Jason > Jason's Quotes

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  • #1
    Italo Calvino
    “In Chloe, a great city, the people who move through the streets are all strangers. At each encounter, they imagine a thousand things about one another; meetings which could take place between them, conversations, surprises, caresses, bites. But no one greets anyone; eyes lock for a second, then dart away, seeking other eyes, never stopping.

    A girl comes along, twirling a parasol on her shoulder, and twirling slightly also her rounded hips. A woman in black comes along, showing her full age, her eyes restless beneath her veil, her lips trembling. At tattooed giant comes along; a young man with white hair; a female dwarf; two girls, twins, dressed in coral. Something runs among them, an exchange of glances link lines that connect one figure with another and draws arrows, stars, triangles, until all combinations are used up in a moment, and other characters come on to the scene: a blind man with a cheetah on a leash, a courtesan with an ostrich-plume fan, an ephebe, a Fat Woman. And thus, when some people happen to find themselves together, taking shelter from the rain under an arcade, or crowding beneath an awning of the bazaar, or stopping to listen to the band in the square, meetings, seductions, copulations, orgies are consummated among them without a word exchanged, without a finger touching anything, almost without an eye raised.

    A voluptuous vibration constantly stirs Chloe, the most chaste of cities. If men and women began to live their ephemeral dreams, every phantom would become a person with whom to begin a story of pursuits, pretenses, misunderstandings, clashes, oppressions, and the carousel of fantasies would stop.”
    Italo Calvino

  • #2
    Henry Miller
    “Conditioned to ecstasy, the poet is like a gorgeous unknown bird mired in the ashes of thought. If he succeeds in freeing himself, it is to make a sacrificial flight to the sun. His dreams of a regenerate world are but the reverberations of his own fevered pulse beats. He imagines the world will follow him, but in the blue he finds himself alone. Alone but surrounded by his creations; sustained, therefore, to meet the supreme sacrifice. The impossible has been achieved; the duologue of author with Author is consummated. And now forever through the ages the song expands, warming all hearts, penetrating all minds. At the periphery the world is dying away; at the center it glows like a live coal. In the great solar heart of the universe the golden birds are gathered in unison. There it is forever dawn, forever peace, harmony and communion. Man does not look to the sun in vain; he demands light and warmth not for the corpse which he will one day discard but for his inner being. His greatest desire is to burn with ecstasy, to commerge his little flame with the central fire of the universe. If he accords the angels wings so that they may come to him with messages of peace, harmony and radiance from worlds beyond, it is only to nourish his own dreams of flight, to sustain his own belief that he will one day reach beyond himself, and on wings of gold. One creation matches another; in essence they are all alike. The brotherhood of man consists not in thinking alike, nor in acting alike, but in aspiring to praise creation. The song of creation springs from the ruins of earthly endeavor. The outer man dies away in order to reveal the golden bird which is winging its way toward divinity.”
    Henry Miller, The Time of the Assassins: A Study of Rimbaud

  • #3
    Anaïs Nin
    “Someone told me the delightful story of the crusader who put a chastity belt on his wife and gave the key to his best friend for safekeeping, in case of his death. He had ridden only a few miles away when his friend, riding hard, caught up with him, saying 'You gave me the wrong key!”
    Anais Nin

  • #4
    Chuck Palahniuk
    “My first time I jacked off, I thought I'd invented it. I looked down at my sloppy handful of junk and thought, This is going to make me rich.”
    Chuck Palahniuk, Choke

  • #5
    Garrison Keillor
    “Sex is good, but not as good as fresh sweet corn.”
    Garrison Keillor
    tags: food, sex

  • #6
    Marquis de Sade
    “What does one want when one is engaged in the sexual act? That everything around you give you its utter attention, think only of you, care only for you...every man wants to be a tyrant when he fornicates.”
    Marquis de Sade, Philosophy in the Boudoir

  • #7
    Arthur Rimbaud
    “But, truly, I have wept too much! The Dawns are heartbreaking. Every moon is atrocious and every sun bitter.”
    Arthur Rimbaud

