“I am not one of those women who can stand things.”
William Faulkner book The Sound and the Fury
Source: The Sound and the Fury
Source: Inés of My Soul
“I am not one of those women who can stand things.”
William Faulkner book The Sound and the Fury
Source: The Sound and the Fury
Merle Shain (1935–1989) Canadian writer
Some Men are More Perfect Than Others (1973)
“I am sick of women who love one. Women who hate one are much more interesting.”
Oscar Wilde (1854–1900) Irish writer and poet
Starhawk (1951) American author, activist and Neopagan
As quoted in Womanspirit Rising: A Feminist Reader in Religion (1979) by Carol P. Christ and Judith Plaskow
Context: I am a witch, by which I mean that I am somebody who believes that the earth is sacred, and that women and women's bodies are one expression of that sacred being. My spirituality has always been linked to my feminism. Feminism is about challenging unequal power structures. So, it also means challenging inequalities in race, class, sexual preference. What we need to be doing is not just changing who holds power, but changing the way we conceive of power. There is the power we're all familiar with — power over. But there is another kind of power — power from within. For a woman, it is the power to be fertile either in terms of having babies or writing books or dancing or baking bread or being a great organizer. It is the kind of power that doesn't depend on depriving someone else.
Ernesto Sábato (1911–2011) Argentine writer, painter and physicist
Un genio es alguien que descubre que la piedra que cae y la luna que no cae representan un solo y mismo fenómeno.
Ernesto Sábato, in On Heroes and Tombs [Sobre héroes y tumbas] (1961), Ch. X
Variant translation: A genius is someone who discovers that the falling stone and the moon that falls represent one and the same phenomenon.