“Adela returned on luminous mornings, like Pomona from the fire of the enkindled day, tipping from her basket the colourful beauty of the sun: glistening wild cherries, full of water under their transparent skins, mysterious black cherries whose aroma surpassed that which would be realised in their taste, and apricots, in whose golden pulp lay the core of the long afternoons.”
“August” http://www.schulzian.net/translation/shops/august1.htm <br class="br">His father, Adela (the domestic servant)
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Bruno Schulz34
Polish novelist and painter 1892–1942Related quotes
Arshile Gorky (1904–1948) Armenian-American painter
1942
Source: posthumous, Movements in art since 1945, p. 31: (in Gorky Memorial Exhibition, Schwabacher pp. 28)
“Love, then unstinted, Love did sip,
And cherries plucked fresh from the lip”
Richard Lovelace (1617–1658) English writer and poet
Love Made in the First Age: To Chloris (l. 13–18).
Context: Love, then unstinted, Love did sip,
And cherries plucked fresh from the lip;
On cheeks and roses free he fed;
Lasses like autumn plums did drop,
And lads indifferently did crop
A flower and a maidenhead.
Samuel Butler (poet) (1612–1680) poet and satirist
Canto II, line 29
Source: Hudibras, Part II (1664)
Edmund Waller (1606–1687) English poet and politician
Cherry-Ripe http://www.bartleby.com/101/168.html. <br class="br">Poetical Works of Edmund Waller and Sir John Denham (1857)
Aleister Crowley (1875–1947) poet, mountaineer, occultist
III Of the Ceremony of the Introit, including what is called the "Creed of the Gnostic Catholic Church" http://www.hermetic.com/egc/creed.html. <br class="br">Liber XV : The Gnostic Mass (1913)
“I believe he would make three bites of a cherry.”
Francois Rabelais book Gargantua and Pantagruel
Source: Gargantua and Pantagruel (1532–1564), Fifth Book (1564), Chapter 28.