“You stared out of the window on the emptiness
Of a world exploding:
Stones and rubble thrown upwards in a fountain
Blasted sideways by the wind.
Every sensation except loneliness
Was drained out of your mind
By the lack of any motionless object the eye could
find.
You were a child again
Who sees for the first time things happen.”
"To A Spanish Poet" (for Manuel Altolaguirre)
The Still Centre (1939)
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Stephen Spender 76
English poet and man of letters 1909–1995Related quotes

Fable (Imitated from the French of La Motte.)
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Kenneth Noland, p. 12
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Source: De architectura (The Ten Books On Architecture) (~ 15BC), Book I, Chapter V, Sec. 8
Context: Dimension stone, flint, rubble, burnt or unburnt brick,—use them as you find them. For it is not every neighborhood or particular locality that can have a wall built of burnt brick like that at Babylon, where there was plenty of asphalt to take the place of lime and sand, and yet possibly each may be provided with materials of equal usefulness so that out of them a faultless wall may be built to last forever.
As quoted in "Stray Questions for: David Eagleman" by Blake Wilson in The New York Times (10 July 2009)

As quoted in "All He Needed Was a Good Scare" by Samuel Grafton, Good Housekeeping (August 1951), p. 136

Christmas Through Your Eyes
2007, 2008