Maggie Hand > Maggie's Quotes

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  • #1
    Warsan Shire
    “I’m not sad, but the boys who are looking for sad girls always find me. I’m not a girl anymore and I’m not sad anymore. You want me to be a tragic backdrop so that you can appear to be illuminated, so that people can say ‘Wow, isn't he so terribly brave to love a girl who is so obviously sad?’ You think I’ll be the dark sky so you can be the star? I’ll swallow you whole.”
    Warsan Shire

  • #2
    Chuck Palahniuk
    “No matter how much you think you love somebody, you'll step back when the pool of their blood edges up too close.”
    Chuck Palahniuk, Invisible Monsters

  • #3
    Stephen  King
    “When it comes to the past, everyone writes fiction.”
    Stephen King, Joyland
    tags: past

  • #4
    Sylvia Plath
    “I guess I should have reacted the way most of the other girls were, but I couldn't get myself to react. I felt very still and very empty, the way the eye of a tornado must feel, moving dully along in the middle of the surrounding hullabaloo.”
    Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar

  • #5
    Sylvia Plath
    “When they asked some old Roman philosopher or other how he wanted to die, he said he would open his veins in a warm bath. I thought it would be easy, lying in the tup and seeing the redness flower from my wrists, flush after flush through the clear water, till I sank into sleep under a surface gaudy as poppies.”
    Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar

  • #6
    Sylvia Plath
    “I felt like a racehorse in a world without racetracks or a champion college footballer suddenly confronted by Wall Street and a business suit, his days of glory shrunk to a little gold cup on his mantel with a date engraved on it like the date on a tombstone.”
    Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar

  • #7
    Sylvia Plath
    “We'll act as if all this were a bad dream."

    A bad dream.

    To the person in the bell jar, blank and stopped as a dead baby, the world itself is the bad dream.

    A bad dream.

    I remembered everything.

    I remembered the cadavers and Doreen and the story of the fig tree and Marco's diamond and the sailor on the Common and Doctor Gordon's wall-eyed nurse and the broken thermometers and the Negro with his two kinds of beans and the twenty pounds I gained on insulin and the rock that bulged between sky and sea like a gray skull.

    Maybe forgetfulness, like a kind snow, would numb and cover them.

    But they were part of me. They were my landscape.”
    Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar



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