Matthew > Matthew's Quotes

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  • #1
    Alice Notley
    “We name us and then we are lost, tamed
    I choose words, more words, to cure the tameness, not the wildness”
    Alice Notley, Mysteries of Small Houses

  • #2
    Gilles Deleuze
    “If you're trapped in the dream of the Other, you're fucked.”
    Gilles Deleuze

  • #3
    Roberto Bolaño
    “Books are finite, sexual encounters are finite, but the desire to read and to fuck is infinite; it surpasses our own deaths, our fears, our hopes for peace.”
    Roberto Bolano

  • #4
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “I cannot sleep unless I am surrounded by books.”
    Jorge Luis Borges

  • #5
    Jacques Lacan
    “The real is what resists symbolization absolutely.”
    Jacques Lacan, The Seminar of Jacques Lacan: Book 1, Freud's Papers on Technique, 1953-1954

  • #6
    Knut Hamsun
    “I love three things, I then say. I love a dream of love I once had, I love you, and I love this patch of earth.

    And which do you love best?

    The dream.”
    Knut Hamsun, Pan

  • #7
    Laura (Riding) Jackson
    “People will think you brilliant
    only if you tell them what they know.
    To avoid being thought brilliant,
    avoid knowing what they know.
    Write to discover to yourself
    what you know.

    Anarchism is Not Enough”
    Laura Riding

  • #8
    Gilles Deleuze
    “A concept is a brick. It can be used to build a courthouse of reason. Or it can be thrown through the window.”
    Gilles Deleuze, A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia

  • #9
    Gilles Deleuze
    “Writing has nothing to do with meaning. It has to do with landsurveying and cartography, including the mapping of countries yet to come.”
    Gilles Deleuze

  • #10
    Wallace Stevens
    “God and the imagination are one.”
    Wallace Stevens

  • #11
    Wallace Stevens
    “The imagination loses vitality as it ceases to adhere to what is real.”
    Wallace Stevens, The Necessary Angel: Essays on Reality and the Imagination

  • #12
    Marilynne Robinson
    “I've developed a great reputation for wisdom by ordering more books than I ever had time to read, and reading more books, by far, than I learned anything useful from, except, of course, that some very tedious gentlemen have written books.”
    Marilynne Robinson, Gilead

  • #13
    Jacques Lacan
    “But what Freud showed us… was that nothing can be grasped, destroyed, or burnt, except in a symbolic way, as one says, in effigie, in absentia.”
    Jacques Lacan, The Seminar of Jacques Lacan: The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis

  • #14
    Aase Berg
    “Poetry is a will to put things right, an imaginary solution, a way of avoiding a catastrophe that already happened. Poetry is an escape, perhaps intelligent, perhaps idiotic, from a senile situation. It is a dialectical movement, it keeps tearing open the wounds while trying to heal them. Here we see the only acceptable path open up towards an existence worthy of human beings. Here the seriousness is unfaltering and absolute. Where it will lead no one knows.”
    Aase Berg
    tags: poetry

  • #15
    Aase Berg
    “I don’t think dreams mean anything; they just are. There’s no reason to translate them into logic.”
    Aase Berg

  • #16
    Novalis
    “Poetry heals the wounds inflicted by reason.”
    Novalis

  • #17
    Mina Loy
    “The flux of life is pouring its aesthetic aspect into your eyes, your ears - and you ignore it because you are looking for your canons of beauty in some sort of frame or glass case or tradition.”
    Mina Loy

  • #18
    C.D. Wright
    “I am suggesting that the radical of poetry lies not in the
    resolution of doubts but in their proliferation”
    C.D. Wright, Cooling Time: An American Poetry Vigil

  • #19
    C.D. Wright
    “Uniformity, in its motives, its goals, its far-ranging consequences, is the natural enemy of poetry, not to mention the enemy of trees, the soil, the exemplary life therein.”
    C.D. Wright

  • #20
    C.D. Wright
    “Almost none of the poetries I admire stick to their labels, native or adopted ones. Rather, they are vagrant in their identifications. Tramp poets, there you go, a new label for those with unstable allegiances.”
    C.D. Wright

  • #21
    Emanuel Lasker
    “Without error there can be no brilliancy”
    Emanuel Lasker

  • #22
    Emanuel Lasker
    “When you see a good move, look for a better one”
    Emanuel Lasker
    tags: chess

  • #23
    Mina Loy
    “There is no half-measure--NO scratching on the surface of the rubbish heap of tradition will bring about Reform, the only method is Absolute Demolition”
    Mina Loy

  • #24
    C.D. Wright
    “Nobody reads poetry, we are told at every inopportune moment. I read poetry. I am somebody. I am the people, too. It can be allowed that an industrious quantity of contemporary American poetry is consciously written for a hermetic constituency; the bulk is written for the bourgeoisie, leaving a lean cut for labor. Only the hermetically aimed has a snowball's chance in hell of reaching its intended ears. One proceeds from this realization. A staggering figure of vibrant, intelligent people can and do live without poetry, especially without the poetry of their time. This figure includes the unemployed, the rank and file, the union brass, banker, scientist, lawyer, doctor, architect, pilot, and priest. It also includes most academics, most of the faculty of the humanities, most allegedly literary editors and most allegedly literary critics. They do so--go forward in their lives, toward their great reward, in an engulfing absence of poetry--without being perceived or perceiving themselves as hobbled or deficient in any significant way. It is nearly true, though I am often reminded of a Transtromer broadside I saw in a crummy office building in San Francisco:



    We got dressed and showed the house

    You live well the visitor said

    The slum must be inside you.



    If I wanted to understand a culture, my own for instance, and if I thought such an understanding were the basis for a lifelong inquiry, I would turn to poetry first. For it is my confirmed bias that the poets remain the most 'stunned by existence,' the most determined to redeem the world in words..”
    C.D. Wright, Cooling Time: An American Poetry Vigil

  • #25
    C.D. Wright
    “Poetry is the language of intensity. Because we are going to die, an expression of intensity is justified.”
    C.D. Wright, Cooling Time: An American Poetry Vigil



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