Kami > Kami's Quotes

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  • #1
    Dr. Seuss
    “You know you're in love when you can't fall asleep because reality is finally better than your dreams.”
    Dr. Seuss

  • #2
    “Decide what you want to be....
    Pay the Price ...
    And be what you want to be.”
    John A Widtsoe, In a Sunlit Land

  • #3
    “In life all must choose at times. Sometimes, two possibilities are good; neither is evil. Usually, however, one is of greater import than the other. When in doubt, each must choose that which concerns the good of others - the greater law - rather than that which chiefly benefits ourselves - the lesser law. The greater must be chosen whether it be law or thing. That was the choice made in Eden. ”
    John A. Widtsoe

  • #4
    “Earth, stars, and the vastness of space; yesterday, today and tomorrow; and the endlessly increasing knowledge of the relation of forces, present an illimitable universe of numberless phenomena. Only in general outline can the universe be understood. In its infinite variety of expression, it wholly transcends the human mind... In the midst of this complexity man finds himself. As he progresses from childhood to manhood, and his slumbering faculties are awakened, he becomes more fully aware of the vastness of his universe and of the futility of hoping to understand it in detail. Nevertheless, conscious man cannot endure confusion. Out of the universal mystery he must draw at least the general, controlling laws that proclaim order in the apparent chaos; and especially is he driven, by his inborn and unalterable nature, to know if possible his own place in the system of existing things. ”
    John A. Widtsoe

  • #5
    Pierre Berton
    “My best advice to writers is get yourself born in an interesting place.”
    Pierre Berton

  • #6
    Charles C. Mann
    “Puebla shopkeepers complained that the country was fighting an invasion of counterfeits from China—a Chinese imitation of a Chinese-made Mexican imitation of a Chinese original.”
    Charles C. Mann, 1493: How Europe's Discovery of the Americas Revolutionized Trade, Ecology and Life on Earth

  • #7
    Megan Whalen Turner
    “No 'Glory shall be your reward' for me. Oh, no, for me, it is, 'Stop whining' and 'Go to bed'.”
    Megan Whalen Turner, The King of Attolia

  • #8
    Megan Whalen Turner
    “I think a good book is a good book forever.
    I don't think they get less good because times change.”
    Megan Whalen Turner

  • #9
    Megan Whalen Turner
    “I CAN DO ANYTHING I WANT!”
    Megan Whalen Turner, The King of Attolia

  • #10
    Bess Streeter Aldrich
    “Junior was eleven. The statement is significant. There are a few peevish people in the world who believe that all eleven-year-old boys ought to be hung. Others, less irritable, think that gently chloroforming them would seem more humane. A great many good-natured folks contend that incarceration for a couple of years would prove the best way to dispose of them.”
    Bess Streeter Aldrich, Mother Mason

  • #11
    Bess Streeter Aldrich
    “Betty, who had found an old battered doll, was sitting quietly in the corner and industriously endeavoring to pick its one eye out”
    Bess Streeter Aldrich, Mother Mason

  • #12
    Bess Streeter Aldrich
    “I've tried to keep pleasant," Mabel went on. "You don't know how I've tried. I have that verse pinned up on my dresser, about

    The man worth while is the man who can smile,
    When everything goes dead wrong."


    "Take it down," Mother said cheerfully. "If there's a verse in the world that has been worked overtime, it's that one. I can't think of anything more inane than to smile when everything goes dead wrong, unless it is to cry when everything is passably right. That verse always seemed to me to be a surface sort of affair. Take it down and substitute 'I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills from whence cometh my help.' That goes to the heart of things--when you feel that strength, then the dead-wrong things begin to miraculously right themselves.”
    Bess Streeter Aldrich, Mother Mason

  • #13
    Bess Streeter Aldrich
    “You have, to dream things out. It keeps a kind of an ideal before you. You see it first in your mind and then you set about to try and make it like the ideal. If you want a garden,—why, I guess you've got to dream a garden.”
    Bess Streeter Aldrich, A Lantern in Her Hand

  • #14
    Bess Streeter Aldrich
    “You know, Grace, it's queer but I don't feel narrow. I feel broad. How can I explain it to you, so you would understand? I've seen everything...and I've hardly been away from this yard....
    I've been part of the beginning and part of the growth. I've married...and borne children and looked into the face of death. Is childbirth narrow, Grace? Or marriage? Or death? When you've experienced all those things, Grace, the spirit has traveled although the body has been confined. I think travel is a rare privilege and I'm glad you can have it. But not every one who stays at home is narrow and not every one who travels is broad. I think if you can understand humanity...can sympathize with every creature...can put yourself into the personality of every one...you're not narrow...you're broad.”
    Bess Streeter Aldrich, A Lantern in Her Hand

  • #15
    Bess Streeter Aldrich
    “The greatest antidote in the world for grief is work, and the necessity of work.”
    Bess Streeter Aldrich, A Lantern in Her Hand

  • #16
    Bess Streeter Aldrich
    “Small wonder that love would break under circumstances like these. Standing there in the soddie door, she seemed two personalities. One argued bitterly that it was impossible for love to keep going when there was no hope for the future, suggested that there was no use trying to keep it going. The other said sternly that marriage was not the fulfillment of a passion, - marriage was the fulfillment of love. And love was sometimes pleasure and sometimes duty.”
    Bess Streeter Aldrich, A Lantern in Her Hand

  • #17
    Hisham Matar
    “My father is both dead and alive. I do not have a grammar for him. He is in the past, present and future. Even if I had held his hand, and felt it slacken, as he exhaled his last breath, I would still, I believe, every time I refer to him, pause to search for the right tense. I suspect many men who have buried their fathers feel the same. I am no different. I live, as we all live, in the aftermath.”
    Hisham Matar, The Return: Fathers, Sons and the Land in Between

  • #18
    Hisham Matar
    “I heard the stories and registered them perhaps the way we all, from within our detailed lives, perceive facts--that is, we do not perceive them at all until they have been repeated countless times and, even then, understand them only partially. So much information is lost that every small loss provokes inexplicable grief. Power must know this. Power must know how fatigued human nature is, and how unready we are to listen, and how willing we are to settle for lies. Power must know that, ultimately, we would rather not know.”
    Hisham Matar, The Return

  • #19
    Hisham Matar
    “To be a man is to be part of this chain of gratitude and remembering, of blame and forgetting, of surrender and rebellion, until a son’s gaze is made so wounded and keen that, on looking back, he sees nothing but shadows. With every passing day the father journeys further into his night, deeper into the fog, leaving behind remnants of himself and the monumental yet obvious fact, at once frustrating and merciful—for how else is the son to continue living if he must not also forget—that no matter how hard we try we can never entirely know our fathers.”
    Hisham Matar, The Return: Fathers, Sons and the Land in Between

  • #20
    Hisham Matar
    “He had given me something priceless: namely, his confidence. I am grateful I was forced to make my own way. His disappearance did put me in need and make my future uncertain, but it turns out need and uncertainty can be excellent teachers.”
    Hisham Matar, The Return: Fathers, Sons and the Land in Between

  • #21
    Hisham Matar
    “And I suppose that is what we want from our mothers: to maintain the world and, even if it is a lie, to proceed as though the world could be maintained. Whereas my father was obsessed with the past and the future, with returning to and remaking Libya, my mother was devoted to the present. For this reason, she was the truly radical force in my adolescence.”
    Hisham Matar, The Return: Fathers, Sons and the Land in Between

  • #22
    Arnold Lobel
    “Blah, said Toad.”
    Arnold Lobel



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