β
I loved you like a man loves a woman he never touches, only writes to, keeps little photographs of.
β
β
Charles Bukowski (Love Is a Dog from Hell)
β
I don't mind living in a man's world, as long as I can be a woman in it.
β
β
Marilyn Monroe (Marilyn: Her Life in Her Own Words: Marilyn Monroe's Revealing Last Words and Her Photographs)
β
When they asked me what I wanted to be I said I didnβt know.
"Oh, sure you know," the photographer said.
"She wants," said Jay Cee wittily, "to be everything.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
What i like about photographs is that they capture a moment thatβs gone forever, impossible to reproduce.
β
β
Karl Lagerfeld
β
A short story is a love affair, a novel is a marriage. A short story is a photograph; a novel is a film.
β
β
Lorrie Moore
β
At some point in life the world's beauty becomes enough. You don't need to photograph, paint, or even remember it. It is enough.
β
β
Toni Morrison
β
When words become unclear, I shall focus with photographs. When images become inadequate, I shall be content with silence.
β
β
Ansel Adams
β
I ask people why they have deer heads on their walls. They always say because it's such a beautiful animal. There you go. I think my mother is attractive, but I have photographs of her.
β
β
Ellen DeGeneres
β
You don't make a photograph just with a camera. You bring to the act of photography all the pictures you have seen, the books you have read, the music you have heard, the people you have loved.
β
β
Ansel Adams
β
When you photograph people in color, you photograph their clothes. But when you photograph people in Black and white, you photograph their souls!
β
β
Ted Grant
β
Whether he is an artist or not, the photographer is a joyous sensualist, for the simple reason that the eye traffics in feelings, not in thoughts.
β
β
Walker Evans
β
All photographs are memento mori. To take a photograph is to participate in another personβs (or thingβs) mortality, vulnerability, mutability. Precisely by slicing out this moment and freezing it, all photographs testify to timeβs relentless melt.
β
β
Susan Sontag
β
I just hope I remember to tell my kids that they are as happy as I look in my old photographs. And I hope that they believe me.
β
β
Stephen Chbosky (The Perks of Being a Wallflower)
β
You don't take a photograph, you make it.
β
β
Ansel Adams
β
A passport, as I'm sure you know, is a document that one shows to government officials whenever one reaches a border between two countries, so that the official can learn who you are, where you were born, and how you look when photographed unflatteringly.
β
β
Lemony Snicket
β
All we ever see of stars are their old photographs.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
The difference between how you look and how you see yourself is enough to kill most people. And maybe the reason vampires donβt die is because they can never see themselves in photographs or mirrors.
β
β
Chuck Palahniuk (Haunted)
β
It scares me how hard it is to remember life before you. I can't even make the comparisons anymore, because my memories of that time have all the depth of a photograph. It seems foolish to play games of better and worse. It's simply a matter of is and is no longer.
β
β
David Levithan (The Lover's Dictionary)
β
Your first 10,000 photographs are your worst.
β
β
Henri Cartier-Bresson
β
He wanted to live life in such a way that if a photograph were taken at random, it would be a cool photograph.
β
β
David Nicholls (One Day)
β
A great photograph is one that fully expresses what one feels, in the deepest sense, about what is being photographed.
β
β
Ansel Adams
β
I was looking at the photographs and I started thinking that there was a time when these weren't memories.
β
β
Stephen Chbosky (The Perks of Being a Wallflower)
β
To the complaint, 'There are no people in these photographs,' I respond, There are always two people: the photographer and the viewer.
β
β
Ansel Adams
β
Today everything exists to end in a photograph.
β
β
Susan Sontag
β
I'm the girl who is lost in space, the girl who is disappearing always, forever fading away and receding farther and farther into the background. Just like the Cheshire cat, someday I will suddenly leave, but the artificial warmth of my smile, that phony, clownish curve, the kind you see on miserably sad people and villains in Disney movies, will remain behind as an ironic remnant. I am the girl you see in the photograph from some party someplace or some picnic in the park, the one who is in fact soon to be gone. When you look at the picture again, I want to assure you, I will no longer be there. I will be erased from history, like a traitor in the Soviet Union. Because with every day that goes by, I feel myself becoming more and more invisible...
β
β
Elizabeth Wurtzel (Prozac Nation)
β
Nothing is original. Steal from anywhere that resonates with inspiration or fuels your imagination. Devour old films, new films, music, books, paintings, photographs, poems, dreams, random conversations, architecture, bridges, street signs, trees, clouds, bodies of water, light and shadows. Select only things to steal from that speak directly to your soul. If you do this, your work (and theft) will be authentic. Authenticity is invaluable; originality is non-existent. And donβt bother concealing your thievery - celebrate it if you feel like it. In any case, always remember what Jean-Luc Godard said: βItβs not where you take things from - itβs where you take them to."
