Manuscript Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Manuscript. Here they are! All 200 of them:

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manuscripts don't burn" - "(рукописи Π½Π΅ горят)
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Mikhail Bulgakov (The Master and Margarita)
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Do you know what you are? You are a manuscript oΖ’ a divine letter. You are a mirror reflecting a noble face. This universe is not outside of you. Look inside yourself; everything that you want, you are already that.
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Jalal ad-Din Muhammad ar-Rumi (Hush, Don't Say Anything to God: Passionate Poems of Rumi)
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I wish I wrote the way I thought Obsessively Incessantly With maddening hunger I’d write to the point of suffocation I’d write myself into nervous breakdowns Manuscripts spiralling out like tentacles into abysmal nothing And I’d write about you a lot more than I should
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Benedict Smith
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You have to love dancing to stick to it. It gives you nothing back, no manuscripts to store away, no paintings to show on walls and maybe hang in museums, no poems to be printed and sold, nothing but that single fleeting moment when you feel alive.
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Merce Cunningham
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My congratulations to you, sir. Your manuscript is both good and original; but the part that is good is not original, and the part that is original is not good.
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Samuel Johnson
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You must keep sending work out; you must never let a manuscript do nothing but eat its head off in a drawer. You send that work out again and again, while you're working on another one. If you have talent, you will receive some measure of success - but only if you persist.
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Isaac Asimov
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The world was her manuscript. No surface was safe.
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Colleen Hoover (Verity)
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If you are never alone, you cannot know yourself.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Scars speak more loudly than the sword that caused them.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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No matter how old you are now. You are never too young or too old for success or going after what you want. Here’s a short list of people who accomplished great things at different ages 1) Helen Keller, at the age of 19 months, became deaf and blind. But that didn’t stop her. She was the first deaf and blind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree. 2) Mozart was already competent on keyboard and violin; he composed from the age of 5. 3) Shirley Temple was 6 when she became a movie star on β€œBright Eyes.” 4) Anne Frank was 12 when she wrote the diary of Anne Frank. 5) Magnus Carlsen became a chess Grandmaster at the age of 13. 6) Nadia ComΔƒneci was a gymnast from Romania that scored seven perfect 10.0 and won three gold medals at the Olympics at age 14. 7) Tenzin Gyatso was formally recognized as the 14th Dalai Lama in November 1950, at the age of 15. 8) Pele, a soccer superstar, was 17 years old when he won the world cup in 1958 with Brazil. 9) Elvis was a superstar by age 19. 10) John Lennon was 20 years and Paul Mcartney was 18 when the Beatles had their first concert in 1961. 11) Jesse Owens was 22 when he won 4 gold medals in Berlin 1936. 12) Beethoven was a piano virtuoso by age 23 13) Issac Newton wrote PhilosophiΓ¦ Naturalis Principia Mathematica at age 24 14) Roger Bannister was 25 when he broke the 4 minute mile record 15) Albert Einstein was 26 when he wrote the theory of relativity 16) Lance E. Armstrong was 27 when he won the tour de France 17) Michelangelo created two of the greatest sculptures β€œDavid” and β€œPieta” by age 28 18) Alexander the Great, by age 29, had created one of the largest empires of the ancient world 19) J.K. Rowling was 30 years old when she finished the first manuscript of Harry Potter 20) Amelia Earhart was 31 years old when she became the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean 21) Oprah was 32 when she started her talk show, which has become the highest-rated program of its kind 22) Edmund Hillary was 33 when he became the first man to reach Mount Everest 23) Martin Luther King Jr. was 34 when he wrote the speech β€œI Have a Dream." 24) Marie Curie was 35 years old when she got nominated for a Nobel Prize in Physics 25) The Wright brothers, Orville (32) and Wilbur (36) invented and built the world's first successful airplane and making the first controlled, powered and sustained heavier-than-air human flight 26) Vincent Van Gogh was 37 when he died virtually unknown, yet his paintings today are worth millions. 27) Neil Armstrong was 38 when he became the first man to set foot on the moon. 28) Mark Twain was 40 when he wrote "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer", and 49 years old when he wrote "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" 29) Christopher Columbus was 41 when he discovered the Americas 30) Rosa Parks was 42 when she refused to obey the bus driver’s order to give up her seat to make room for a white passenger 31) John F. Kennedy was 43 years old when he became President of the United States 32) Henry Ford Was 45 when the Ford T came out. 33) Suzanne Collins was 46 when she wrote "The Hunger Games" 34) Charles Darwin was 50 years old when his book On the Origin of Species came out. 35) Leonardo Da Vinci was 51 years old when he painted the Mona Lisa. 36) Abraham Lincoln was 52 when he became president. 37) Ray Kroc Was 53 when he bought the McDonalds Franchise and took it to unprecedented levels. 38) Dr. Seuss was 54 when he wrote "The Cat in the Hat". 40) Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger III was 57 years old when he successfully ditched US Airways Flight 1549 in the Hudson River in 2009. All of the 155 passengers aboard the aircraft survived 41) Colonel Harland Sanders was 61 when he started the KFC Franchise 42) J.R.R Tolkien was 62 when the Lord of the Ring books came out 43) Ronald Reagan was 69 when he became President of the US 44) Jack Lalane at age 70 handcuffed, shackled, towed 70 rowboats 45) Nelson Mandela was 76 when he became President
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Pablo
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How is it that, a full two centuries after Jane Austen finished her manuscript, we come to the world of Pride and Prejudice and find ourselves transcending customs, strictures, time, mores, to arrive at a place that educates, amuses, and enthralls us? It is a miracle. We read in bed because reading is halfway between life and dreaming, our own consciousness in someone else's mind.
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Anna Quindlen (How Reading Changed My Life)
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The less you eat, drink, buy books, go to the theatre or to balls, or to the pub, and the less you think, love, theorize, sing, paint, fence, etc., the more you will be able to save and the greater will become your treasure which neither moth nor rust will corruptβ€”your capital. The less you are, the less you express your life, the more you have, the greater is your alienated life and the greater is the saving of your alienated being.
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Karl Marx (Economic & Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844)
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Love is only a word, until we decide to let it possess us with all its force. Love is only a word, until someone arrives to give it meaning. Don't give up. Remember, it's always the last key on the key ring that opens the door.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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My books piled up before me for my use waiting in space where I placed them, they haven't disappeared, time's left its remnants and qualities for me to use -- my words piled up, my texts, my manuscripts, my loves.
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Allen Ginsberg (Howl and Other Poems)
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we write every day, we fight every day, we think and scheme and dream a little dream every day. manuscripts pile up in the kitchen sink, run-on sentences dangle around our necks. we plant purple prose in our gardens and snip the adverbs only to thread them in our hair. we write with no guarantees, no certainties, no promises of what might come and we do it anyway. this is who we are.
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Tahereh Mafi
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And if I'm alone in bed, I will go to the window, look up at the sky, and feel certain that loneliness is a lie, because the Universe is there to keep me company.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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At first I felt dizzy - not with the kind of dizziness that makes the body reel but the kind that's like a dead emptiness in the brain, an instinctive awareness of the void.
