“…this baroque language…”
on C++, 1994/5
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Paul DiLascia 44
American software developer 1959–2008Related quotes

Part Two: 2. The Transcendence of Delirium
History of Madness (1961)

“A special kind of beauty exists which is born in language, of language, and for language.”
A Retrospective Glance at the Lifework of a Master of Books
Fragments of a Poetics of Fire (1988)

[O] : Introduction, 0.8
Semiotics and the Philosophy of Language (1984)
Context: A general semiotics studies the whole of the human signifying activity — languages — and languages are what constitutes human beings as such, that is, as semiotic animals. It studies and describes languages through languages. By studying the human signifying activity it influences its course. A general semiotics transforms, for the very fact of its theoretical claim, its own object.

From A Note on Poetry (circa 1936) quoted in Modern American Poetry (1950) by Louis Untermeyer
General sources

“Language is the archives of history … Language is fossil poetry.”
1840s, Essays: Second Series (1844), The Poet

“Learning a language represents training in the delusions of that language.”
"Gowachin Aphorism"; p. 111
The Bureau of Sabotage series, Whipping Star (1969)

“Writing obscures language; it is not a guise for language but a disguise.”
Source: Cours de linguistique générale (1916), p. 31