn directing an enamoured eye at an old lady seated in a stage box, whose magnificent pearls had caught his interest; and in this way, largely owing to what Saint-Loup had told me about the private lives of actors, I saw another drama, silent but telling, being played out beneath the words of the play that was being performed, yet the play itself, however uninspired, was still something that interested me too; for within it I could feel germinating and blossoming for an hour in the glare of the footlights, created out of the agglutination on the face of an actor of another face of grease-paint and pasteboard, and on his individual soul the words of a part, the ephemeral and spirited personalities, captivating too, who form the cast of a play, whom one loves, admires, pities, whom one would like to meet again after the play is over, but who by that time have already disintegrated into the actors who are no longer what they were in their roles, into a script which no longer shows the actors’ faces, into a coloured powder that can be wiped off by a handkerchief, who have reverted, in a word, to elements that contain nothing of them, because their dissolution is complete as soon as the play has ended, and this, like the dissolution of a loved one, causes one to doubt the reality of the self and to meditate on the mystery of death.”
    Marcel Proust, The Guermantes Way

  • #22
    Marcel Proust
    “With that tender consideration which, in great crises, people who are crushed by grief shew even for the slightest discomfort of others:

    "Forgive me for disturbing your sleep," she said to me.

    "I was not asleep," I answered as I awoke.”
    Marcel Proust

  • #23
    Marcel Proust
    “Out of the fresh little green hearts of their foliage the lilacs raised inquisitively over the fence of the park their plumes of white or purple blossom, which glowed, even in the shade, with the sunlight in which they had been bathed.”
    Marcel Proust, In Search of Lost Time [volumes 1 to 7]

  • #24
    Marcel Proust
    “so that it would be in a real sense the death of ourselves, a death followed, it is true, by resurrection but in a different ego, the life, the love of which are beyond the reach of those elements of the existing ego that are doomed to die. It is they—even the meanest of them, such as our obscure attachments to the dimensions, to the atmosphere of a bedroom—that grow stubborn and refuse, in acts of rebellion which we must recognise to be a secret, partial, tangible and true aspect of our resistance to death, of the long resistance, desperate and daily renewed, to a fragmentary and gradual death such as interpolates itself throughout the whole course of our life, tearing away from us at every moment a shred of ourselves, dead matter on which new cells will multiply, and grow. And for a neurotic nature such as mine, one that is to say in which the intermediaries, the nerves, perform their functions badly—fail to arrest on its way to the consciousness, allow indeed to penetrate there, distinct, exhausting, innumerable, agonising, the plaint of those most humble elements of the personality which are about to disappear—the anxiety and alarm which I felt as I lay outstretched beneath that strange and too lofty ceiling were but the protest of an affection that survived in me for a ceiling that was familiar and low.”
    Marcel Proust, In Search Of Lost Time (All 7 Volumes)

  • #25
    F. Scott Fitzgerald
    “In his blue gardens men and girls came and went like moths among the whisperings and the champagne and the stars.”
    F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby



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