
“It's just a job. Grass grows, birds fly, waves pound the sand. I beat people up.”
As quoted in "Ali's Quotes" at BBC Sport : Boxing (17 January 2007)
"They Stopped the Moving Sands" part of a letter to his agent Lurton Blassingame, outlining an article on how the USDA was using poverty grasses to protect Florence, Oregon from harmful sand dunes (11 July 1957); the article was never published, but did develop several of the ideas that led to "Dune"; as quoted in The Road to Dune (2005), p. 266
General sources
“It's just a job. Grass grows, birds fly, waves pound the sand. I beat people up.”
As quoted in "Ali's Quotes" at BBC Sport : Boxing (17 January 2007)
Quote in Dali's letter to his art-friend Lorca, 1927; as quoted in Surrealism and the Spanish Civil War, Robin Adèle Greeley, p. 67
Dali is striving then for a rational approach of his paintings; he is very probably referring to his painting, he made earlier in 1927: ' Little Ashes' https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b7/Little_Ashes.jpg
Quotes of Salvador Dali, 1920 - 1930
Podcast - Bonus Hour
On Nature
“I am able to approach the Buddhas barefoot and undisturbed, my feet in wet grass, wet sand.”
The Asian Journal of Thomas Merton (1975) Part One : Ceylon / November 29 - December 6.
Context: I am able to approach the Buddhas barefoot and undisturbed, my feet in wet grass, wet sand. Then the silence of the extraordinary faces. The great smiles. Huge and yet subtle. Filled with every possibility, questioning nothing, knowing everything, rejecting nothing, the peace not of emotional resignation but of Madhyamika, of sunyata, that has seen through every question without trying to discredit anyone or anything — without refutation — without establishing some other argument. For the doctrinaire, the mind that needs well-established positions, such peace, such silence, can be frightening.
Four Saints in Three Acts (1927)
Operas and Plays (1932)
“A man is educated and turned out to work. But a woman is educated — and turned out to grass.”
Of Men and Women (1941), Ch. 4
“It is forbidden to walk on the grass. It is not forbidden to fly over the grass.”
Games for Actors and non-Actors (1992)
Source: Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West