Cat > Cat's Quotes

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  • #1
    Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o
    “Our lives are a battlefield on which is fought a continuous war between the forces that are pledged to confirm our humanity and those determined to dismantle it; those who strive to build a protective wall around it, and those who wish to pull it down; those who seek to mould it and those committed to breaking it up; those who aim to open our eyes, to make us see the light and look to tomorrow [...] and those who wish to lull us into closing our eyes”
    Ngugi wa Thiong'o

  • #2
    Lemony Snicket
    “I know that having a good vocabulary doesn't guarantee that I'm a good person, but it does mean I've read a great deal. And in my experience, well-read people are less likely to be evil.”
    Lemony Snicket, The Slippery Slope
    tags: humor

  • #3
    Salman Rushdie
    “What kind of idea are you? Are you the kind that compromises, does deals, accomodates itself to society, aims to find a niche, to survive; or are you the cussed, bloody-minded, ramrod-backed type of damnfool notion that would rather break than sway with the breeze? – The kind that will almost certainly, ninety-nine times out of hundred, be smashed to bits; but, the hundredth time, will change the world.”
    Salman Rushdie, The Satanic Verses

  • #4
    Seamus Heaney
    “I can't think of a case where poems changed the world, but what they do is they change people's understanding of what's going on in the world.”
    Seamus Heaney

  • #5
    Seamus Heaney
    “I rhyme
    To see myself, to set the darkness echoing.”
    Seamus Heaney, Death of a Naturalist

  • #6
    W.B. Yeats
    “Being Irish, he had an abiding sense of tragedy, which sustained him through temporary periods of joy.”
    William Butler Yeats

  • #7
    W.B. Yeats
    “Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold
    Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
    The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere the ceremony of innocence is lost
    The best lack all conviction, while the worst are filled with passionate intensity.”
    W.B. Yeats
    tags: yeats

  • #8
    T.S. Eliot
    “Some editors are failed writers, but so are most writers.”
    T.S. Eliot

  • #9
    T.S. Eliot
    “Teach us to care and not to care”
    T.S. Eliot

  • #10
    T.S. Eliot
    “Home is where one starts from. As we grow older
    The world becomes stranger, the pattern more complicated
    Of dead and living. Not the intense moment
    Isolated, with no before and after,
    But a lifetime burning in every moment
    And not the lifetime of one man only
    But of old stones that cannot be deciphered.
    There is a time for the evening under starlight,
    A time for the evening under lamplight
    (The evening with the photograph album).
    Love is most nearly itself
    When here and now cease to matter.
    Old men ought to be explorers
    Here or there does not matter
    We must be still and still moving
    Into another intensity
    For a further union, a deeper communion
    Through the dark cold and the empty desolation,
    The wave cry, the wind cry, the vast waters
    Of the petrel and the porpoise. In my end is my beginning.”
    T S Eliot

  • #11
    Chinua Achebe
    “...when we are comfortable and inattentive, we run the risk of committing grave injustices absentmindedly.”
    Chinua Achebe, The Education of a British-Protected Child: Essays

  • #12
    Nadine Gordimer
    “My answer is: Recognize yourself in others”
    Nadine Gordimer

  • #13
    Kazuo Ishiguro
    “What I'm not sure about, is if our lives have been so different from the lives of the people we save. We all complete. Maybe none of us really understand what we've lived through, or feel we've had enough time.”
    Kazuo Ishiguro, Never Let Me Go

  • #14
    C.S. Lewis
    “When the two people who thus discover that they are on the same secret road are of different sexes, the friendship which arises between them will very easily pass – may pass in the first half hour – into erotic love. Indeed, unless they are physically repulsive to each other or unless one or both already loves elsewhere, it is almost certain to do so sooner or later. And conversely, erotic love may lead to Friendship between the lovers. But this, so far from obliterating the distinction between the two loves, puts it in a clearer light. If one who was first, in the deep and full sense, your Friend, is then gradually or suddenly revealed as also your lover you will certainly not want to share the Beloved’s erotic love with any third. But you will have no jealousy at all about sharing the Friendship. Nothing so enriches an erotic love as the discovery that the Beloved can deeply, truly and spontaneously enter into Friendship with the Friends you already had; to feel that not only are we two united by erotic love but we three or four or five are all travelers on the same quest, have all a common vision.”
    C.S. Lewis, Four Loves

  • #15
    C.S. Lewis
    “I believe, to be sure, that any man who reaches Heaven will find that what he abandoned (even in plucking out his right eye) has not been lost: that the kernel of what he was really seeking even in his most depraved wishes will be there, beyond expectation, waiting for him in 'the High Countries'.”
    C.S. Lewis, The Great Divorce



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