[MovieMaker Magazine #53 - Winter, January 22, 2004 ]
β
β
Jim Jarmusch
β
Taking pictures is savoring life intensely, every hundredth of a second.
β
β
Marc Riboud
β
We photograph things in order to drive them out of our minds. My stories are a way of shutting my eyes.
β
β
Franz Kafka
β
The Earth is Art, The Photographer is only a Witness
β
β
Yann Arthus-Bertrand (Earth from Above)
β
I used to think that I could never lose anyone if I photographed them enough. In fact, my pictures show me how much Iβve lost.
β
β
Nan Goldin
β
There are no rules for good photographs, there are only good photographs.
β
β
Ansel Adams
β
To photograph people is to violate them, by seeing them as they never see themselves, by having knowledge of them that they can never have; it turns people into objects that can be symbolically possessed. Just as a camera is a sublimation of the gun, to photograph someone is a subliminal murder - a soft murder, appropriate to a sad, frightened time.
β
β
Susan Sontag (On Photography)
β
I donβt have a photograph, but you can have my footprints. Theyβre upstairs in my socks.
β
β
Groucho Marx
β
I believe in equality for everyone, except reporters and photographers.
β
β
Mahatma Gandhi
β
It is a cruel, ironical art, photography. The dragging of captured moments into the future; moments that should have been allowed to be evaporate into the past; should exist only in memories, glimpsed through the fog of events that came after. Photographs force us to see people before their future weighed them down....
β
β
Kate Morton (The House at Riverton)
β
To photograph is to hold one's breath, when all faculties converge to capture fleeting reality. It's at that precise moment that mastering an image becomes a great physical and intellectual joy.
β
β
Henri Cartier-Bresson (The Mind's Eye: Writings on Photography and Photographers)
β
And I'll dance with you in Vienna,
I'll be wearing a river's disguise.
The hyacinth wild on my shoulder
my mouth on the dew of your thighs.
And I'll bury my soul in a scrapbook,
with the photographs there and the moss.
And I'll yield to the flood of your beauty,
my cheap violin and my cross.
β
β
Leonard Cohen (Stranger Music: Selected Poems and Songs)
β
All colors made me happy: even gray.
My eyes were such that literally they
Took photographs.
β
β
Vladimir Nabokov (Pale Fire)
β
I have one last hope for you, which is something that I already had at 21. The friends with whom I sat on graduation day have been my friends for life. They are my childrenβs godparents, the people to whom Iβve been able to turn in times of trouble, friends who have been kind enough not to sue me when Iβve used their names for Death Eaters. At our graduation we were bound by enormous affection, by our shared experience of a time that could never come again, and, of course, by the knowledge that we held certain photographic evidence that would be exceptionally valuable if any of us ran for Prime Minister.
β
β
J.K. Rowling (Very Good Lives: The Fringe Benefits of Failure and the Importance of Imagination)
β
A photograph is a moral decision taken in one eighth of a second.
β
β
Salman Rushdie (The Ground Beneath Her Feet)
β
there is this one photograph... that is just beautiful. it would be impossible to describe how beautiful it is, but iβll try. if you listen to the song βasleep,β and you think about those pretty weather days that make you remember things, and you think about the prettiest eyes youβve known, and you cry and the person holds you back, then i think you will see the photograph.
β
β
Stephen Chbosky (The Perks of Being a Wallflower)
β
It's like he would take a photograph of Sam, and the photograph
would be beautiful. And he would think that the reason the
photograph was beautiful was because of how he took it. If I took
it, I would know that the only reason it's beautiful is because of
Sam.
β
β
Stephen Chbosky (The Perks of Being a Wallflower)
β
Old pictures look very rugged and young, and the people in the photographs always seem a lot happier than you are.
β
β
Stephen Chbosky (The Perks of Being a Wallflower)
β
A photographer is like a cod, which produces a million eggs in order that one may reach maturity.
β
β
George Bernard Shaw
β
Not everybody trusts paintings but people believe photographs.
β
β
Ansel Adams
β
Photographs are a way of imprisoning reality...One can't possess reality, one can possess images--one can't possess the present but one can possess the past.