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Fernando Pessoa (The Education of the Stoic: The Only Manuscript of the Baron of Teive)
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Don't try to be useful. Try to be yourself: that is enough & that makes all the difference.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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What I had to face, the very bitter lesson that everyone who wants to write has got to learn, was that a thing may in itself be the finest piece of writing one has ever done, and yet have absolutely no place in the manuscript one hopes to publish.
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Thomas Wolfe
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Manuscripts do not burn.
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Mikhail Bulgakov (The Master and Margarita)
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Our life is a book to which we add daily, until suddenly we are finished, and then the manuscript is burned.
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J.M. Barrie
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Excessive caution destroys the soul and the heart, because living is an act of courage, and an act of courage is always an act of love.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Never miss an opportunity to show your love, especially to those close to you, because we are always at our most cautious with them for fear of being hurt.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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A rose dreams of enjoying the company of bees, but none appears. The sun asks: β€œAren’t you tired of waiting?” β€œYes,” answers the rose, β€œbut if I close my petals, I will wither and die.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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If money is the bond binding me to human life, binding society to me, connecting me with nature and man, is not money the bond of all bonds? Can it not dissolve and bind all ties? Is it not, therefore, also the universal agent of separation?
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Karl Marx (Economic & Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844)
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There are too many people in the world as it is, but the supply of ancient manuscripts is severely limited.
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Elizabeth Peters (Crocodile on the Sandbank (Amelia Peabody #1))
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Defeat is for the valiant. Only they will know the honour of losing and the joy of winning I am not here to tell you that defeat is a part of life: we all know that. Only the defeated know Love. Because it is in the realm of love that we fight our first battles – and generally lose. I am here to tell you that there are people who have never been defeated. They are the ones who never fought. They managed to avoid scars, humiliations, feelings of helplessness, as well as those moments when even warriors doubt the existence of God.’’ Manuscript Found In Accra – Paulo Coelho
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Only he who gives up is defeated. Everyone else is victorious.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Somewhere in the center of my soul, a rusty chain began to unwind. It freed itself, link by link, from where it had rested, unobserved, waiting for him. My hands, which had been balled up and pressed against his chest, unfurled with it. The chain continued to drop, to an unfathomable depth where there was nothing but darkness and Matthew. At last it snapped to its full length, anchoring me to a vampire. Despite the manuscript, despite the fact that my hands contained enough voltage to run a microwave, and despite the photograph, as long as I was connected to him, I was safe.
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Deborah Harkness (A Discovery of Witches (All Souls, #1))
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The simplest things in life are the most extraordinary. Let them reveal themselves.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Communism is the riddle of history solved, and it knows itself to be this solution.
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Karl Marx (Economic & Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844)
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Edit your manuscript until your fingers bleed and you have memorized every last word. Then, when you are certain you are on the verge of insanity...edit one more time!
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C.K. Webb
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Love is an act of faith in another person, not an act of surrender.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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The ordinary man looking at a mountain is like an illiterate person confronted with a Greek manuscript.
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Aleister Crowley (The Confessions of Aleister Crowley: An Autohagiography)
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You might have lost some major battles, but you survived and you're still here.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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What was broken will never be the same again.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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The eyes are the mirror of the soul and reflect everything that seems to be hidden; and like a mirror, they also reflect the person looking into them.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Because we managed to keep our heart open, despite the pain. Because we realized that the person who left us did not take the sun with them or leave darkness in their place.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Allowing someone else to make us happy will make them happy too.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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The fool believes the iniquities of the world are the fault of other men. Gibson’s voice, dry as old manuscript pages, had never been more clear. The truly wise try to change themselves, which is the more difficult and less grand task.
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Christopher Ruocchio (Empire of Silence (The Sun Eater, #1))
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Avoid those who seek friends in order to maintain a certain social status or to open doors they would not otherwise be able to approach.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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If we desire to avoid insult, we must be able to repel it; if we desire to secure peace, one of the most powerful instruments of our rising prosperity, it must be known, that we are at all times ready for War.
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George Washington (The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources 1745-1799 Volume 39 (General Index O-Z List of Letters) - Leather Bound)
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Love is only a word, until someone arrives to give it meaning. Don't give up. Remember, it's always the last key on the key ring that opens the door.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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I may wear the skin of an urbane sophisticate, but in this manuscript I invite you to strip it off and laugh at my stupidity.
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RyΕ«nosuke Akutagawa (The Life of a Stupid Man)
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None of us can know what tomorrow will hold, because each day has its good and its bad moments.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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The increase in value of the world of things is directly proportional to the decrease in value of the human world.
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Karl Marx (Economic & Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844)
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Solitude is not the absence of company, but the moment when our soul is free to speak to us and help us decide what to do with our life.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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In the cycle of nature there is no such thing as victory or defeat; there is only movement.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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If you love without evoking love in return - if through the vital expression of yourself as a loving person you fail to become a loved person, then your love is impotent, it is a misfortune.
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Karl Marx (Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 (Dover Books on Western Philosophy))
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In life's most significant moments we are always alone.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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When everything seems to be going well and your dream is almost within your gasp, that is when you must be more alert than ever.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Let's find and remedy all our weaknesses before our enemies get a chance to say a word. That is what Charles Darwin did. ...When Darwin completed the manuscript of his immortal book "The Origin Of Species" he realized that the publication of his revolutionary concept of creation would rock the intellectual and religious worlds. So he became his own critic and spent another 15 years checking his data, challenging his reasoning, and criticizing his conclusions.
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Dale Carnegie (How to Stop Worrying and Start Living: Time-Tested Methods for Conquering Worry)
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Beware of anyone who tries to please you all the time.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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the reward of our work is not what we get, but what we become
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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It is well known how the monks wrote silly lives of Catholic Saints over the manuscripts on which the classical works of ancient heathendom had been written.
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Karl Marx
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Manuscripts don't burn.
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Mikhail Bulgakov (The Master and Margarita)
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For those who are not frightened by the solitude, everything will have a different taste. In solitude, they will discover the love that might otherwise arrive unnoticed. In solitude, they will understand and respect the love that left them. In solitude, they will be able to decide whether it is worth asking that lost love to come back or if they should simply let it go and set off along a new path. In solitude, they will learn that saying β€˜No’ does not always show a lack of generosity and that saying β€˜Yes’ is not always a virtue. And those who are alone at this moment, need never be frightened by the words of the devil: β€˜You’re wasting your time.’ Or by the chief demon’s even more potent words: β€˜No one cares about you.’ The Divine Energy is listening to us when we speak to other people, but also when we are still and silent and able to accept solitude as a blessing. And when we achieve that harmony, we receive more than we asked for.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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You will be loved and respected only if you love and respect yourself.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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This was a manuscript of the night we couldn’t read.
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Jack Kerouac (On the Road)
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I fell asleep and dreamed that life was only Happiness. I woke and discovered that life was Duty. I did my Duty and discovered that life was Happiness.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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To stop us reading forbidden books they will have to burn every manuscript. But to stop us thinking forbidden thoughts they will have to cut off our heads.
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Philippa Gregory (The Queen's Fool (The Plantagenet and Tudor Novels, #13))
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This manuscript of yours that has just come back from another editor is a precious package. Don't consider it rejected. Consider that you've addressed it 'to the editor who can appreciate my work' and it has simply come back stamped 'Not at this address'. Just keep looking for the right address.