  • #8
    Robert Penn Warren
    “Season late, day late, sun just down, and the sky
    Cold gunmetal but with a wash of live rose, and she,
    From water the color of sky except where
    Her motion has fractured it to shivering splinters of silver,
    Rises. Stands on the raw grass. Against
    The new-curdling night of spruces, nakedness
    Glimmers and, at bosom and flank, drips
    With fluent silver. The man,

    Some ten strokes out, but now hanging
    Motionless in the gunmetal water, feet
    Cold with the coldness of depth, all
    History dissolving from him, is
    Nothing but an eye. Is an eye only. Sees

    The body that is marked by his use, and Time's,
    Rise, and in the abrupt and unsustaining element of air,
    Sway, lean, grapple the pond-bank. Sees
    How, with that posture of female awkwardness that is,
    And is the stab of, suddenly perceived grace, breasts bulge down in
    The pure curve of their weight and buttocks
    Moon up and, in swelling unity,
    Are silver and glimmer. Then

    The body is erect, she is herself, whatever
    Self she may be, and with an end of the towel grasped in each hand,
    Slowly draws it back and forth across back and buttocks, but
    With face lifted toward the high sky, where
    The over-wash of rose color now fails. Fails, though no star
    Yet throbs there. The towel, forgotten,
    Does not move now. The gaze
    Remains fixed on the sky. The body,

    Profiled against the darkness of spruces, seems
    To draw to itself, and condense in its whiteness, what light
    In the sky yet lingers or, from
    The metallic and abstract severity of water, lifts. The body,
    With the towel now trailing loose from one hand, is
    A white stalk from which the face flowers gravely toward the high sky.
    This moment is non-sequential and absolute, and admits
    Of no definition, for it
    Subsumes all other, and sequential, moments, by which
    Definition might be possible. The woman,

    Face yet raised, wraps,
    With a motion as though standing in sleep,
    The towel about her body, under her breasts, and,
    Holding it there hieratic as lost Egypt and erect,
    Moves up the path that, stair-steep, winds
    Into the clamber and tangle of growth. Beyond
    The lattice of dusk-dripping leaves, whiteness
    Dimly glimmers, goes. Glimmers and is gone, and the man,

    Suspended in his darkling medium, stares
    Upward where, though not visible, he knows
    She moves, and in his heart he cries out that, if only
    He had such strength, he would put his hand forth
    And maintain it over her to guard, in all
    Her out-goings and in-comings, from whatever
    Inclemency of sky or slur of the world's weather
    Might ever be. In his heart he cries out. Above

    Height of the spruce-night and heave of the far mountain, he sees
    The first star pulse into being. It gleams there.

    I do not know what promise it makes him. ”
    Robert Penn Warren

  • #9
    André Breton
    “L'union libre [Freedom of Love]"