β
β
Susan Sontag (On Photography)
β
Always seeing something, never seeing nothing, being photographer
β
β
Walter De Mulder
β
It frustrates and fascinates me that we'll never know for sure, that despite the best efforts of historians and scientists and poets, there are some things we'll just never know. What the first song sounded like. How it felt to see the first photograph. Who kissed the first kiss, and if it was any good.
β
β
Isaac Marion (Warm Bodies (Warm Bodies, #1))
β
A photograph is usually looked at- seldom looked into.
β
β
Ansel Adams
β
Perhaps itβs true that things can change in a day. That a few dozen hours can affect the outcome of whole lifetimes. And that when they do, those few dozen hours, like the salvaged remains of a burned houseβthe charred clock, the singed photograph, the scorched furnitureβmust be resurrected from the ruins and examined. Preserved. Accounted for. Little events, ordinary things, smashed and reconstituted. Imbued with new meaning. Suddenly they become the bleached bones of a story.
β
β
Arundhati Roy (The God of Small Things)
β
Itβs painful, loving someone from afar.
Watching them β from the outside.
The once familiar elements of their life reduced to nothing more than occasional mentions in conversations and faces changing in photographsβ¦..
They exist to you now as nothing more than living proof that something can still hurt you β¦ with no contact at all.
β
β
Ranata Suzuki
β
Love After Love
The time will come
when, with elation
you will greet yourself arriving
at your own door, in your own mirror
and each will smile at the other's welcome,
and say, sit here. Eat.
You will love again the stranger who was your self.
Give wine. Give bread. Give back your heart
to itself, to the stranger who has loved you
all your life, whom you ignored
for another, who knows you by heart.
Take down the love letters from the bookshelf,
the photographs, the desperate notes,
peel your own image from the mirror.
Sit. Feast on your life.
β
β
Derek Walcott (Collected Poems, 1948-1984)
β
The painter constructs, the photographer discloses.
β
β
Susan Sontag (On Photography)
β
Everyone has a photographic Memory, some just don't have film.
β
β
Steven Wright
β
This is what I like about photographs. They're proof that once, even if just for a heartbeat, everything was perfect.
β
β
Jodi Picoult (Lone Wolf)
β
While there is perhaps a province in which the photograph can tell us nothing more than what we see with our own eyes, there is another in which it proves to us how little our eyes permit us to see.
β
β
Dorothea Lange
β
A great photograph is a full expression of what one feels about what is being photographed in the deepest sense and is thereby a true expression of what one feels about life in its entirety.
β
β
Ansel Adams
β
I remember seeing that picture and realizing that photographs werenβt real. Thereβs no context, just the illusion that youβre showing a snapshot of a life, but life isnβt snapshots, itβs fluid. So photos are like fictions. I loved that about them. Everyone thinks photography is truth, but itβs just a very convincing lie.
β
β
Victoria E. Schwab (The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue)
β
Life is a movie; death is a photograph.
β
β
Susan Sontag
β
A portrait is not a likeness. The moment an emotion or fact is transformed into a photograph it is no longer a fact but an opinion. There is no such thing as inaccuracy in a photograph. All photographs are accurate. None of them is the truth.
β
β
Richard Avedon
β
Above all, life for a photographer cannot be a matter of indifference
β
β
Robert Frank
β
A photograph shouldn't be just a picture, it should be a philosophy.
β
β
Amit Kalantri (Wealth of Words)
β
What the Photograph reproduces to infinity has occurred only once: the Photograph mechanically repeats what could never be repeated existentially.
β
β
Roland Barthes (Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography)
β
When you draw something it lives and when you photograph it it dies.
β
β
John Fowles (The Collector)
β
I loved you
like a man loves a woman he never touches, only
writes to, keeps little photographs of. I would have
loved you more if I had sat in a small room rolling a
cigarette and listened to you piss in the bathroom,
but that didnβt happen. your letters got sadder.
your lovers betrayed you. kid, I wrote back, all
lovers betray.
β
β
Charles Bukowski (Love Is a Dog from Hell)
β
A photograph can be an instant of life captured for eternity that will never cease looking back at you.
β
β
Brigitte Bardot
β
Old lovers go the way of old photographs, bleaching out gradually as in a slow bath of acid: first the moles and pimples, then the shadings. Then the faces themselves, until nothing remains but the general outlines.
β
β
Margaret Atwood (Catβs Eye)
β
Needing to have reality confirmed and experience enhanced by photographs is an aesthetic consumerism to which everyone is now addicted. Industrial societies turn their citizens into image-junkies; it is the most irresistible form of mental pollution.
