Jen > Jen's Quotes

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  • #1
    E.E. Cummings
    “since the thing perhaps is
    to eat flowers and not to be afraid”
    E.E. Cummings, E.E. Cummings: Complete Poems 1904-1962

  • #2
    E.E. Cummings
    “Now the ears of my ears are awake and now the eyes of my eyes are opened.”
    e.e. cummings

  • #3
    Margaret Atwood
    “I would like to be the air that inhabits you for a moment only. I would like to be that unnoticed and that necessary.”
    Margaret Atwood

  • #4
    Margaret Atwood
    “The temptation is to stay inside; to subside into the kind of recluse whom neighborhood children regard with derision and little awe; to let the hedges and weeds grow up, to allow the doors to rust shut, to lie on my bed in some gown-shaped garment and let my hair lengthens and spread out over the pillow and my fingernails to sprout into claws, while candle wax drips onto the carpet. But long ago I made a choice between classicism and romanticism. I prefer to be upright and contained—an urn in daylight.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Blind Assassin

  • #5
    Sylvia Plath
    “I can never read all the books I want; I can never be all the people I want and live all the lives I want. I can never train myself in all the skills I want. And why do I want? I want to live and feel all the shades, tones and variations of mental and physical experience possible in my life. And I am horribly limited.”
    Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath

  • #6
    Sylvia Plath
    “Is there no way out of the mind?”
    Sylvia Plath

  • #7
    Sylvia Plath
    “Out of the ash
    I rise with my red hair
    and I eat men like air.”
    Sylvia Plath, Ariel: The Restored Edition

  • #8
    Jeanette Winterson
    “What is it that you contain? The dead. Time. Light patterns of millennia opening in your gut. Every minute, in each of you, a few million potassium atoms succumb to radioactive decay. The energy that powers these tiny atomic events has been locked inside potassium atoms ever since a star-sized bomb exploded nothing into being. Potassium, like uranium and radium, is a long-lived radioactive nuclear waste of the supernova bang that accounts for you.

    Your first parent was a star.”
    Jeanette Winterson, Weight: The Myth of Atlas and Heracles

  • #9
    Margaret Atwood
    “You can wet the rim of a glass and run your finger around the rim and it will make a sound. This is what I feel like: this sound of glass. I feel like the word shatter. I want to be with someone.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #10
    Margaret Atwood
    “Home is where the heart is, I thought now, gathering myself together in Betty's Luncheonette. I had no heart any more, it had been broken; or not broken, it simply wasn't there any more. It had been scooped neatly out of me like the yolk from a hard-boiled egg, leaving the rest of me bloodless and congealed and hollow.
    I'm heartless, I thought. Therefore I'm homeless.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Blind Assassin

  • #11
    Margaret Atwood
    “A Paradox, the doughnut hole. Empty space, once, but now they've learned to market even that. A minus quantity; nothing, rendered edible. I wondered if they might be used-metaphorically, of course-to demonstrate the existence of God. Does naming a sphere of nothingness transmute it into being?”
    Margaret Atwood, Der blinde Mörder

  • #12
    Margaret Atwood
    “Why does the mind do such things? Turn on us, rend us, dig the claws in. If you get hungry enough, they say, you start eating your own heart. Maybe it's much the same.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Blind Assassin

  • #13
    Margaret Atwood
    “You want the truth, of course. You want me to put two and two together. But two and two doesn’t necessarily get you the truth. Two and two equals a voice outside the window. Two and two equals the wind. The living bird is not its labeled bones.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Blind Assassin

  • #14
    Friedrich Nietzsche
    “I go into solitude so as not to drink out of everybody's cistern. When I am among the many I live as the many do, and I do not think I really think. After a time it always seems as if they want to banish my self from myself and rob me of my soul.”
    Nietzsche Friedrich Wilhelm



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