“Words, sentences, ideas, no matter how subtle or ingenious, the maddest flights of poetry, the most profound dreams, the most hallucinating visions, are but crude hieroglyphs chiseled in pain and sorrow to commemorate an event which is untransmissible.”
Source: Henry Miller on Writing (1964), p. 23
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Henry Miller 187
American novelist 1891–1980Related quotes

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“Still, no matter how commonplace, one’s death is the most interesting event of one’s life.”
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