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Barbara Kingsolver
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Love lasts because it changes and not because it stays the same and never faces any challenges.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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I'm not worried about tomorrow, because God is there already, waiting for me.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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O words are poor receipts for what time hath stole away
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John Clare (Poems Chiefly from Manuscript)
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It was not uncommon to walk in the door of their home and find my mother sitting on the sofa reading over a manuscript with shampoo horns sculpted into her hair. Anne Sexton's voice would be blasting from the speakers. A woman who writes feels too much...
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Augusten Burroughs (Running with Scissors)
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Almost overnight, the streets glow with meaning. She reads inscriptions on coins, on cornerstones and tombstones, on lead seals and buttress piers and marble plaques embedded into the defensive wallsβ€”each twisting lane of the city a great battered manuscript in its own right.
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Anthony Doerr (Cloud Cuckoo Land)
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only the defeated know LOVE. because it is in the realm of love that we fight our first battles - and generally lose ........
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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The greatest gift God gave us is the power to make decisions.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Edward and I had not had a last grand scene of farewell, nor did I plan one. To speak the word was to make it final. It would be the same as typing the words The End on the last page of a manuscript. So we did not say our goodbyes, and we stayed very close to each other, always touching. Whatever end found us, it would not find us separated.
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Stephenie Meyer (Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga, #4))
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Does a leaf, when it falls from the tree in winter, feel defeated by the cold? The tree says to the leaf: "That’s the cycle of life. You may think you’re going to die, but you live on in me. It’s thanks to you that I’m alive, because I can breathe. It’s also thanks to you that I have felt loved, because I was able to give shade to the weary traveller. Your sap is in my sap; we are one thing.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Christian does a great job helping an aspiring writer get inspired to write and finish their book. It’s easy to read and understand, and provides encouragement and specific guidance, without being too harsh or detailed on fiction writing only. If you are struggling with how to put your thoughts onto paper, give this a read and establish a rhythm for your writing. Christian’s success at completing over 21 published manuscripts while leading a busy life are testament in if there is a will, there is a way. And it provides some good humor throughout.” Rachel Braynin, Sr Program Manager at Lulu Publishing
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Christian Warren Freed (So...You Want to Write a Book?)
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The library is a whispering post. You don't need to take a book off a shelf to know there is a voice inside that is waiting to speak to you, and behind that was someone who truly believed that if he or she spoke, someone would listen. It was that affirmation that always amazed me. Even the oddest, most peculiar book was written with that kind of courage -- the writer's belief that someone would find his or her book important to read. I was struck by how precious and foolish and brave that belief is, and how necessary, and how full of hope it is to collect these books and manuscripts and preserve them. It declares that stories matter, and so does every effort to create something that connects us to one another, and to our past, and to what is still to come.
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Susan Orlean (The Library Book)
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For the first time since I submitted the manuscript, I feel a deep wash of shame. This isn’t my history, my heritage. This isn’t my community. I am an outsider, basking in their love under false pretenses. It should be Athena sitting here, smiling with these people, signing books and listening to the stories of her elders.
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R.F. Kuang (Yellowface)
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Dreaming carries no risks. The dangerous thing is trying to transform your dreams into reality.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Live the life you always wanted to live. Avoid criticizing others and concentrate on fulfilling your dreams.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Love transforms, Love heals. But sometimes it lays deadly traps and ends up destroying the person who decided to surrender himself completely.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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A life is never useless. Each soul that came down to Earth is here for a reason.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Do not seek to be loved at any price, because Love has no price.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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If you are never alone you cannot know yourself. And if you do not know yourself, you will begin to fear the void.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Defeat ends when we launch into another battle. Failure has no end: it is a lifetime choice.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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To struggle against censorship, whatever its nature, and whatever the power under which it exists, is my duty as a writer, as are calls for freedom of the press. I am a passionate supporter of that freedom, and I consider that if any writer were to imagine that he could prove he didn't need that freedom, then he would be like a fish affirming in public that it didn't need water.
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Mikhail Bulgakov (Manuscripts Don't Burn: Mikhail Bulgakov A Life in Letters and Diaries)
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My point is simple: Adults will have negative opinions about you and everything you do. Let Them judge. Let Them react. Let Them doubt you. Let Them question the decisions you are making. Let Them be wrong about you. Let Them roll their eyes when you start posting videos online or you want to rewrite the manuscript for the 12th time. Instead of wasting your time worrying about them, start living your life in a way that makes you proud of yourself. Let Me do what I want to do with my one wild and precious life.
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Mel Robbins (The Let Them Theory: A Life-Changing Tool That Millions of People Can't Stop Talking About)
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My smile is my way of saying: "You can destroy my body, but not my soul.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Scars are medals branded on the flesh, and your enemies will be frightened by them because they are proof of your long experience of battle.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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No one can go back, but everyone can go forward.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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It can be depressing when no one takes interest, and a lack of response makes the writer question why they’re writing at all. To have one’s writing rejected is like you, yourself, are being rejected.
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Elizabeth Clements (Apollo Weeps)
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No matter how you are feeling, get up every morning and prepare to let your light shine forth.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Who would sup with the mighty must climb the path of daggers. -Anonymous notation found inked in the margin of a manuscript history (believed to date to the time of Arthur Hawkwing) of the last days of the Tovan Conclaves
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Robert Jordan (The Path of Daggers (The Wheel of Time, #8))
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Will a day come when the race will detect the funniness of these juvenilities and laugh at themβ€”and by laughing at them destroy them? For your race, in its poverty, has unquestionably one really effective weaponβ€”laughter. Power, Money, Persuasion, Supplication, Persecution--these can lift at a colossal humbug,β€”push it a littleβ€” crowd it a littleβ€”weaken it a little, century by century: but only Laughter can blow it to rags and atoms at a blast. Against the assault of Laughter nothing can stand. - "The Chronicle of Young Satan," Mysterious Stranger Manuscripts
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Mark Twain (The Mysterious Stranger Manuscripts)
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With every farewell comes a hidden hope.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Love does not to be understood. It needs only to be shown.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Walk neither faster nor slower than your own soul. Because it is your soul that will teach you the usefulness of each step you take.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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And to those who believe that adventures are i say try routine: it kills you far more quickly.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Shame is Prides cloke.
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William Blake (The Marriage of Heaven and Hell: Illuminated Manuscript with the Original Illustrations)
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Life will undertake to separate us, and we must each set off in search of our own path, our own destiny or our own way of facing death.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Here’s her story, a tale of the bear-keeper’s daughter and the Empire: what happened to her and what happened because of her.
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Carol Strickland (The Eagle and the Swan)
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Sit still with me in the shade of these green trees, which have no weightier thought than the withering of their leaves when autumn arrives, or the stretching of their many stiff fingers into the cold sky of the passing winter. Sit still with me and meditate on how useless effort is, how alien the will, and on how our very meditation is no more useful than effort, and no more our own than the will. Meditate too on how a life that wants nothing can have no weight in the flux of things, but a life the wants everything can likewise have no weight in the flux of things, since it cannot obtain everything, and to obtain less than everything is not worthy of souls that seek the truth.