    My wife with the hair of a wood fire
    With the thoughts of heat lightning
    With the waist of an hourglass
    With the waist of an otter in the teeth of a tiger
    My wife with the lips of a cockade and of a bunch of stars of the last magnitude
    With the teeth of tracks of white mice on the white earth
    With the tongue of rubbed amber and glass
    My wife with the tongue of a stabbed host
    With the tongue of a doll that opens and closes its eyes
    With the tongue of an unbelievable stone
    My wife with the eyelashes of strokes of a child's writing
    With brows of the edge of a swallow's nest
    My wife with the brow of slates of a hothouse roof
    And of steam on the panes
    My wife with shoulders of champagne
    And of a fountain with dolphin-heads beneath the ice
    My wife with wrists of matches
    My wife with fingers of luck and ace of hearts
    With fingers of mown hay
    My wife with armpits of marten and of beechnut
    And of Midsummer Night
    Of privet and of an angelfish nest
    With arms of seafoam and of riverlocks
    And of a mingling of the wheat and the mill
    My wife with legs of flares
    With the movements of clockwork and despair
    My wife with calves of eldertree pith
    My wife with feet of initials
    With feet of rings of keys and Java sparrows drinking
    My wife with a neck of unpearled barley
    My wife with a throat of the valley of gold
    Of a tryst in the very bed of the torrent
    With breasts of night
    My wife with breasts of a marine molehill
    My wife with breasts of the ruby's crucible
    With breasts of the rose's spectre beneath the dew
    My wife with the belly of an unfolding of the fan of days
    With the belly of a gigantic claw
    My wife with the back of a bird fleeing vertically
    With a back of quicksilver
    With a back of light
    With a nape of rolled stone and wet chalk
    And of the drop of a glass where one has just been drinking
    My wife with hips of a skiff
    With hips of a chandelier and of arrow-feathers
    And of shafts of white peacock plumes
    Of an insensible pendulum
    My wife with buttocks of sandstone and asbestos
    My wife with buttocks of swans' backs
    My wife with buttocks of spring
    With the sex of an iris
    My wife with the sex of a mining-placer and of a platypus
    My wife with a sex of seaweed and ancient sweetmeat
    My wife with a sex of mirror
    My wife with eyes full of tears
    With eyes of purple panoply and of a magnetic needle
    My wife with savanna eyes
    My wife with eyes of water to he drunk in prison
    My wife with eyes of wood always under the axe
    My wife with eyes of water-level of level of air earth and fire”
    Andre Breton, Poems of André Breton: A Bilingual Anthology

  • #11
    Jack Spicer
    “Most of my friends like words too well. They set them under the blinding light of the poem and try to extract every possible connotation from each of them, every temporary pun, every direct or indirect connection - as if a word could become an object by mere addition of consequences. Others pick up words from the streets, from their bars, from their offices and display them proudly in their poems as if they were shouting, "See what I have collected from the American language. Look at my butterflies, my stamps, my old shoes!" What does one do with all this crap?”
    Jack Spicer

  • #12
    Jack Spicer
    “See how weak prose is.... Presently I shall go to a bar and there one or two poets will speak to me and I to them and we will try to destroy each other or attract each other and nothing will happen because we will be speaking in prose.”
    Jack Spicer

  • #13
    Friedrich Hölderlin
    “Holy spirits, you walk up there
    in the light, on soft earth.
    Shining god-like breezes
    touch upon you gently,
    as a woman's fingers
    play music on holy strings.

    Like sleeping infants the gods
    breathe without any plan;
    the spirit flourishes continually
    in them, chastely kept,
    as in a small bud,
    and their holy eyes
    look out in still
    eternal clearness.

    A place to rest
    isn't given to us.
    Suffering humans
    decline and blindly fall
    from one hour to the next,
    like water thrown
    from cliff to cliff,
    year after year,
    down into the Unknown.”
    Friedrich Holderlin

  • #14
    Friedrich Hölderlin
    “All the fruit is ripe, plunged in fire, cooked,
    And they have passed their test on earth, and one law is this:
    That everything curls inward, like snakes,
    Prophetic, dreaming on
    The hills of heaven. And many things
    Have to stay on the shoulders like a load
    of failure. However the roads
    Are bad. For the chained elements,
    Like horses, are going off to the side,
    And the old
    Laws of the earth. And a longing
    For disintegration constantly comes. Many things however
    Have to stay on the shoulders. Steadiness is essential.
    Forwards, however, or backwards we will
    Not look. Let us learn to live swaying
    As in a rocking boat on the sea.”
    Friedrich Holderlin

  • #15
    André Breton
    “The sexual eagle exults he will gild the earth once more
    his descending wing
    his ascending wing sways imperceptibly the sleeves of the peppermint
    and all the water's adorable undress
    Days are counted so clearly
    that the mirror has yielded to a froth of fronds
    of the sky i see but one star
    now around us there is only the milk describing its dizzy ellipsis
    from which sometimes soft intuition with pupils of eyed agate
    rises to poke its umbrella tip in the mud of the electric light
    then great reaches cast anchor stretch out in the depths of my closed eyes
    icebergs radiating the customs of all the worlds yet to come
    bron from a fragment of you fragment unkown and iced on the wing
    your existence the giant bouquet escaping fr4om my arms
    is badly tied it didgs out walls unrolls the stairs of houses
    loses its leaves in the show windows of the street
    to gether the news i am always leaving to gather the news
    the newspaper is glass today and if letters no longer arrive
    it's that the train has been consumed
    the great incision of the emerald which gaave birth to the foliage
    is scarred for always the sawdust of blinding snow
    and the quarries of flesh are sounding along on the first shelf
    reversed on this shelf
    i take the impression of death and life
    to the liquid air”
    Andre Breton

