“And, hungry for the old, familiar ways,
I turned aside and bowed my head and wept.”
Claude McKay (1889–1948) Jamaican American writer, poet
The Tropics in New York, l. 11-12
Canto XXXIII, line 49 (tr. Longfellow).
The Divine Comedy (c. 1308–1321), Inferno
“And, hungry for the old, familiar ways,
I turned aside and bowed my head and wept.”
Claude McKay (1889–1948) Jamaican American writer, poet
The Tropics in New York, l. 11-12
Donald Davidson (1893–1968) American poet, essayist, critic and author
Late Answer: A Civil War Seminar
Anna Akhmatova (1889–1966) Russian modernist poet
Translated by Judith Hemschemeyer from Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova (1989)
Requiem; 1935-1940 (1963; 1987), The Sentence
Context: Today I have so much to do:
I must kill memory once and for all,
I must turn my soul to stone,
I must learn to live again—
Unless... Summer's ardent rustling
Is like a festival outside my window.
“Within a stone's throw of it.”
Miguel de Cervantes (1547–1616) Spanish novelist, poet, and playwright
Source: Don Quixote de la Mancha (1605–1615), Part I, Book III, Ch. 9.
“I could kill two birds if I wasn't so stoned.”
Ron English (1959) American artist
Ron English's Fauxlosophy: Volume 2 (2022)
Anna Comnena book Alexiad
The Alexiad, Preface
“But I would not feel so all alone, everybody must get stoned!”
Bob Dylan (1941) American singer-songwriter, musician, author, and artist
Song lyrics, Blonde on Blonde (1966), Rainy Day Women #12 & 35