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Fernando Pessoa (The Education of the Stoic: The Only Manuscript of the Baron of Teive)
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Love is an act of faith, not an exchange. Contradictions are what make love grow. Conflicts are what allow love to remain by our side.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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What is success?" poses the Copt. "It is being able to go to bed each night with your soul at peace.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Love rules, but no one knows where it has its throne; in order to know that secret place, you must first submit to Love.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Your manuscript is both good and original; but the part that is good is not original, and the part that is original is not good.
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Samuel Johnson
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Tolstoy's wife copied out the entire manuscript of War and Peace in longhand seven times.
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David Markson (Reader’s Block)
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Great nations write their autobiographies in three manuscripts - the book of their deeds, the book of their words and the book of their art.
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John Ruskin
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Remember, it is no sign of weakness or defeat that your manuscript ends up in need of major surgery. This is a common occurrence in all writing, and among the best writers.
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William Strunk Jr.
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We had spent years battling for control of our marriage, of our love story, our life story. I had been thoroughly, finally outplayed. I created a manuscript, and she created a life.
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Gillian Flynn (Gone Girl)
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Elegance is accepted and admired because it makes no effort to be elegant.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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solitude is not absence of love, but its complement
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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I was the type who looked at discussions of What Is Truth only with a view toward correcting the manuscript. If you were to quote "I am that I am," for example, I thought that the fundamental problem was where to put the comma, inside the quotation marks or outside.
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Umberto Eco (Foucault’s Pendulum)
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Start with a word. A word leads to a sentence, which leads to a paragraph, which leads to a chapter, which leads to a manuscript, which leads to a book..... just start with a word!
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Mark Pettinger (The Decalogue)
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Respect those who grew up and learned alongside you. Respect those who taught you.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Only Southerners have taken horsewhips and pistols to editors about the treatment or maltreatment of their manuscript. This--the actual pistols--was in the old days, of course, we no longer succumb to the impulse. But it is still there, within us.
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William Faulkner (The Sound and the Fury)
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Defeat is for those who, despite their fears, live with enthusiasm and faith.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Knowledge and book learning are not wisdom," said the captain. "Is this book wisdom?" asked Lucy, putting the manuscript back on the table. "It has some elements of wisdom in it, me dear," replied the captain. "I did not lead a very wise life myself but it was a full one and a grown-up one. You come to age very often through shipwreck and disaster, and at the heart of the whirlpool some men find God.
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R.A. Dick (The Ghost and Mrs. Muir)
β€œ
The point is, I can’t tell you how to succeed. But I can tell you how not to: Give in to the shame of being rejected and put your manuscriptβ€”or painting, song, voice, dance moves, [insert passion here]β€”in the coffin that is your bedside drawer and close it for good. I guarantee you that it won’t take you anywhere. Or you could do what this writer did: Give in to your obsession instead.
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Kathryn Stockett
β€œ
The study was slowly lit up as the candle was brought in. The familiar details came out: the stag's horns, the bookshelves, the looking-glass, the stove with its ventilator, which had long wanted mending, his father's sofa, a large table, on the table an open book, a broken ash-tray, a manuscript-book with his handwriting. As he saw all this, there came over him for an instant a doubt of the possibility of arranging this new life, of which he had been dreaming on the road. All these traces of his life seemed to clutch him, and to say to him: 'No, you're not going to get away from us, and you're not going to be different, but you're going to be the same as you've always been; with doubts, everlasting dissatisfaction with yourself, vain efforts to amend, and falls, and everlasting expectations, of a happiness which you won't get, and which isn't possible for you.
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Leo Tolstoy (Anna Karenina)
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Succes doesn't not come from having one's work recognised by others. It is the fruit of a seed that you lovingly planted.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Some of the most thrilling things in life are done on impulse.
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Syrie James (The Missing Manuscript of Jane Austen)
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We will always meet rivals in everything we do, but the most dangerous are those we believe to be our friends.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Writing is hard…It gets harder when it becomes your career, your job, because it’s no longer a hobby, it’s no longer a manuscript hidden in your desk drawer. It becomes a platform from which the world can judge you. Your soul becomes target practice, and the critics hold the arrows.
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Karina Halle (Smut)
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Happiness is contagious and will always manage to find a solution.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Our soul is governed by four invisible forces: love, death, power and time.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Our task is not to leave a record of what happened on this date for those who will inherit the Earth; history will take care of that.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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It is the imperfect that astonishes and attracts us.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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We've written the rough draft of our love together, the draft with loose ends, unfinished edges, mistakes every other page. But every writer knows there's magic in revision, where your work changes from a manuscript into a book. Where intentions, emotions, missed connections coalesce into something complete. It's where what you mean to say becomes what you have said. The characters deepen, the details shine, the prose sparkles. Suddenly, from nothing, you find your story.
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Emily Wibberley (The Roughest Draft)
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And soon afterwards this manuscript will appear, my final book... There will be outrage and disgust and people will turn on me at the last, they will hate me, my reputation will for ever be destroyed, my punishment earned, self-inflicted like this gunshot wound, and the world will finally know that I was the greatest feather man of them all.
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John Boyne (The Absolutist)
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Stay close to those who sing, tell stories, and enjoy life, and whose eyes sparkle with happiness. Because happiness is contagious and will always manage to find a solution, whereas logic can find only an explanation for the mistake made.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Outer beauty is inner beauty made visible, and it manifests itself in the light that flows in our eyes.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Change often brings unimagined opportunity...If there is no struggle, there is no progress. To live in a safe cocoon- I believe that is not truly living. It is stagnation.
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Syrie James (The Missing Manuscript of Jane Austen)
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Without solitude, Love will not stay long by your side.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Crowded places, I shunned them as noises too rude And fled to the silence of sweet solitude.
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John Clare (Poems Chiefly from Manuscript)
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Advice to friends. Advice to fellow mothers in the same boat. "How do you do it all?" Crack a joke. Make it seem easy. Make everything seem easy. Make life seem easy and parenthood and marriage and freelancing for pennies, writing a novel and smiling after a rejection, keeping the faith after two, reminding oneself that four years of work counted for a lot, counted for everything. Make the bed. Make it nice. Make the people laugh when you sit down to write and if you can't make them laugh make them cry. Make them want to hug you or hold you or punch you in the face. Make them want to kill you or fuck you or be your friend. Make them change. Make them happy. Make the baby smile. Make him laugh. Make him dinner. Make him proud. Hold the phone, someone is on the other line. She says its important. People are dying. Children. Friends. Press mute because there is nothing you can say. Press off because you're running out of minutes. Running out of time. Soon he'll be grown up and you'll regret the time you spent pushing him away for one more paragraph in the manuscript no one will ever read. Put down the book, the computer, the ideas. Remember who you are now. Wait. Remember who you were. Wait. Remember what's important. Make a list. Ten things, no twenty. Twenty thousand things you want to do before you die but what if tomorrow never comes? No one will remember. No one will know. No one will laugh or cry or make the bed. No one will have a clue which songs to sing to the baby. No one will be there for the children. No one will finish the first draft of the novel. No one will publish the one that's been finished for months. No one will remember the thought you had last night, that great idea you forgot to write down.
