Dorian > Dorian's Quotes

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  • #1
    “I wish I wrote the way I thought
    Obsessively
    Incessantly
    With maddening hunger
    I’d write to the point of suffocation
    I’d write myself into nervous breakdowns
    Manuscripts spiralling out like tentacles into abysmal nothing
    And I’d write about you
    a lot more
    than I should”
    Benedict Smith

  • #2
    Emily Dickinson
    “If I read a book and it makes my whole body so cold no fire can warm me, I know that is poetry. If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I know that is poetry. These are the only ways I know it. Is there any other way?”
    Emily Dickinson, Selected Letters

  • #3
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    “Think of you! I do not think of you; you are always before my soul.”
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, The Sorrows of Young Werther

  • #4
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    “I was oppressed with the sensations I then felt; I sunk under the weight of them.”
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, The Sorrows of Young Werther

  • #5
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    “‎It has ever been my fate to give pain to those whose happiness I should have promoted.”
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, The Sorrows of Young Werther

  • #6
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    “They should be ashamed of themselves, all these sober people!”
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, The Sorrows of Young Werther

  • #7
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    “Say what you will of fortitude, but show me the man who can patiently endure the laughter of fools when they have obtained an advantage over him. 'Tis only when their nonsense is without foundation that one can suffer it without complaint.”
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, The Sorrows of Young Werther

  • #8
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    “I was on the point of breaking off the conversation, for nothing puts me so completely out of patience as the utterance of a wretched commonplace when I am talking from my inmost heart.”
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, The Sorrows of Young Werther
    tags: words

  • #9
    Ocean Vuong
    “There is so much I want to tell you, Ma. I was once foolish enough to believe knowledge would clarify, but some things are so gauzed behind layers of syntax and semantics, behind days and hours, names forgotten, salvaged and shed, that simply knowing the wound exists does nothing to reveal it.
    I don't know what I'm saying. I guess what I mean is that sometimes I don't know what or who we are. Days I feel like a human being, while other days I feel more like a sound. I touch the world not as myself but as an echo of who I was. Can you hear me yet? Can you read me?”
    Ocean Vuong, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

  • #10
    Virginia Woolf
    “Proust so titillates my own desire for expression that I can hardly set out the sentence. Oh if I could write like that! I cry. And at the moment such is the astonishing vibration and saturation and intensification that he procures—there’s something sexual in it—that I feel I can write like that, and seize my pen and then I can’t write like that. Scarcely anyone so stimulates the nerves of language in me: it becomes an obsession. But I must return to Swann.


    My great adventure is really Proust. Well—what remains to be written after that? I’m only in the first volume, and there are, I suppose, faults to be found, but I am in a state of amazement; as if a miracle were being done before my eyes. How, at last, has someone solidified what has always escaped—and made it too into this beautiful and perfectly enduring substance? One has to put the book down and gasp. The pleasure becomes physical—like sun and wine and grapes and perfect serenity and intense vitality combined.


    Jacques Raverat...sent me a letter about Mrs Dalloway which gave me one of the happiest moments days of my life. I wonder if this time I have achieved something? Well, nothing anyhow compared with Proust, in whom I am embedded now. The thing about Proust is his combination of the utmost sensibility with the utmost tenacity. He searches out these butterfly shades to the last grain. He is as tough as catgut & as evanescent as a butterfly's bloom. And he will I suppose both influence me & make out of temper with every sentence of my own.”
    Virginia Woolf



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