“God's creatures who cried themselves to sleep stirred to cry again.”
Source: The Silence of the Lambs
Buffalo Rising interview (2007)
Context: Life is pretty rough for the nearly 400 million people in India who still live on $2 USD or less a day-they are mostly what this show is about.
In America by comparison, the children of the poor may not have access to the latest Dolce & Gabbana or Armani suit, but they at least predominantly have shelter, even though it may not be a castle but it is a warm place to rest and recuperate. So many of the children I come across in such countries as India live and sleep with their families on the street covered by a tarp or a piece of plastic or cardboard. They cry themselves to sleep at night from hunger.
We are very lucky to be living in the U. S. and not there under similar conditions in a country like India, even if being poor here means living simply. If we as people can remember this much from seeing one of my shows, then we are already well on the way toward progress in my opinion.
“God's creatures who cried themselves to sleep stirred to cry again.”
Source: The Silence of the Lambs
“Well let the poets cry themselves to sleep
And all their tearful words will turn back into steam”
I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning (2005)
"Count Magnus", from Ghost Stories of an Antiquary (1904); The Collected Ghost Stories of M. R. James (London: Edward Arnold, 1947) p. 111.
“God is day and night, winter and summer, war and peace, surfeit and hunger.”
Fragment 67
Numbered fragments
Part I
The City of Dreadful Night (1870–74)