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Rebecca Woolf
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Horror is a feeling that cannot last long; human nature is incapable of supporting it. Sadness, whether it be from bereavement, or disappointment, or misfortune of any kind may linger on through life
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James De Mille (A Strange Manuscript found in a Copper Cylinder)
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Blessed are those who do not fear solitude, who are not afraid of their own company, who are not always desperately looking for something to do, something to amuse themselves with, something to judge. If you are never alone, you cannot know yourself.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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If you love without evoking love in returnβ€”that is, if your loving as loving does not produce reciprocal love; if through a living expression of yourself as a loving person you do not make yourself a loved person, then your love is impotentβ€” a misfortune.
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Karl Marx (Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844)
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Nature is telling us: "Change!
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Elegance is not an outer quality, but a part of the soul that is visible to others.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Difficulty" is the name of an ancient tool that was created purely to help us define who we are.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Love accepts its companion unconditionally and allow each to grow in his or her own way.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Before Jesse could say another word, the bedroom door jerked open and Lucie’s father stood on the threshold, looking alarmed. β€œLucie?” he said. β€œDid you call out? I thought I heard you.” Lucie tensed, but the expression in her father’s blue eyes didn’t changeβ€”mild worry mixed with curious puzzlement. He really couldn’t see Jesse. Jesse looked at her and, very irritatingly, shrugged as if to say, I told you so. β€œNo, Papa,” she said. β€œEverything is all right.” He looked at the manuscript pages scattered all over the rug. β€œSpot of writer’s block, Lulu?” Jesse raised an eyebrow. Lulu? he mouthed. Lucie considered whether it was possible to die of humiliation. She did not dare look at Jesse.
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Cassandra Clare (Chain of Gold (The Last Hours, #1))
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The cord that tethers ability to success is both loose and elastic. It is easy to see fine qualities in successful books or to see unpublished manuscripts, inexpensive vodkas, or people struggling in any field as somehow lacking. It is easy to believe that ideas that worked were good ideas, that plans that succeeded were well designed, and that ideas and plans that did not were ill conceived. And it is easy to make heroes out of the most successful and to glance with disdain at the least. But ability does not guarantee achievement, nor is achievement proportional to ability. And so it is important to always keep in mind the other term in the equationβ€”the role of chance…What I’ve learned, above all, is to keep marching forward because the best news is that since chance does play a role, one important factor in success is under our control: the number of at bats, the number of chances taken, the number of opportunities seized.
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Leonard Mlodinow (The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives)
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That a thing made by hand, the work and thought of a single craftsman, can endure much longer than its maker, through centuries in fact, can survive natural catastrophe, neglect, and even mistreatment, has always filled me with wonder. Sometimes in museums, looking at a humble piece of pottery from ancient Persia or Pompeii, or a finely wrought page from a medieval illuminated manuscript toiled over by a nameless monk, or a primitive tool with a carved handle, I am moved to tears. The unknown life of the maker is evanescent in its brevity, but the work of his or her hands and heart remains.
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Susan Vreeland
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In front of me 327 pages of the manuscript [Master and Margarita] (about 22 chapters). The most important remains - editing, and it's going to be hard. I will have to pay close attention to details. Maybe even re-write some things... 'What's its future?' you ask? I don't know. Possibly, you will store the manuscript in one of the drawers, next to my 'killed' plays, and occasionally it will be in your thoughts. Then again, you don't know the future. My own judgement of the book is already made and I think it truly deserves being hidden away in the darkness of some chest. [Bulgakov from Moscow to his wife on June 15 1938]
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Mikhail Bulgakov
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Where there is loyalty, weapons are of no use.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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When you are going through difficult times, remember: you might have lost some major battles, but you survived and you're still here.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Nothing in this world is useless in the eyes of God.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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The great wisdom of life is to realize that we can be the master of the things that try to enslave us.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Don't let other's say "That road is better" or "That route is easier." The greatest gift God gave us is the power to make decisions.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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When you read a manuscript that has been damaged by water, fire, light or just the passing of the years, your eye needs to study not just the shape of the letters but other marks of production. The speed of the pen. The pressure of the hand on the page. Breaks and releases in the flow. You must relax. Think of nothing. Until you wake into a dream where you are at once a pen flying of vellum and the vellum itself with the touch of ink tickling your surface. Then you can read it. The intention of the writer, his thoughts, his hesitations, his longings and his meaning. You can read as clearly as if you were the very candlelight illuminating the page as the pen speeds over it.
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Diane Setterfield (The Thirteenth Tale)
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Elegance is achieved when, having discarded all superfluous things, we discover simplicity and concentration.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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True love, is the love that seduces and will never allow itself to be seduced.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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The enemy is not the person standing before you, sword in hand. It is the person standing next to you with a dagger concealed behind his back.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Because the act of surrender means: "I trust you.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Words strike the air and the mind, they act on the senses and on the soul.
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Jan Potocki (The Manuscript Found in Saragossa)
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He loved a book because it was a book; he loved its odor, its form, its title. What he loved in a manuscript was its old illegible date, the bizarre and strange Gothic characters, the heavy gilding which loaded its drawings. It was its pages covered with dust β€” dust of which he breathed the sweet and tender perfume with delight.
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Gustave Flaubert
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There are three infallible ways of pleasing an author, and the three form a rising scale of compliment: 1, to tell him you have read one of his books; 2, to tell him you have read all of his books; 3, to ask him to let you read the manuscript of his forthcoming book. No. 1 admits you to his respect; No. 2 admits you to his admiration; No. 3 carries you clear into his heart.
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Mark Twain (Pudd'nhead Wilson (Bantam Classics))
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Frankly, if there ever was a time when I was really happy, it wasn't during those first intoxicating moments of my success, but long before that, when I hadn't yet read or shown my manuscript to anyone -- during those long nights of ecstatic hopes and dreams and passionate love of my work, when I had grown attached to my vision, to the characters I had created myself, as though they were my own offspring, as though they really existed -- and I loved, rejoiced and grieved over them, at times even shedding quite genuine tears over my guileless hero.
