“She came naturally by her confused and groundless fears, for her own mother lived the latter years of her life in the horrible suspicion that electricity was dripping invisibly all over the house.”
My Life and Hard Times (1933) page 33, Harper & Row, New York.
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James Thurber90
American cartoonist, author, journalist, playwright 1894–1961Related quotes
J.M. Coetzee book Life & Times of Michael K
Life & Times of Michael K (1983)
Context: He closed his eyes and tried to recover in his imagination the mudbrick walls and reed roof of her stories, the garden of prickly pear, the chickens scampering for the feed scattered by the little barefoot girl. And behind that child, in the doorway, her face obscured by shadow, he searched for a second woman, the woman from whom his mother had come into the world. When my mother was dying in the hospital, he thought, when she knew her end was coming, it was not me she looked to but someone who stood behind me: her mother or the ghost of her mother. To me she was a woman but to herself she was still a child calling to her mother to hold her hand and help her. And her own mother, in the secret life we do not see, was a child too. I come from a line of children without end.
C.G. Jung (1875–1961) Swiss psychiatrist and psychotherapist who founded analytical psychology
"Psychological Aspects of the Mother Archetype" (1939). In CW 9, Part I: The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious. P. 186
George Meredith (1828–1909) British novelist and poet of the Victorian era
Ode to the Spirit of Earth in Autumn, st. 14.
Kate DiCamillo book Flora & Ulysses
Source: Flora & Ulysses (2013), Chapter Four: A Surprisingly Helpful Cynic, p. 12
Harry Markowitz (1927) American economist
On Eugene Schumann http://www.amazon.com/review/R280VQKJ4LC7OI
“She was a stranger in her own life, a tourist in her own body.”
Melissa de la Cruz book The Van Alen Legacy
Source: The Van Alen Legacy