Go Quotes (page 659)
With cold eyes and indifferent mind the spectators regard the work. Connoissers admire the "skill" (as one admires a tightrope walker), enjoy the "quality of painting" (as one enjoys a pasty). But hungry souls go hungry away. The vulgar herd stroll through the rooms and pronounce the pictures "nice" or "splendid." Those who could speak have said nothing, those who could hear have heard nothing.
Wassily Kandinsky
![Italo Calvino quote: "Reading is going toward something that is about to be, and no..."](/pic/241421/600x316/quotation-italo-calvino-reading-is-going-toward-something-that-is-about.jpg)
And evolution or God or whatever arranged things genetically, to keep the little families going, to cheer them up, so that they could all have somebody to tell stories around the campfire at night, and somebody else to paint pictures on the walls of caves, and somebody else who wasn't afraid of anything and so on.
Kurt Vonnegut
[God says] Discipleship is not limited to what you can comprehend - it must transcend all comprehension. Plunge into the deep waters beyond your own comprehension, and I will help you to comprehend even as I do. Bewilderment is the true comprehension. Not to know where you are going is the true knowledge. My comprehension transcends yours.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
![Anais Nin quote: "We do not escape into philosophy, psychology, and art--we go..."](/pic/241372/600x316/quotation-anais-nin-we-do-not-escape-into-philosophy-psychology-and.jpg)
I asked him if it were a mirage, and he said yes. I said it was a dream, and he agreed, But said it was the desert's dream not his. And he told me that in a year or so, when he had aged enough for any man, then he would walk into the wind, until he saw the tents. This time, he said, he would go on with them.
Neil Gaiman
![Virginia Woolf quote: "Better was it to go unknown and leave behind you an arch, then..."](/pic/241201/600x316/quotation-virginia-woolf-better-was-it-to-go-unknown-and-leave-behind-you.jpg)
I'd write of people and places like I knew, and I'd make my characters talk everyday English; and I'd let the sun rise and set in the usual quiet way without much fuss over the fact. If I had to have villains at all, I'd give them a chance, Anne--I'd give them a chance. There are some terrible bad men the world, I suppose, but you'd have to go a long piece to find them...But most of us have got a little decency somewhere in us. Keep on writing, Anne.
L. M. Montgomery