Eamonn > Eamonn's Quotes

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  • #1
    Zadie Smith
    “The very reason I write is so that I might not sleepwalk through my entire life.”
    Zadie Smith

  • #2
    Michel Faber
    “MERCY. It was a word she’d rarely encountered”
    Michel Faber, Under the Skin

  • #3
    Michel Faber
    “Shared suffering, she’d found, was no guarantee of intimacy.”
    Michel Faber, Under the Skin

  • #4
    Michel Faber
    “The past was dwindling, like something shrinking to a speck in the rear-view mirror, and the future was shining through the windscreen, demanding her full attention.”
    Michel Faber, Under the Skin

  • #5
    Henry Miller
    “There is no salvation in becoming adapted to a world which is crazy”
    Henry Miller

  • #6
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau
    “In all the ills that befall us, we are more concerned by the intention than the result. A tile that falls off a roof may injure us more seriously, but it will not wound us so deeply as a stone thrown deliberately by a malevolent hand. The blow may miss, but the intention always strikes home.”
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Reveries of the Solitary Walker

  • #7
    Paul Bowles
    “Immediately when you arrive in Sahara, for the first or the tenth time, you notice the stillness. An incredible, absolute silence prevails outside the towns; and within, even in busy places like the markets, there is a hushed quality in the air, as if the quiet were a conscious force which, resenting the intrusion of sound, minimizes and disperses sound straightaway. Then there is the sky, compared to which all other skies seem fainthearted efforts. Solid and luminous, it is always the focal point of the landscape. At sunset, the precise, curved shadow of the earth rises into it swiftly from the horizon, cutting into light section and dark section. When all daylight is gone, and the space is thick with stars, it is still of an intense and burning blue, darkest directly overhead and paling toward the earth, so that the night never really goes dark.
    You leave the gate of the fort or town behind, pass the camels lying outside, go up into the dunes, or out onto the hard, stony plain and stand awhile alone. Presently, you will either shiver and hurry back inside the walls, or you will go on standing there and let something very peculiar happen to you, something that everyone who lives there has undergone and which the French call 'le bapteme de solitude.' It is a unique sensation, and it has nothing to do with loneliness, for loneliness presupposes memory. Here in this wholly mineral landscape lighted by stars like flares, even memory disappears...A strange, and by no means pleasant, process of reintergration begins inside you, and you have the choice of fighting against it, and insisting on remaining the person you have always been, or letting it take its course. For no one who has stayed in the Sahara for a while is quite the same as when he came.
    ...Perhaps the logical question to ask at this point is: Why go? The answer is that when a man has been there and undergone the baptism of solitude he can't help himself. Once he has been under the spell of the vast luminous, silent country, no other place is quite strong enough for him, no other surroundings can provide the supremely satisfying sensation of existing in the midst of something that is absolute. He will go back, whatever the cost in time or money, for the absolute has no price.”
    Paul Bowles, Their Heads are Green and Their Hands are Blue: Scenes from the Non-Christian World

  • #8
    Paul Bowles
    “Everyone is isolated from everyone else. The concept of society is like a cushion to protect us from the knowledge of that isolation. A fiction that serves as an anesthetic.”
    Paul Bowles

  • #9
    Martin Amis
    “He awoke at six, as usual. He needed no alarm clock. He was already comprehensively alarmed.”
    Martin Amis, The Information

  • #10
    George Orwell
    “Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.”
    George Orwell, 1984



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