Hagar > Hagar's Quotes

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  • #91
    Karl Kraus
    “Culture is the tacit agreement to let the means of subsistence disappear behind the purpose of existence.”
    Karl Kraus

  • #92
    Karl Kraus
    “I had a terrible vision: I saw an encyclopedia walk up to a polymath and open him up.”
    Karl Kraus

  • #93
    David Foster Wallace
    “Mario, what do you get when you cross an insomniac, an unwilling agnostic and a dyslexic?"

    "I give."

    "You get someone who stays up all night torturing himself mentally over the question of whether or not there's a dog.”
    David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

  • #94
    Leonard Cohen
    “The last refuge of the insomniac is a sense of superiority to the sleeping world.”
    Leonard Cohen

  • #95
    Banana Yoshimoto
    “That's the advantage of insomnia. People who go to be early always complain that the night is too short, but for those of us who stay up all night, it can feel as long as a lifetime. You get a lot done”
    Banana Yoshimoto, N.P

  • #96
    Raymond Carver
    “I've crossed some kind of invisible line. I feel as if I've come to a place I never thought I'd have to come to. And I don't know how I got here. It's a strange place. It's a place where a little harmless dreaming and then some sleepy, early-morning talk has led me into considerations of death and annihilation.”
    Raymond Carver, Where I'm Calling From: New and Selected Stories

  • #97
    Jonathan Lethem
    “Insomnia is a variant of Tourette's--the waking brain races, sampling the world after the world has turned away, touching it everywhere, refusing to settle, to join the collective nod. The insomniac brain is a sort of conspiracy theorist as well, believing too much in its own paranoiac importance--as though if it were to blink, then doze, the world might be overrun by some encroaching calamity, which its obsessive musings are somehow fending off.”
    Jonathan Lethem, Motherless Brooklyn

  • #98
    Colette
    “In its early stages, insomnia is almost an oasis in which those who have to think or suffer darkly take refuge.”
    Colette

  • #99
    William Shakespeare
    “O sleep, O gentle sleep, Nature's soft nurse, how have I frightened thee. That thou no more will weigh my eyelids down, And steep my senses in forgetfulness?”
    William Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part Two

  • #100
    Louis-Ferdinand Céline
    “When it becomes really impossible to get away and sleep, then the will to live evaporates of its own accord.”
    Louis-Ferdinand Céline, Journey to the End of the Night

  • #101
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “He was afraid of touching his own wrist. He never attempted to sleep on his left side, even in those dismal hours of the night when the insomniac longs for a third side after trying the two he has.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Pnin

  • #102
    Marina Tsvetaeva
    “Somewhere in the night a
    human being is drowning.”
    Marina Tsvetaeva, Selected Poems

  • #103
    Mirza Asadullah Khan Ghalib
    “sharab peene de masjid mein beth kar,
    Yaa woh jagha bata jahan Khuda nahin..”
    Mirza Asadullah Khan Ghalib

  • #104
    Kenzaburō Ōe
    “ Once a person has been poisoned by self-deception, he can't make decisions about himself as neatly as all that," Himiko said, elaborating her friend's terrific prophecy; " You won't get a divorce Bird. You'll justify yourself like crazy, and try to salvage your married life by confusing the real issues. A decision like divorce is beyond you now, Bird, the poison has gone to work. And you know how the story ends ? Not even your own wife will trust you absolutely, and one day you'll discover for yourself that your entire private life is in the shadow of deception and in the end you'll destroy yourself. Bird, the first signs of self-destruction have appeared already!"
    " But that's a blind alley! Leave it to you to paint the most hopeless future you can think of. " Bird lunged at jocularity...”
    Kenzaburō Ōe, A Personal Matter

  • #105
    José Donoso
    “All my work will explode inside my body, each fragment of my anatomy will acquire a life of its own, outside mine, Humberto won’t exist, only these monsters, the despot who imprisoned me at La Rinconada to force me to invent him, Ines’s honey complexion, Brigida’s death, Iris Mateluna’s hysterical pregnancy, the saintly girl who was never beatified, Humberto Penaloza’s father pointing out Don Jeronimo dressed up to go to the Jockey Club, and your benign, kind hand, Mother Benita, that does not and will not let go of mine, and your attention fixed on these words of a mute, and your rosaries, the Casa’s La Rinconada as it once was, as it is now, as it was afterwards, the escape, the crime, all of it alive in my brain, Peta Ponce’s prism refracting and confusing everything and creating simultaneous and contradictory planes, everything without ever reaching paper, because I always hear voices and laughter enveloping and tying me up.”
    Jose Donoso, The Obscene Bird of Night

  • #106
    Adolf Hitler
    “Reading is not an end to itself, but a means to an end.”
    Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf

  • #107
    Aldous Huxley
    “An intellectual is a person who has discovered something more interesting than sex.”
    Aldous Huxley

  • #108
    Carl Schmitt
    “The concept of humanity is an especially useful ideological instrument of imperialist expansion, and in its ethical-humanitarian form it is a specific vehicle of economic imperialism. Here one is reminded of a somewhat modified expression of Proudhon’s: whoever invokes humanity wants to cheat. To confiscate the word humanity, to invoke and monopolize such a term probably has certain incalculable effects, such as denying the enemy the quality of being human and declaring him to be an outlaw of humanity; and a war can thereby be driven to the most extreme inhumanity.”
    Carl Schmitt

  • #109
    Muhammad Iqbal
    “Khudi ko kar buland itna ke har taqder se pehle

    Khuda bande se khud pooche bata teri raza kya hai.”
    allama iqbal

  • #110
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “Curiously enough, one cannot read a book; one can only reread it. A good reader, a major reader, and active and creative reader is a rereader.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Lectures on Literature



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