Alberto Gonzales (1955) 80th United States Attorney General
Remarks at his installation as Attorney General.
Atlas, on bearing the burden of maintaining the worlds, in Ch. 4
Space Chantey (1968)
Context: I tried to tell you, but words will not convey it. One has to be inside it to comprehend the magnitude. … It was the beginning. It's the only thing there is. But it was haphazard for so many aeons that it spooks me to think about it. There were always three or four maintaining it, but there was no one person strong enough to take it all over. "Somewhere there must be someone strong enough to take it all over," I said to myself in a direful moment, but the strongest person I could think of was myself. I've been doing it ever since. … By my attention I hold it all in being. Nothing exists unless it is perceived. If perception fails for a moment, then that thing fails forever. … I hate to be misjudged. They say that I bear it all on my shoulders, as though I were a stud or a balk. It's not on my great shoulders, it is amazing head on my great shoulders that maintains all.
Alberto Gonzales (1955) 80th United States Attorney General
Remarks at his installation as Attorney General.
China Miéville (1972) English writer
China Mieville: "My job is not to try to give readers what they want..." http://www.theguardian.com/childrens-books-site/2012/sep/20/china-mieville-interview, theguardian.com, Thursday 20 September, 2012.
John Scotus Eriugena (810–877) Irish theologian
Helen Waddell The Wandering Scholars (Harmondsworth: Penguin, [1927] 1954) pp. 77-78.
Criticism
“I am the owner of my shoulders, the tenant of my hips.”
Malcolm de Chazal (1902–1981) Mauritian artist
Sens-plastique
Muriel Spark book The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
Source: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1961), P. 5
“And now … over my shoulder a backward glance …”
Paul Harvey (1918–2009) American broadcaster
Regular tag lines
“America I'm putting my queer shoulder to the wheel.”
Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997) American poet
America (1956)
“Death rides on my shoulder, death walks in my footsteps. I am death.”
Robert Jordan (1948–2007) American writer
Lews Therin Telamon
(15 October 1994)
“… the devil on my right shoulder must have brutally strangled the angel on my left…”
Gena Showalter (1975) American writer
Source: Playing with Fire