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Fyodor Dostoevsky (The Insulted and Humiliated)
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You will be loved and respected only if you love and respect yourself. Never try to please everyone, if you do, you will be respected by no one.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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When we are walking our chosen path, we walk elegantly, emanating light.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Fate is never unfair to anyone. We are all free to love or hate what we do.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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You will only be loved and respected if you love and respect yourself. Never try to please everyone; if you do, you will be respected by no one.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Although anxiety is part of life, never let it control you.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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We are always prepared to defend ourselves, because we all live with the fear and paranoia that other people don't like us.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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One of Love's qualities--namely, Forgiveness.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Love is an act of faith, not an exchange.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Defeat is for the valiant. Only they will know the honor of losing and the joy of winning.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Let no one reduce to tears or reproach This statement of the mastery of God, Who, with magnificent irony, gave Me at once both books and night Of this city of books He pronounced rulers These lightless eyes, who can only Peruse in libraries of dreams The insensible paragraphs that yield With every new dawn. Vainly does the day Lavish on them its infinite books, Arduous as the arduous manuscripts Which at Alexandria did perish. Of hunger and thirst (a Greek story tells us) Dies a king amidst fountains and gardens; I aimlessly weary at the confines Of this tall and deep blind library. Encyclopedias, atlases, the East And the West, centuries, dynasties Symbols, cosmos and cosmogonies Do walls proffer, but pointlessly. Slow in my shadow, I the hollow shade Explore with my indecisive cane; To think I had imagined Paradise In the form of such a library. Something, certainly not termed Fate, rules on such things; Another had received in blurry Afternoons both books and shadow. Wandering through these slow corridors I often feel with a vague and sacred dread That I am another, the dead one, who must Have trodden the same steps at the same time. Which of the two is now writing this poem Of a plural I and of a single shadow? How important is the word that names me If the anathema is one and indivisible? Groussac or Borges, I see this darling World deform and extinguish To a pale, uncertain ash Resembling sleep and oblivion
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Jorge Luis Borges
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After all we speak of people 'taking refuge' in vagueness -the more precise you are, in general the more likely you are to be wrong, whereas you stand a good chance of not being wrong if you make it vague enough.
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J.L. Austin (Sense and Sensibilia: Reconstructed from the Manuscript Notes by C.J. Warnock)
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Love appears and says: "You think you're heading towards a specific point, but the whole justification for the goal's existence lies in your love for it. Rest a little,but as soon as you can, get up and carry on. Because ever since your goal found out that you were traveling toward it, it has been running to meet you.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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I hid my love when young till I Couldn't bear the buzzing of a fly; I hid my life to my despite Till I could not bear to look at light: I dare not gaze upon her face But left her memory in each place; Where'er I saw a wild flower lie I kissed and bade my love good-bye.
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John Clare (Poems Chiefly from Manuscript)
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When you forgive, the person who insulted you feels humbled in his error and becomes loyal.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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It is remarkable how closely the history of the apple tree is connected with that of man.
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Henry David Thoreau (Wild Fruits: Thoreau's Rediscovered Last Manuscript)
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Don’t give up. Remember, it’s always the last key on the key ring that opens the door.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra: A Literary Fable of Spirituality and Ancient Wisdom)
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She praised his book and he embraced her from gratitude rather than lust, but she didn't let go. Neither did he. She kissed his cheek, his earlobe. For months they'd run their fingers around the hem of their affection without once acknowledging the fabric. The circumference of the world tightened to what their arms encompassed. She sat on the desk, between the columns of read and unread manuscript, and pulled him toward her by his index fingers.
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Anthony Marra (A Constellation of Vital Phenomena)
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Well,' said Can o' Beans, a bit hesitantly,' imprecise speech is one of the major causes of mental illness in human beings.' Huh?' Quite so. The inability to correctly perceive reality is often responsible for humans' insane behavior. And every time they substitute an all-purpose, sloppy slang word for the words that would accurately describe an emotion or a situation, it lowers their reality orientations, pushes them farther from shore, out onto the foggy waters of alienation and confusion.' The manner in which the other were regarding him/her made Can O' Beans feel compelled to continue. 'The word neat, for example, has precise connotations. Neat means tidy, orderly, well-groomed. It's a valuable tool for describing the appearance of a room, a hairdo, or a manuscript. When it's generically and inappropriately applied, though, as it is in the slang aspect, it only obscures the true nature of the thing or feeling that it's supposed to be representing. It's turned into a sponge word. You can wring meanings out of it by the bucketful--and never know which one is right. When a person says a movie is 'neat,' does he mean that it's funny or tragic or thrilling or romantic, does he mean that the cinematography is beautiful, the acting heartfelt, the script intelligent, the direction deft, or the leading lady has cleavage to die for? Slang possesses an economy, an immediacy that's attractive, all right, but it devalues experience by standardizing and fuzzing it. It hangs between humanity and the real world like a . . . a veil. Slang just makes people more stupid, that's all, and stupidity eventually makes them crazy. I'd hate to ever see that kind of craziness rub off onto objects.
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Tom Robbins (Skinny Legs and All)
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You’ll be looking to make a niche for yourself in whatever dim, echoing caverns of academia may still exist by your time. I situate you at your desk, your hair tucked back behind your ears, your nail polish chippedβ€”for nail polish will have returned, it always does. You’re frowning slightly, a habit that will increase as you age. I hover behind you, peering over your shoulder: your muse, your unseen inspiration, urging you on. You’ll labour over this manuscript of mine, reading and rereading, picking nits as you go, developing the fascinated but also bored hatred biographers so often come to feel for their subjects.
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Margaret Atwood (The Testaments (The Handmaid's Tale, #2))
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Writers make everybody nervous but we terrify Silly Service workers. Our apartments always look like a front for something, and no matter how carefully we tidy up for guests we always seem to miss the note card that says, "Margaret has to die soon." We own the kind of books that spies use to construct codes, like The Letters of Mme. de Sevigne, and we are the only people in the world who write oxymoron in the margin of the Bible. Manuscripts in the fridge in case of fire, Strunk's Elements in the bathroom, the Laramie City Directory explained away with "It might come in handy," all strike fear in the GS-7 heart. Nobody really wants to sleep with a writer, but Silly Service workers won't even talk to us.
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Florence King (Confessions of a Failed Southern Lady)
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Grief is not very different from illness: in the impetus of its fire it does not recognise lords, it does not fear colleagues, it does not respect or spare anyone, not even itself." [First letter to Pope Celestine (1193)]
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Eleanor of Aquitaine (The letter collections of Peter of Blois: Studies in the manuscript tradition (Studia Graeca et Latina Gothoburgensia))
β€œ
I once had a dream, or a vision, and I imagined that dream to be of importance to other people, so I wrote the manuscript and made the film. But it is not until the moment when my dream meets with your emotions and your minds that my shadows come to life. It is your recognition that brings them to life. It is your indifference that kills them. I hope that you will understand; that you when you leave the cinema will take with you an experience or a sudden thoughtβ€”or maybe a question. The efforts of my friends and myself have then not been in vain…
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Ingmar Bergman
β€œ
Christ represents originally: 1) men before God; 2) God for men; 3) men to man. Similarly, money represents originally, in accordance with the idea of money: 1) private property for private property; 2) society for private property; 3) private property for society. But Christ is alienated God and alienated man. God has value only insofar as he represents Christ, and man has value only insofar as he represents Christ. It is the same with money.
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Karl Marx (Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 (Dover Books on Western Philosophy))
β€œ
Mother shook her head impatiently. 'You need to...stop looking for heroes, Anne.' Her speech was slow, slurred, but understandable. 'Only the weak need...heroes...and heroes need...those around them to remain weak. You're...not weak.' I remembered those words. I knew they were true, all of them. True about me, and true about Charles. I brought them out, every now and then, as I kept working -- on both the manuscript and myself. And, perhaps on my definition of my marriage. No, my prayer for my marriage; a marriage of two equals. With separate -- but equally valid -- views of the world; shared goggles no more, but looking at the same scenery, at the same time.
