Our Quotes (page 543)
No. I cannot expect you to believe it. Take it as a lie--or a prophecy. Say I dreamed it in the workshop. Consider I have been speculating upon the destinies of our race until I have hatched this fiction. Treat my assertion of its truth as a mere stroke of art to enhance its interest. And taking it as a story, what do you think of it?
H. G. Wells
![Woody Allen quote: "Arlene and I have to get a divorce. She thinks I'm a pervert..."](/pic/355090/600x316/quotation-woody-allen-arlene-and-i-have-to-get-a-divorce-she-thinks-im.jpg)
![Alain de Botton quote: "Travel agents would be wiser to ask us what we hope to change..."](/pic/355074/600x316/quotation-alain-de-botton-travel-agents-would-be-wiser-to-ask-us-what-we.jpg)
We even talked like Hemingway characters, though in travesty, as if to deny our discipleship: That is your bed, and it is a good bed, and you must make it and you must make it well. Or: Today is the day of the meatloaf. The meatloaf is swell. It is swell but when it is gone the not-having meatloaf will be tragic and the meatloaf man will not come anymore.
Tobias Wolff
![Khalil Gibran quote: "Let not the waves of the sea separate us now, and the years..."](/pic/354929/600x316/quotation-khalil-gibran-let-not-the-waves-of-the-sea-separate-us-now-and.jpg)
Tie your heart at night to mine, love, and both will defeat the darknesslike twin drums beating in the forestagainst the heavy wall of wet leaves. Night crossing: black coal of dreamthat cuts the thread of earthly orbswith the punctuality of a headlong trainthat pulls cold stone and shadow endlessly. Love, because of it, tie me to a purer movement, to the grip on life that beats in your breast, with the wings of a submerged swan, So that our dream might replyto the sky's questioning starswith...
Pablo Neruda
![Albert Einstein quote: "Paper is to write things down that we need to remember. Our..."](/pic/354879/600x316/quotation-albert-einstein-paper-is-to-write-things-down-that-we-need-to.jpg)
So does a whole world, with all its greatnesses and littlenesses, lie in a twinkling star. And as mere human knowledge can split a ray of light and analyse the manner of its composition, so, sublimer intelligences may read in the feeble shining of this earth of ours, every thought and act, every vice and virtue, of every responsible creature on it.
Charles Dickens
Blind impatience is equally evident in the fruit section. Our ancestors might have delighted in the occasional handful of berries found on the underside of a bush in late summer, viewing it as a sign of the unexpected munificence of a divine creator, but we became modern when we gave up on awaiting sporadic gifts from above and sought to render any pleasing sensation immediately and repeatedly available.
Alain de Botton
It never occurred to me that our lives, until then so closely interwoven, could unravel and separate over a thing like that. But the fact was, I suppose, there were powerful tides tugging us apart by then, and it only needed something like that to finish the task. If we'd understood that back then-who knows?-maybe we'd have kept a tighter hold of one another.
Kazuo Ishiguro