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  • #31
    William Blake
    “To see a World in a grain of sand,
    And a Heaven in a wild flower,
    Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand,
    And Eternity in an hour.”
    William Blake, Auguries of Innocence

  • #32
    William Blake
    “A good local pub has much in common with a church, except that a pub is warmer, and there's more conversation. ”
    William Blake

  • #33
    William Blake
    “Truth can never be told so as to be understood and not be believed.”
    William Blake

  • #34
    William Blake
    “The man who never alters his opinion is like standing water, and breeds reptiles of the mind.”
    William Blake, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell

  • #35
    Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
    “Her degree at least that of Princess, for she is my Queen and mistress; her beauty superhuman, for in her are realized all the impossible and chimerical attributes of beauty which poets give to their ladies; that her hair is gold; her forehead the Elysian fields; her eyebrows rainbows; her eyes suns; her cheeks roses; her lips coral; her teeth pearls; her neck alabaster; her breast marble; her hands ivory; she is white as snow; and those parts which modesty has veiled from human sight are such, I think and believe, that discreet reflection can extol them, but make no comparison.”
    Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quijote de la Mancha

  • #36
    Kakuzō Okakura
    “Nothing is more hallowing than the union of kindred spirits in art. At the moment of meeting, the art lover transcends himself. At once he is and is not. He catches a glimpse of Infinity, but words cannot voice his delight, for the eye has no tongue. Freed from the fetters of matter, his spirit moves in the rhythm of things. It is thus that art becomes akin to religion and ennobles mankind. It is this which makes a masterpiece something sacred. In the old days the veneration in which the Japanese held the work of the great artist was intense. The tea-masters guarded their treasures with religious secrecy, and it was often necessary to open a whole series of boxes, one within another, before reaching the shrine itself--the silken wrapping within whose soft folds lay the holy of holies. Rarely was the object exposed to view, and then only to the initiated.”
    Kakuzō Okakura, The Book of Tea



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