Jacob Wren > Jacob's Quotes

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  • #1
    Antonio Machado
    “My philosophy is fundamentally sad, but I’m not a sad man, and I don’t believe I sadden anyone else. In other words, the fact that I don’t put my philosophy into practice saves me from its evil spell, or, rather, my faith in the human race is stronger then my intellectual analysis of it; there lies the fountain of youth in which my heart is continually bathing.”
    Antonio Machado

  • #2
    Ariana Reines
    “I want to say something about bad writing. I'm proud of my bad writing. Everyone is so intelligent lately, and stylish. Fucking great. I am proud of Philip Guston's bad painting, I am proud of Baudelaire's mamma's boy goo goo misery. Sometimes the lurid or shitty means having a heart, which's something you have to try to have. Excellence nowadays is too general and available to be worth prizing: I am interested in people who have to find strange and horrible ways to just get from point a to point b.”
    Ariana Reines

  • #3
    Kristi Maxwell
    “Living together/ is one move closer/ to living apart”
    Kristi Maxwell

  • #4
    Joan Didion
    “People with self-respect exhibit a certain toughness, a kind of moral nerve; they display what was once called *character,* a quality which, although approved in the abstract, sometimes loses ground to the other, more instantly negotiable virtues.... character--the willingness to accept responsibility for one's own life--is the source from which self-respect springs.”
    Joan Didion, Slouching Towards Bethlehem

  • #5
    Lynne Tillman
    “The right to pursue happiness sends me and other Americans, even here where we are meant to resist outside temptation, on a hunt for it. If I’m not hungry, I might seek other forms of happiness, or pleasure, which is part of my American birthright, though the most misconceived notion of them or the most difficult to realize; I can pursue several means and ways to be happy, if I am able to forget what makes me habitually sad.”
    Lynne Tillman, American Genius

  • #6
    Inger Christensen
    “Happiness is the change that comes over me
    when I describe the world
    It comes over the world
    Happiness is the change that comes over me
    when I'm afraid
    It comes over the world
    For instance I can be afraid of and for the world
    afraid because the world consists among other things
    of me so swiftly dying”
    Inger Christensen, it

  • #7
    Laura (Riding) Jackson
    “She saw that the world was evil and yet craved for happines in it, which she thought to get by being evil herself. And she had no more happiness than I have had -- who chose the other way. There was something that was the same in each of us: we were alike in that we hated the world, and yet saw that it could not have been otherwise. And we both tried to love in spite of this hate: perhaps she was more successful than I. Therefore do not talk lightly of a new start. Evil as the old things were, they were all that we had. And if you feel that they are gone now, be sorrowful -- for it will be a long time before new things come to replace them, and we cannot say how much better they will be.”
    Laura Riding Jackson

  • #8
    Samuel Beckett
    “I hope I am not too old to take it up seriously, nor too stupid about machines to qualify as a commercial pilot. I do not feel like spending the rest of my life writing books that no one will read. It is not as though I wanted to write them. *1937”
    Samuel Beckett

  • #9
    William Gaddis
    “If it is not beautiful for someone, it does not exist.”
    William Gaddis, The Recognitions

  • #10
    Felisberto Hernández
    “I was in the situation of someone who has assumed, all his life, that madness was on eway, and suddenly in its grip, discovers that it is not only different from the way he'd imagined but that the person suffering from it is someone else, and that this someone else is not interested in finding out what madness is like: he is simply immersed in it, or it has descended on him, and that's that.”
    Felisberto Hernandez, Piano Stories

  • #11
    Chris Kraus
    “Because the world itself is now unfathomable, the only complexities that really count are small moments of domestic life that combine to trigger deep emotion. There is no longer any way of being poor in any interesting way in major cities like Manhattan”
    Chris Kraus, Torpor

  • #12
    Paul  Collins
    “If a book cover has raised lettering, metallic lettering, or raised metallic lettering, then it is telling the reader: Hello. I am an easy-to-read work on espionage, romance, a celebrity, and/or murder. To readers who do not care for such things, this lettering tells them: Hello. I am crap.
    Paul Collins, Sixpence House: Lost in a Town of Books

