
“Do you know why swallows build in the eaves of houses? It is to listen to the stories.”
Act I
Peter Pan (1904)
"Cliff Swallows to Order" [1944]; Published in For the Health of the Land, J. Baird Callicott and Eric T. Freyfogle (eds.), 1999, p. 119.
1940s
“Do you know why swallows build in the eaves of houses? It is to listen to the stories.”
Act I
Peter Pan (1904)
sane
Fame, written with Carlos Alomar and John Lennon
Song lyrics, Young Americans (1975)
“If only the Earth would open and swallow you up.”
[Brother Theodore Complete Collection on Letterman, 1982-89, Don Giller, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kj5fVnHWUl4]
Variant: When you’re in love, sometimes you have to swallow your pride, and sometimes you have to keep your pride. It’s a balance. But when the relationship is right, you find the balance.
Source: Something Borrowed
As quoted in Epistulae morales ad Lucilium by Seneca, Epistle XC (trans. R. M. Gummere)
“Stop all this weeping, swallow your pride
You will not die, it’s not poison”
Song lyrics, Highway 61 Revisited (1965), Tombstone Blues
Hannibal Lecter’s Creator Cooks Up Something New (No Fava Beans or Chianti) https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/18/books/thomas-harris-new-book.html (May 18, 2019)
On the phenomenon that would come to be called primitive accumulation of capital, in Black and White: Land, Labor, and Politics in the South (1884)