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- “Groundhog Day was one of the greatest scripts ever written. It didn’t even get nominated for an Academy Award.” — Bill Murray
- “People get surprised by my choices. But that comes from me looking for something new.” — Maggie Cheung
- “I rather like the idea of death.” — poet Stevie Smith
- “I didn’t think then, and I still don’t, that I was actually sick.” — Frances Farmer
- “I think I’m a character actress in a leading lady’s body, but the industry doesn’t really see me that way.” — Sanaa Lathan
- “I’ve been very lucky, considering what I look like and what I do.” — James Gandolfini
- “I never said, ‘I want to be alone.’ I only said, ‘I want to be left alone.’ There is all the difference.” — Greta Garbo
- It’s the birthday of Irish poet Mícheál Ó hAirtnéide (Michael Hartnett)
- “I was a pretty good imitator of Roy Acuff, but then I found out they already had a Roy Acuff, so I started singin’ like myself.” — Hank Williams
- Happy Birthday, William Carlos Williams: “My whole life / has hung too long upon a partial victory.”
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- Elisa on “I didn’t think then, and I still don’t, that I was actually sick.” — Frances Farmer
- sheila on “Groundhog Day was one of the greatest scripts ever written. It didn’t even get nominated for an Academy Award.” — Bill Murray
- Kelly C Sedinger on “Groundhog Day was one of the greatest scripts ever written. It didn’t even get nominated for an Academy Award.” — Bill Murray
- Pat on And the Waltz Goes On, by Sir Anthony Hopkins
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- sheila on Meeting Elia Kazan
- sheila on Review: Sitting in Bars with Cake (2023)
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Tag Archives: Emerson
“Tennyson’s rank is too well fixed and we love him too much.” — Oscar Wilde
“He was not only a minor Virgil, he is also with Virgil as Dante saw him, a Virgil among the Shades, the saddest of all English poets.” – T.S. Eliot It’s Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s birthday, born on August 6, 1809. … Continue reading
Posted in Books, James Joyce, On This Day, writers
Tagged A.S. Byatt, Camille Paglia, Dorothy Parker, Ellen Terry, Emerson, England, Ezra Pound, George Orwell, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Harold Bloom, Ireland, Jeanette Winterson, L.M. Montgomery, Lord Tennyson, Matthew Arnold, Michael Schmidt, Oscar Wilde, Philip Larkin, poetry, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, T.S. Eliot, Thomas Hardy, W.H. Auden
8 Comments
“[My ambition is to] give something to our literature which will be our own.” — Walt Whitman
“I like to think that eventually he will shame us into becoming Americans again.” — Guy Davenport on Walt Whitman Whitman is the organizing principle behind my review of Martin Scorsese’s Rolling Thunder Revue. Bob Dylan quotes Whitman all the … Continue reading
Posted in Books, On This Day, writers
Tagged Algernon Charles Swinburne, Allen Ginsberg, Bob Dylan, Camille Paglia, Elizabeth Bishop, Emerson, Emily Dickinson, Ezra Pound, Frank O'Hara, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Harold Bloom, Hart Crane, James Baldwin, Longfellow, Michael Schmidt, Oscar Wilde, poetry, Thoreau, Walt Whitman, William Carlos Williams
5 Comments
“I could readily see in Emerson”
I could readily see in Emerson … the insinuation that had he lived in those days when the world was made, he might have offered some valuable suggestions. — Herman Melville
LM Montgomery on Washington Irving vs. Emerson
“What a difference there is between Emerson and Irving … Emerson had the greater intellect, Irving the greater heart. But for my own part, I go in for the heart.”
LM Montgomery on Emerson
“To be interested in Emerson you must get right into the groove of his thought and keep steadily on it. Then you can enjoy him. There can be no skipping or culling, if you want to get at his meaning. … Continue reading
In Debt
When Shakespeare is charged with debts to his authors, Landor replies, “Yet he was more original than his originals. He breathed upon dead bodies, and brought them into life.” — Emerson, “Quotation and Originality”
Bad Times
Bad times have a scientific value. These are occasions a good learner would not miss. — Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Conduct of Life”
Vulgar Mistake
Let me never fall into the vulgar mistake of dreaming that I am persecuted whenever I am contradicted. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
Words to live by
Let me never fall into the vulgar mistake of dreaming that I am persecuted whenever I am contradicted. — Ralph Waldo Emerson