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Katherine Mansfield43
New Zealand author 1888–1923Related quotes
Robinson Jeffers (1887–1962) American poet
"Love the Wild Swan" (1935)
Context: This wild swan of a world is no hunter's game.
Better bullets than yours would miss the white breast
Better mirrors than yours would crack in the flame.
Does it matter whether you hate your... self?
At least Love your eyes that can see, your mind that can
Hear the music, the thunder of the wings. Love the wild swan.
Alessia Cara (1996) Canadian singer
"Wild Things" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=De30ET0dQpQ, Know-It-All (2015), New York: Def Jam Recordings
Alessia Cara (1996) Canadian singer
"Wild Things" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=De30ET0dQpQ, Know-It-All (2015), New York: Def Jam Recordings
“Poetry must have something in it that is barbaric, vast and wild.”
Denis Diderot (1713–1784) French Enlightenment philosopher and encyclopædist
On Dramatic Poetry (1758)
“I must mend the ways of my mind. This is a very big place, and I do not know how it works.”
Lewis Thomas (1913–1993) American physician, poet and educator
The Fragile Species (1992)
Context: I must mend the ways of my mind. This is a very big place, and I do not know how it works. I am a member of a fragile species, still new to the earth, the youngest creatures of any scale, here only a few moments as evolutionary time is measured, a juvenile species, a child of a species. We are only tentatively set in place, error prone, at risk of fumbling, in real danger at the moment of leaving behind only a thin layer of of our fossils, radioactive at that.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834) English poet, literary critic and philosopher
To a Lady, Offended by a Sportive Observation
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
“All farms are much alike everywhere, and all wild places have their own beauty.”
Jo Walton book Tooth and Claw
Source: Tooth and Claw (2003), Chapter 7, section 27 (p. 118)