  • #13
    Teju Cole
    “To be alive, it seemed to me, as I stood there in all kinds of sorrow, was to be both original and reflection, and to be dead was to be split off, to be reflection alone.”
    Teju Cole, Open City

  • #14
    Enrique Vila-Matas
    “I don't like ferocious irony but rather the kind that vacillates between disappointment and hope. Okay?”
    Enrique Vila-Matas, Never Any End to Paris

  • #15
    Julio Cortázar
    “All profound distraction opens certain doors. You have to allow yourself to be distracted when you are unable to concentrate.”
    Julio Cortázar, Around the Day in Eighty Worlds

  • #16
    Pierre Joris
    “I like the imp / in impossibility ”
    Pierre Joris
    tags: poetry

  • #17
    Herman Melville
    “A smile is the chosen vehicle of all ambiguities.”
    Herman Melville, Pierre; or, The Ambiguities

  • #18
    James Baldwin
    “You think your pain and your heartbreak are unprecedented in the history of the world, but then you read. It was books that taught me that the things that tormented me most were the very things that connected me with all the people who were alive, who had ever been alive.”
    James Baldwin

  • #20
    Lyn Hejinian
    “A German goldsmith covered a bit of metal with cloth in the 14th century and gave mankind its first button. It was hard to know this as politics, because it plays like the work of one person, but nothing is isolated in history -- certain humans are situations.”
    Lyn Hejinian, My Life

  • #21
    Arno Schmidt
    “You see, for me [art]'s not one of life's ornaments, rococo relaxation to be greeted affably after a day of hard work; I'm inverted on this : for me it's my very breath, the one thing necessary, and all else is excretion and a latrine.”
    Arno Schmidt, Nobodaddy's Children: Scenes from the Life of a Faun, Brand's Heath, Dark Mirrors

  • #22
    Georg Christoph Lichtenberg
    “You believe I run after the strange because I do not know the beautiful; no, it is because you do not know the beautiful that I seek the strange.”
    Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, The Waste Books

  • #23
    Georg Christoph Lichtenberg
    “Diogenes, filthily attired, paced across the splendid carpets in Plato's dwelling. Thus, said he, do I trample on the pride of Plato. Yes, Plato replied, but only with another kind of pride.”
    Georg Christoph Lichtenberg

  • #24
    Machado de Assis
    “The best thing to do is to loosen my grip on my pen and let it go wandering about until it finds an entrance. There must be one – everything depends on the circumstances, a rule applicable as much to literary style as to life. Each word tugs another one along, one idea another, and that is how books, governments and revolutions are made – some even say that is how Nature created her species.”
    Machado de Assis

  • #25
    Roberto Bolaño
    “Of what is lost, irretrievably lost, all I wish to recover is the daily availability of my writing, lines capable of grasping me by the hair and lifting me up when I'm at the end of my strength. (Significant, said the foreigner.) Odes to the human and the divine. Let my writing be like the verses of by Leopardi that Daniel Biga recited on a Nordic bridge to gird himself with courage.”
    Roberto Bolaño, Antwerp

  • #26
    Fernando Pessoa
    “No intelligent idea can gain general acceptance unless some stupidity is mixed in with it”
    Fernando Pessoa

  • #27
    Joanna Russ
    “As my mother once said: The boys throw stones at the frogs in jest.

    But the frogs die in earnest.”
    Joanna Russ, The Female Man

  • #28
    Fernando Pessoa
    “Literature is the most agreeable way of ignoring life.”
    Fernando Pessoa, The Book of Disquiet

  • #29
    Chinua Achebe
    “In my definition I am a protest writer, with restraint.”
    Chinua Achebe, There Was a Country: A Personal History of Biafra

  • #30
    I have always imagined that Paradise will be a kind of library.
    “I have always imagined that Paradise will be a kind of library.”
    Jorge Luis Borges

  • #31
    Tana French
    “Our entire society is based on discontent. People wanting more and more and more. Being constantly dissatisfied with their homes, their bodies, their décor, their clothes, everything – taking it for granted that that’s the whole point of life. Never to be satisfied. If you are perfectly happy with what you got, especially if what you got isn’t even all that spectacular then you’re dangerous. You’re breaking all the rules. You’re undermining the sacred economy. You’re challenging every assumption that society is built on.”
    Tana French, The Likeness



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