3823

poetsonart:
“Winslow Homer, Fog Warning (1885) // Alfred, Lord Tennyson, “Ulysses” (1833)
”

poetsonart:

Winslow Homer, Fog Warning (1885) // Alfred, Lord Tennyson, “Ulysses” (1833)

  4906

aseaofquotes:
“Jeanette Winterson, The PowerBook
”

aseaofquotes:

Jeanette Winterson, The PowerBook

laslo-kovacssss-blog:

“There was once a very great American surgeon named Halsted. He was married to a nurse. He loved her-immeasurably. One day Halsted noticed that his wife’s hands were chapped and red when she came back from surgery. And so he invented rubber gloves. For her. It is one of the great love stories in medicine. The difference between inspired medicine and uninspired medicine is love. When I met Ana I knew: I loved her to the point of invention.”

— Sarah Ruhl, The Clean House 

Everything is more beautiful because we are doomed. You will never be lovelier than you are now. We will never be here again.
— Homer, The Iliad  (via sunst0ne)

oldfilmsflicker:

The Times of Harvey Milk, 1984 (dir. Rob Epstein)

  3256

The voice of the sea speaks to the soul.
  4139

What is it like to be a prophet? Everywhere Cassandra ran she found she was already there.
— Anne Carson, “Cassandra Float Can” (via dostevsky)
  888

We learned about the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, which said that the language you spoke affected how you processed reality. We learned that it was wrong. […]
In my heart, I knew that Whorf was right. I knew I thought differently in Turkish and in English—not because thought and language were the same, but because different languages forced you to think about different things. Turkish, for example, had a suffix, -miş, that you put on verbs to report anything you didn’t witness personally. You were always stating your degree of subjectivity. You were always thinking about it, every time you opened your mouth.
— Elif Batuman, The Idiot (via zuiol)
When we took Shakespeare’s “Measure for Measure” into a maximum security woman’s prison on the West Side…there’s a scene there where a young woman is told by a very powerful official that “If you sleep with me, I will pardon your brother. And if you don’t sleep with me, I’ll execute him.” And he leaves the stage. And this character, Isabel, turned out to the audience and said: “To whom should I complain?” And a woman in the audience shouted: “The Police!” And then she looked right at that woman and said: “If I did relate this, who would believe me?” And the woman answered back, “No one, girl.” And it was astonishing because not only was it an amazing sense of connection between the audience and the actress, but you also realized that this was a kind of an historical lesson in theater reception. That’s what must have happened at The Globe. These soliloquies were not simply monologues that people spoke, they were call and response to the audience. And you realized that vibrancy, that that sense of connectedness is not only what makes theater great in prisons, it’s what makes theater great, period.
— Oskar Eustis on ArtBeat Nation (he told the same story on Charlie Rose)

khmacleod:

Ancient moon priestesses were called virgins. ‘Virgin’ meant not married, not belonging to a man - a woman who was ‘one-in-herself’. The very word derives from a Latin root meaning strength, force, skill; and was later applied to men: virle. Ishtar, Diana, Astarte, Isis were all all called virgin, which did not refer to sexual chastity, but sexual independence. And all great culture heroes of the past, mythic or historic, were said to be born of virgin mothers: Marduk, Gilgamesh, Buddha, Osiris, Dionysus, Genghis Khan, Jesus - they were all affirmed as sons of the Great Mother, of the Original One, their worldly power deriving from her. When the Hebrews used the word, and in the original Aramaic, it meant ‘maiden’ or ‘young woman’, with no connotations to sexual chastity. But later Christian translators could not conceive of the ‘Virgin Mary’ as a woman of independent sexuality, needless to say; they distorted the meaning into sexually pure, chaste, never touched. —Monica Sjoo

  4970

She is in love. It is bright within her, like a swallowed star.
  6105

Deep in my heart there’s a poet and a liar.
—  SayWeCanFly, “The Poet”  (via wnq-music)
You’ve got a warm heart. You’ve got a beautiful brain.
— Medicine by Daughter (via imagination)
  2143

Are you? Still?
— Virginia Woolf, from a letter to Vita Sackville-West c. March 1928
(via violentwavesofemotion)

Scroll to top