“How beautiful they are,
The lordly ones
Who dwell in the hills,
In the hollow hills.”

Faery song from play The Immortal Hour.

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Do you have more details about the quote "How beautiful they are, The lordly ones Who dwell in the hills, In the hollow hills." by William Sharp (writer)?
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William Sharp (writer) 9
Scottish writer 1855–1905

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Context: It’s the same old wilderness, just no longer up on that hill or around that bend or in the gully. It’s the fact that there is no more hill or gully, that the hollow is there and you’ve got to explore the hollow with faith. If you don’t have faith that there is something down there, pretty soon when you’re in the hollow, you begin to get scared and start shaking. That’s when you stop taking acid and start taking coke and drinking booze and start trying to fill the hollow with depressants and Valium. Real warriors like William Burroughs or Leonard Cohen or Wallace Stevens examine the hollow as well as anybody; they get in there, look far into the dark, and yet come out with poetry.

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“First we look at the hills in the painting,
Then we look at the painting in the hills.”

As quoted in Lin Yutang's My Country and My People (1935), pp. 99 and 248
Compare:
We're made so that we love
First when we see them painted, things we've passed
Perhaps a hundred times nor cared to see;
And so they are better, painted,—better to us,
Which is the same thing. Art was given for that;
God uses us to help each other so,
Lending our minds out.
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