Only Quotes (page 568)
![Barbara Taylor Bradford quote: "Yes, damn it, I love you! But the bedroom is not the..."](/pic/292430/600x316/quotation-barbara-taylor-bradford-yes-damn-it-i-love-you-but-the.jpg)
I speak and speak,” Marco says, “but the listener retains only the words he is expecting. The description of the world to which you lend a benevolent ear is one thing; the description that will go the rounds of the groups of stevedores and gondoliers on the street outside my house the day of my return is another; and yet another, that which I might dictate late in life, if I were taken prisoner by Genoese pirates and put in irons in the same cell with a writer of adventure stories. It is not...
Italo Calvino
![George R. R. Martin quote: "We are only human, and the gods have fashioned us for love...."](/pic/292356/600x316/quotation-george-r-r-martin-we-are-only-human-and-the-gods-have.jpg)
It is perhaps an ugly comment on the American press, but the function of the interviewer on most newspapers is to entertain, not to shed light. . . . An interviewer soon begins to judge public figures on the basis of their entertainment value, overlooking their true importance. It is not easy to get an interview with Professor Franz Boas, the greatest anthropologist in the world, across a city desk, but a mild interview with Oom the Omnipotent will hit the bottom of page one under a...
Joseph Mitchell
The difference between a path and a road is not only the obvious one. A path is little more than a habit that comes with knowledge of a place. It is a sort of ritual of familiarity. As a form, it is a form of contact with a known landscape. It is not destructive. It is the perfect adaptation, through experience and familiarity, of movement to place; it obeys the natural contours; such obstacles as it meets it goes around.
Wendell Berry
![Neal Stephenson quote: "In the wilderness, only the most terrible beasts of prey..."](/pic/292270/600x316/quotation-neal-stephenson-in-the-wilderness-only-the-most-terrible.jpg)
To lose somebody is to lose not only their person but all those modes and manifestations into which their person has flowed outwards; so that in losing a beloved one may find so many things, pictures, poems, melodies, places lost too: Dante, Avignon, a song of Shakespeare's, the Cornish sea.
Iris Murdoch