
“Sorrow can be alleviated by good sleep, a bath and a glass of wine”
Source: Don Quixote de la Mancha (1605–1615), Part II (1615), Book IV, Ch. 74.
“Sorrow can be alleviated by good sleep, a bath and a glass of wine”
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 30.
Japan, the Beautiful and Myself (1969)
Context: Ryokan, who shook off the modern vulgarity of his day, who was immersed in the elegance of earlier centuries, and whose poetry and calligraphy are much admired in Japan today — he lived in the spirit of these poems, a wanderer down country paths, a grass hut for shelter, rags for clothes, farmers to talk to. The profundity of religion and literature was not, for him, in the abstruse. He rather pursued literature and belief in the benign spirit summarized in the Buddhist phrase "a smiling face and gentle words". In his last poem he offered nothing as a legacy. He but hoped that after his death nature would remain beautiful. That could be his bequest.
“We read to find ourselves, more fully and more strangely than otherwise we could hope to find.”
Forgive me then the avarice to hoard them.
Letter to Samuel Bowles (August 1858 or 1859), letter #193 of The Letters of Emily Dickinson (1958), edited Thomas H. Johnson, associate editor Theodora Ward
Variant: My friends are my "estate." Forgive me then the avarice to hoard them.
2010s, 2016, August, Speech in Jackson, Mississippi (August 24, 2016)