  • #16
    “Ain't no sense worryin' about the things you got control over, 'cause if you got control over 'em, ain't no sense worryin'. And ain't no sense worryin' about the things you don't got control over, 'cause if you don't got control over 'em, ain't no sense worryin'.”
    Mickey Rivers

  • #17
    Kyril Bonfiglioli
    “I never think of policemen's wives; their beauty maddens me like wine.”
    Kyril Bonfiglioli

  • #18
    Kyril Bonfiglioli
    “Bed is the only place for protracted telephoning. It is also execellently suited to reading, sleeping and listening to canaries. It is not a good place for sex: sex should take place in armchairs, or in bathrooms, or on lawns which have been brushed but not too recently mown, or on sandy beaches if you happen to have been circumcised. If you are too tired to have intercourse except in bed you are probably too tired anyway and should be husbanding your strength.”
    Kyril Bonfiglioli, The Mortdecai Trilogy

  • #19
    André Breton
    “to poke its umbrella tip in the mud of the electric light ”
    Andre Breton

  • #20
    André Breton
    “The pure playfulness of certain wholly whimsical portions of (Charles) Cros’s work should not obscure the fact that at the center of some of his most beautiful poems a revolver is leveled straight at us.”
    Andre Breton

  • #21
    André Breton
    “Past and future monopolize the poet’s sensory and intellectual faculties, detached from the immediate spectacle. These two philtres become utterly clear the moment one stops being hypnotized by the cloudy precipitate constituted by the world of today.”
    Andre Breton

  • #22
    Jacques Derrida
    “The traditional statement about language is that it is in itself living, and that writing is the dead part of language.”
    Jacques Derrida

  • #23
    Blaise Cendrars
    “Life
    The machine
    The human soul
    A 75mm breech
    My portrait”
    Blaise Cendrars, Complete Poems

  • #24
    Blaise Cendrars
    “I used the word 'prose' in the Trans-Siberian in the early Latin sense of prosa dictu. Poem seemed to me too pretentious, too narrow. Prose is more open, popular.”
    Blaise Cendrars

  • #25
    Amy Hempel
    “I moved through the days like a severed head that finishes a sentence.”
    Amy Hempel

  • #26
    Walt Whitman
    “SKIRTING the river road, (my forenoon walk, my rest,)
    Skyward in air a sudden muffled sound, the dalliance of the eagles,
    The rushing amorous contact high in space together,
    The clinching interlocking claws, a living, fierce, gyrating wheel,
    Four beating wings, two beaks, a swirling mass tight grappling, 5
    In tumbling turning clustering loops, straight downward falling,
    Till o’er the river pois’d, the twain yet one, a moment’s lull,
    A motionless still balance in the air, then parting, talons loosing,
    Upward again on slow-firm pinions slanting, their separate diverse flight,
    She hers, he his, pursuing.”
    Walt Whitman

  • #27
    Aase Berg
    “Poetry is a will to put things right, an imaginary solution, a way of avoiding a catastrophe that already happened. Poetry is an escape, perhaps intelligent, perhaps idiotic, from a senile situation. It is a dialectical movement, it keeps tearing open the wounds while trying to heal them. Here we see the only acceptable path open up towards an existence worthy of human beings. Here the seriousness is unfaltering and absolute. Where it will lead no one knows.”
    Aase Berg
    tags: poetry

  • #28
    Sarah Manguso
    My friend Isabel says, When you’re writing even a short novel, with at least a couple of subplots, and God only knows how many characters, your brain holds the volume of it beyond the ability of your consciousness.