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Melanie Benjamin (The Aviator's Wife)
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Beauty is present in all creation, but the danger lies in the fact that we allow ourselves to be influenced by what people think. We deny our own beauty because others can't or won't recognize it. We try to imitate what we see around us. We try to be what other people think of as 'pretty' & little by little, our soul fades. We forget the world is what we imagine it to be. We stop being the sun and become, instead, the pool of water reflecting it.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
β€œ
Preverbal, love is the smell of a known body, the touch of a recognized hand, the blurred face in a haze of light. Words come, and love sharpens. Love becomes describable, narratable, relatable. Over time, one love comes to lay atop another, a mother's love, a father's love, a lover's love, a friend's love, an enemy's love. This promiscuous mixing of feelings and touches, of smiles and cries in the dark, of half-pushed pleasures and heart-cracking pain, of shared unutterable intimacies and guttural expressions, layer in embellished bricolage. One love coats another, like the clear pages of an anatomy textbook, drawing pictures of things we can only ever see in fractions. With the coming of words, love writes and is then overwritten; love is marginalia illegibly scrawled in your own illegible hand. In time, love becomes a dense manuscript, a palimpsest of inscrutable, epic proportions, one love is overlaying another, thick and hot and stinking of beds. It's an unreadable mess.
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Chelsea G. Summers (A Certain Hunger)
β€œ
The greatest threat to a robust, autonomous civil society is the ever-growing Leviathan state and those like Obama who see it as the ultimate expression of the collective. Obama compounds the fallacy by declaring the state to be the font of entrepreneurial success. How so? It created the infrastructure - roads, bridges, schools, Internet - off which we all thrive. Absurd. We don't credit the Swiss postal service with the Special Theory of Relativity because it transmitted Einstein's manuscript to the Annalen der Physik.
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Charles Krauthammer (Things That Matter: Three Decades of Passions, Pastimes and Politics)
β€œ
The fact that labour is external to the worker, i.e., it does not belong to his intrinsic nature; that in his work, therefore he does not affirm himself but denies himself, does not feel content but unhappy, does not develop freely his physical and mental energy but mortifies his body and his mind. The worker therefore only feels himself outside his work, and in his work feels outside himself.
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Karl Marx (Essential Writings of Karl Marx: Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts, Communist Manifesto, Wage Labor and Capital, Critique of the Gotha Program)
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I never wavered in my certainty that God did not exist. I was simply liberated by the thought that there might be a way to engage with religion without having to subscribe to its supernatural content - a way, to put it in more abstract terms, to think about Fathers without upsetting my respectful memory of my own father. I recognized that my continuing resistance to theories of an afterlife or of heavenly residents was no justification for giving up on the music, buildings, prayers, rituals, feasts, shrines, pilgrimages, communal meals and illustrated manuscripts of the faiths.
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Alain de Botton (Religion for Atheists: A Non-Believer's Guide to the Uses of Religion)
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Humanity was heaved back to the paper age in half a second. Life-support systems spat out bolts of energy and died. Precious manuscripts were lost. Banks collapsed as all financial records for the past fifty years were completely wiped out. Planes fell from the sky, the Graum II space station drifted off into space, and defense satellites that were not supposed to exist stopped existing. People took to the streets, shouting into their dead cell phones as if volume could reactivate them. Looting spread across countries like a computer virus while actual computer viruses died with their hosts, and credit cards became mere rectangles of plastic. Parliaments were stormed worldwide as citizens blamed their governments for this series of inexplicable catastrophes. Gouts of fire and foul blurts of actual brimstone emerged from cracks in the earth. These were mostly from ruptured pipes, but people took up a cry of Armageddon. Chaos reigned, and the survivalists eagerly unwrapped the kidskin from their crossbows.
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Eoin Colfer (The Last Guardian (Artemis Fowl, #8))
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In desperate attempt to give meaning to life, many turn to religion, because a struggle in the name of a faith is always a justification for some grand action that could transform the world. β€˜We are doing God’s work,’ they tell themselves. And they become devout followers, then evangelists and, finally, fanatics. They don’t understand that religion was created in order to share the mystery and to worship, not to oppress or convert others. The great manifestation of the miracle of God is life. Tonight, I will weep for you, O Jerusalem, because that understanding of the Divine Unity is about to disappear for the next one thousand years.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Sometimes taking part in a great battle will be the thing that will help to change the course of history. But sometimes you can do that simply by smiling, for no reason, at someone you happen to pass in the street. Without intending to, you might have saved the life of a complete stranger, who also thought he was useless and might have been ready to kill himself – until a smile gave him new hope and confidence.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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Giving importance to what we think because we thought it, taking our own selves not only (to quote the Greek philosopher) as the measure of all things but as their norm or standard, we create in ourselves, if not an interpretation, at least a criticism of the universe, which we don't even know and therefore cannot criticize. The giddiest, most weak-minded of us then promote that criticism to an interpretation that's superimposed, like a hallucination; induced rather than deduced. It's a hallucination in the strict sense, being an illusion based on something only dimly seen.
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Fernando Pessoa (The Education of the Stoic: The Only Manuscript of the Baron of Teive)
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We are afraid to change because we think that, after so much effort and sacrifice, we know our present world. And even though that world might not be the best of all worlds, and even though we may not be entirely satisfied with it, at least it won’t give us any nasty surprises. We won’t go wrong. When necessary, we will make a few minor adjustments so that everything continues the same.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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A tree's shade is worth more than the knowledge of truth, my sons, for a tree's shade is true while it lasts, and the knowledge of truth is false in its very truth. The leaves' greenness is worth more, for a right understanding, than a great thought, for the leaves, greenness is something you can show others, but you can never show them a great thought. We are born without knowing how to talk and we die without having known how to express ourselves. Our life runs its course between the silence of one who cannot speak and the silence of one who wasn't understood, and around it hovers β€” like a bee where there are no flowers β€” a useless, inscrutable destiny.
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Fernando Pessoa (The Education of the Stoic: The Only Manuscript of the Baron of Teive)
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Among university professors, for example, getting tenure is a major hurdle and milestone, and at most universities tenure depends heavily on having published some high-quality, original work. One researcher, Bob Boice, looked into the writing habits of young professors just starting out and tracked them to see how they fared. Not surprisingly, in a job where there is no real boss and no one sets schedules or tells you what to do, these young professors took a variety of approaches. Some would collect information until they were ready and then write a manuscript in a burst of intense energy, over perhaps a week or two, possibly including some long days and very late nights. Others plodded along at a steadier pace, trying to write a page or two every day. Others were in between. When Boice followed up on the group some years later, he found that their paths had diverged sharply. The page-a-day folks had done well and generally gotten tenure. The so-called β€œbinge writers” fared far less well, and many had had their careers cut short. The clear implication was that the best advice for young writers and aspiring professors is: Write every day. Use your self-control to form a daily habit, and you’ll produce more with less effort in the long run.
