Source: Reasons and Persons (1984), p. 281
Context: Is the truth depressing? Some may find it so. But I find it liberating, and consoling. When I believed that my existence was a further fact, I seemed imprisoned in myself. My life seemed like a glass tunnel, through which I was moving faster every year, and at the end of which there was darkness. When I changed my view, the walls of my glass tunnel disappeared. I now live in the open air. There is still a difference between my life and the lives of other people. But the difference is less. I am less concerned about the rest of my own life, and more concerned about the lives of others.
“Each day I live in a glass room
Unless I break it with the thrusting
Of my senses and pass through
The splintered walls to the great landscape.”
"Each Day I Live in a Glass Room," A Reverie of Bone and other Poems (1967)
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Mervyn Peake 91
English writer, artist, poet and illustrator 1911–1968Related quotes
“Maybe the ghosts have a glass ceiling? Break through that glass ceiling ghosts! I plan to.”
Ghost Hunters. October 31, 2006.
In reference to moving up the World Wrestling Entertainment roster, despite a lack of a conventional wrestling physique.
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Satire upon a Printer, line 36; reported in Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations (1922).
Source: Lighthousekeeping (2004)
Context: You say we are not one, you say truly there are two of us. Yes, there were two of us, but we were one. As for myself, I am splintered by great waves. I am coloured glass from a church window long since shattered. I find pieces of myself everywhere, and I cut myself handling them.
“Look! A see-through wall of glass!”
http://www.zefrank.com/thewiki/the_show:_05-05-06
"The Show" (www.zefrank.com/theshow/)
"Day"
By Still Waters (1906)
John Piper (Penguin Books, 1944), p. 12.
“The splinter in your eye is the best magnifying-glass available.”
Source: Bright Star: Love Letters and Poems of John Keats to Fanny Brawne
Source: 1961 - 1975, Barbara Hepworth, A Pictorial autobiography', 1970, p. 280