    Of course
    .”
    Sarah Manguso, The Two Kinds of Decay

  • #29
    Jack Kerouac
    “The Beat Generation, that was a vision that we had, John Clellon Holmes and I, and Allen Ginsberg in an even wilder way, in the late forties, of a generation of crazy, illuminated hipsters suddenly rising and roaming America, serious, bumming and hitchhiking everywhere, ragged, beatific, beautiful in an ugly graceful new way--a vision gleaned from the way we had heard the word 'beat' spoken on streetcorners on Times Square and in the Village, in other cities in the downtown city night of postwar America--beat, meaning down and out but full of intense conviction--We'd even heard old 1910 Daddy Hipsters of the streets speak the word that way, with a melancholy sneer--It never meant juvenile delinquents, it meant characters of a special spirituality who didn't gang up but were solitary Bartlebies staring out the dead wall window of our civilization--the subterraneans heroes who'd finally turned from the 'freedom' machine of the West and were taking drugs, digging bop, having flashes of insight, experiencing the 'derangement of the senses,' talking strange, being poor and glad, prophesying a new style for American culture, a new style (we thought), a new incantation--The same thing was almost going on in the postwar France of Sartre and Genet and what's more we knew about it--But as to the actual existence of a Beat Generation, chances are it was really just an idea in our minds--We'd stay up 24 hours drinking cup after cup of black coffee, playing record after record of Wardell Gray, Lester Young, Dexter Gordon, Willie Jackson, Lennie Tristano and all the rest, talking madly about that holy new feeling out there in the streets- -We'd write stories about some strange beatific Negro hepcat saint with goatee hitchhiking across Iowa with taped up horn bringing the secret message of blowing to other coasts, other cities, like a veritable Walter the Penniless leading an invisible First Crusade- -We had our mystic heroes and wrote, nay sung novels about them, erected long poems celebrating the new 'angels' of the American underground--In actuality there was only a handful of real hip swinging cats and what there was vanished mightily swiftly during the Korean War when (and after) a sinister new kind of efficiency appeared in America, maybe it was the result of the universalization of Television and nothing else (the Polite Total Police Control of Dragnet's 'peace' officers) but the beat characters after 1950 vanished into jails and madhouses, or were shamed into silent conformity, the generation itself was shortlived and small in number.”
    Jack Kerouac

  • #30
    Switchfoot
    “The shadow proves the sunshine.”
    Switchfoot

  • #33
    Susan Sontag
    “Most of Arbus's work lies within the Warhol aesthetic, that is, defines itself in relation to the twin poles of boringness and freakishness; but it doesn't have the Warhol style. Arbus had neither Warhol's narcissism and genius for publicity nor the self-protective blandness with which he insulates himself from the freaky nor his sentimentality. It is unlikey that Warhol, who comes from a working-class family, ever felt any ambivalence toward success which afflicted the children of the Jewish upper middle classes in the 1960s. To someone raised as a Catholic, like Warhol (and virtually everyone in his gang), a fascination with evil comes much more genuinely than it does to someone from a Jewish background. Compared with Warhol, Arbus seems strikingly vulnerable, innocent--and certainly more pessimistic. Her Dantesque vision of the city (and the suburbs) has no reserves of irony. Although much of Arbus's material is the same as that depicted in, say, Warhol's Chelsea Girls (1966)...For Arbus, both freaks and Middle America were equally exotic: a boy marching in a pro-war parade and a Levittown housewife were as alien as a dwarf or a transvestite; lower-middle-class suburbia was as remote as Times Square, lunatic asylums, and gay bars. Arbus's work expressed her turn against what was public (as she experienced it), conventional, safe, reassuring--and boring--in favor of what was private, hidden, ugly, dangerous, and fascinating. These contrasts, now, seem almost quaint. What is safe no long monopolizes public imagery. The freakish is no longer a private zone, difficult of access. People who are bizarre, in sexual disgrace, emotionally vacant are seen daily on the newsstands, on TV, in the subways. Hobbesian man roams the streets, quite visible, with glitter in his hair.”
    Susan Sontag, On Photography



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