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Roy F. Baumeister (Willpower: Rediscovering Our Greatest Strength)
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Far and away the greatest menace to the writerβ€”any writer, beginning or otherwiseβ€”is the reader. The reader is, after all, a kind of silent partner in this whole business of writing, and a work of fiction is surely incomplete if it is never read. The reader is, in fact, the writer's only unrelenting, genuine enemy. He has everything on his side; all he has to do, after all, is shut his eyes, and any work of fiction becomes meaningless. Moreover, a reader has an advantage over a beginning writer in not being a beginning reader; before he takes up a story to read it, he can be presumed to have read everything from Shakespeare to Jack Kerouac. No matter whether he reads a story in manuscript as a great personal favor, or opens a magazine, orβ€”kindest of allβ€”goes into a bookstore and pays good money for a book, he is still an enemy to be defeated with any kind of dirty fighting that comes to the writer's mind.
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Shirley Jackson (Let Me Tell You: New Stories, Essays, and Other Writings)
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Don't panic. Midway through writing a novel, I have regularly experienced moments of bowel-curdling terror, as I contemplate the drivel on the screen before me and see beyond it, in quick succession, the derisive reviews, the friends' embarrassment, the failing career, the dwindling income, the repossessed house, the divorce . . . Working doggedly on through crises like these, however, has always got me there in the end. Leaving the desk for a while can help. Talking the problem through can help me recall what I was trying to achieve before I got stuck. Going for a long walk almost always gets me thinking about my manuscript in a slightly new way. And if all else fails, there's prayer. St Francis de Sales, the patron saint of writers, has often helped me out in a crisis. If you want to spread your net more widely, you could try appealing to Calliope, the muse of epic poetry, too.
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Sarah Waters
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How do you end a story that’s not yours? Add another sentence where there is a pause? Infiltrate the story with a comma when really there should have been a period? Punctuate with an exclamation point where a period would have sufficed? What if you kill something breathing and breathe life into something the author wanted to eliminate? How do you get inside the mind of a person who isn’t there? Fill the shoes of someone who will never again fill his own?
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Shaila M. Abdullah
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The Allatians believe that they have a writing system superior to all others. Unlike books written in alphabets, syllabaries, or logograms, an Allatian book captures not only words, but also the writer’s tone, voice, inflection, emphasis, intonation, rhythm. It is simultaneously a score and a recording. A speech sounds like a speech, a lament a lament, and a story re-creates perfectly the teller’s breathless excitement. For the Allatians, reading is literally hearing the voice of the past. But there is a cost to the beauty of the Allatian book. Because the act of reading requires physical contact with the soft, malleable surface, each time a text is read, it is also damaged and some aspects of the original irretrievably lost. Copies made of more durable materials inevitably fail to capture all the subtleties of the writer’s voice, and are thus shunned. In order to preserve their literary heritage, the Allatians have to lock away their most precious manuscripts in forbidding libraries where few are granted access. Ironically, the most important and beautiful works of Allatian writers are rarely read, but are known only through interpretations made by scribes who attempt to reconstruct the original in new books after hearing the source read at special ceremonies.
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Ken Liu (The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories)
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Without solitude, Love will not stay long by your side. Because Love needs to rest, so that it can journey through the heavens and reveal itself in other forms. Without solitude, no plant or animal can survive, no soil can remain productive, no child can learn about life, no artist can create, no work can grow and be transformed. Solitude is not the absence of Love, but its complement. Solitude is not the absence of company, but the moment when our soul is free to speak to us and help us decide what to do with our life. Therefore, blessed are those who do not fear solitude, who are not afraid of their own company, who are not always desperately looking for something to do, something to amuse themselves with, something to judge. If you are never alone, you cannot know yourself. And if you do not know yourself, you will begin to fear the void.
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Paulo Coelho (Manuscript Found in Accra)
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On Editors: "... The chief qualification of ninety-nine per cent of all editors is failure. They have failed as writers. Don't think they prefer the drudgery of the desk and the slavery to their circulation and to the business manager to the joy of writing. They have tried to write, and they have failed. And right there is the cursed paradox of it. Every portal to success in literature is guarded by those watch-dogs, the failures of literature. The editors, the sub-editors, associate editors, most of them, and the manuscript readers for the magazines and book-publishers, most of them, nearly all of them, are men who wanted to write and failed. And yet they, of all creatures under the sun the most unfit, are the very creatures who decide what shall and what shall not find its way into print–they, who have proved themselves not original, who have demonstrated that they lack the divine fire, sit in judgment upon originality and genius. And after them comes the reviewers, just so many more failures. Don't tell me that they have not dreamed the dream and attempted to write poetry and fiction; for they have, and they have failed. Why, the average review is more nauseating than cod-liver oil....
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Jack London (Martin Eden)
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Ms. Lane.”Barrons’ voice is deep, touched with that strange Old World accent and mildly pissed off. Jericho Barrons is often mildly pissed off. I think he crawled from the swamp that way, chafed either by some condition in it, out of it, or maybe just the general mass incompetence he encountered in both places. He’s the most controlled, capable man I’ve ever known. After all we’ve been through together, he still calls me Ms. Lane, with one exception: When I’m in his bed. Or on the floor, or some other place where I’ve temporarily lost my mind and become convinced I can’t breathe without him inside me this very instant. Then the things he calls me are varied and nobody’s business but mine. I reply: β€œBarrons,” without inflection. I’ve learned a few things in our time together. Distance is frequently the only intimacy he’ll tolerate. Suits me. I’ve got my own demons. Besides I don’t believe good relationships come from living inside each other’s pockets. I believe divorce comes from that. I admire the animal grace with which he enters the room and moves toward me. He prefers dark colors, the better to slide in and out of the night, or a room, unnoticed except for whatever he’s left behind that you may or may not discover for some time, like, say a tattoo on the back of one’s skull. β€œWhat are you doing?” β€œReading,” I say nonchalantly, rubbing the tattoo on the back of my skull. I angle the volume so he can’t see the cover. If he sees what I’m reading, he’ll know I’m looking for something. If he realizes how bad it’s gotten, and what I’m thinking about doing, he’ll try to stop me. He circles behind me, looks over my shoulder at the thick vellum of the ancient manuscript. β€œIn the first tongue?” β€œIs that what it is?” I feign innocence. He knows precisely which cells in my body are innocent and which are thoroughly corrupted. He’s responsible for most of the corrupted ones. One corner of his mouth ticks up and I see the glint of beast behind his eyes, a feral crimson backlight, bloodstaining the whites. It turns me on. Barrons makes me feel violently, electrically sexual and alive. I’d march into hell beside him. But I will not let him march into hell beside me. And there’s no doubt that’s where I’m going. I thought I was strong, a heroine. I thought I was the victor. The enemy got inside my head and tried to seduce me with lies. It’s easy to walk away from lies. Power is another thing. Temptation isn’t a sin that you triumph over once, completely and then you’re free. Temptation slips into bed with you each night and helps you say your prayers. It wakes you in the morning with a friendly cup of coffee, and knows exactly how you take it. He skirts the Chesterfield sofa and stands over me. β€œLooking for something, Ms. Lane?” I’m eye level with his belt but that’s not where my gaze gets stuck and suddenly my mouth is so dry I can hardly swallow and I know I’m going to want to. I’m Pri-ya for this man. I hate it. I love it. I can’t escape it. I reach for his belt buckle. The manuscript slides from my lap, forgotten. Along with everything else but this moment, this man. β€œI just found it,” I tell him.
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Karen Marie Moning (Burned (Fever, #7))