Marion Woodman (1928–2018) Canadian writer
Source: The Owl Was a Baker's Daughter (1980), p. 9
Source: The Van Alen Legacy
Marion Woodman (1928–2018) Canadian writer
Source: The Owl Was a Baker's Daughter (1980), p. 9
“She is content then with her own space, and her own matter, and her own art.”
Marcus Aurelius book Meditations
VIII, 50
Meditations (c. 121–180 AD), Book VIII
Context: The universal nature has no external space; but the wondrous part of her art is that though she has circumscribed herself, everything which is within her which appears to decay and to grow old and to be useless she changes into herself, and again makes other new things from these very same, so that she requires neither substance from without nor wants a place into which she may cast that which decays. She is content then with her own space, and her own matter, and her own art.
Marion Woodman (1928–2018) Canadian writer
Source: The Owl Was a Baker's Daughter (1980), p. 100
“He offered her the world. She said she had her own.”
Monique Duval (1924–2014) Canadian journalist
Susan B. Anthony (1820–1906) American women's rights activist
Statement of Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1856), partially quoted in The Right to Vote (2001) by Claudia Isler, p. 50, and in Perfecting the Family : Antislavery Marriages in Nineteenth-Century America (1997) by Chris Dixon, p. 144
“Only in the fever of creation could she recreate her own lost life.”
Anaïs Nin book Winter of Artifice
Winter of Artifice (1939)
“She knew whose love she doubted. It wasn't her parents' and it wasn't her friends: It was her own.”
Ann Brashares book Forever in Blue: The Fourth Summer of the Sisterhood
Source: Forever in Blue: The Fourth Summer of the Sisterhood
Colette Dowling (1938)
Source: The Cinderella Complex: Women's Hidden Fear of Independence (1981), p. 114