β
β
Susan Sontag (On Photography)
β
We feel that to reveal embarrassing or private things, we have given someone something, that, like a primitive person fearing that a photographer will steal his soul, we identify our secrets, our past and their blotches, with our identity, that revealing our habits or losses or deeds somehow makes one less of oneself.
β
β
Dave Eggers (A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius)
β
Landscape photography is the supreme test of the photographer - and often the supreme disappointment.
β
β
Ansel Adams
β
To photograph: it is to put on the same line of sight the head, the eye and the heart.
β
β
Henri Cartier-Bresson
β
to take a photograph is to participate in another person's mortality, vulnerability, mutability. precisely by slicing out this moment and freezing it, all photographs testify to time's relentless melt.
β
β
Susan Sontag (On Photography)
β
Pleasures are like photographs: in the presence of the person we love, we take only negatives, which we develop later, at home, when we have at our disposal once more our inner dark room, the door of which it is strictly forbidden to open while others are present.
β
β
Marcel Proust (In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower)
β
When you develop an infatuation for someone you always find a reason to believe that this is exactly the person for you. It doesnβt need to be a good reason. Taking photographs of the night sky, for example. Now, in the long run, thatβs just the kind of dumb, irritating habit that would cause you to split up. But in the haze of infatuation, itβs just what youβve been searching for all these years.
β
β
Alex Garland (The Beach)
β
When I look at my old pictures, all I can see is what I used to be but am no longer. I think: What I can see is what I am not.
β
β
Aleksandar Hemon (The Lazarus Project)
β
People spot a big black lens, and they worry about what they're doing, or how their hair looks. Nobody see the person holding the camera.
β
β
Erica O'Rourke (Torn (Torn Trilogy, #1))
β
Ultimately β or at the limit β in order to see a photograph well, it is best to look away or close your eyes. 'The necessary condition for an image is sight,'Janouch told Kafka; and Kafka smiled and replied: 'We photograph things in order to drive them out of our minds. My stories are a way of shutting my eyes.
β
β
Roland Barthes (Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography)
β
i don't know when love became elusive
what i know, is that no one i know has it
my fathers arms around my mothers neck
fruit too ripe to eat, a door half way open
when your name is a just a hand i can never hold
everything i have ever believed in, becomes magic.
i think of lovers as trees, growing to and
from one another searching for the same light,
my mothers laughter in a dark room,
a photograph greying under my touch,
this is all i know how to do, carry loss around until
i begin to resemble every bad memory,
every terrible fear,
every nightmare anyone has ever had.
i ask did you ever love me?
you say of course, of course so quickly
that you sound like someone else
i ask are you made of steel? are you made of iron?
you cry on the phone, my stomach hurts
i let you leave, i need someone who knows how to stay.
β
β
Warsan Shire
β
I donβt know if I will have the time to write any more letters, because I might be too busy trying to participate. So, if this does end up being the last letter, I just want you to know that I was in a bad place before I started high school, and you helped me. Even if you didnβt know what I was talking about, or know someone whoβs gone through it, you made me not feel alone. Because I know there are people who say all these things donβt happen. And there are people who forget what itβs like to be sixteen when they turn seventeen. I know these will all be stories some day, and our pictures will become old photographs. We all become somebodyβs mom or dad. But right now, these moments are not stories. This is happening. I am here, and I am looking at her. And she is so beautiful. I can see it. This one moment when you know youβre not a sad story. You are alive. And you stand up and see the lights on the buildings and everything that makes you wonder. And youβre listening to that song, and that drive with the people who you love most in this world. And in this moment, I swear, we are infinite.
β
β
Stephen Chbosky (The Perks of Being a Wallflower)
β
No more Internet. No more social media, no more scrolling through litanies of dreams and nervous hopes and photographs of lunches, cries for help and expressions of contentment and relationship-status updates with heart icons whole or broken, plans to meet up later, pleas, complaints, desires, pictures of babies dressed as bears or peppers for Halloween. No more reading and commenting on the lives of others, and in so doing, feeling slightly less alone in the room. No more avatars.
β
β
Emily St. John Mandel (Station Eleven)
β
At some point in life the world's beauty becomes enough. You don't need to photograph, paint or even remember it. It is enough. No record of it needs to be kept and you don't need someone to share it with or tell it to. When that happens β that letting go β you let go because you can.
β
β
Toni Morrison (Tar Baby)
β
It's funny, but certain faces seem to go in and out of style. You look at old photographs and everybody has a certain look to them, almost as if they're related. Look at pictures from ten years later and you can see that there's a new kind of face starting to predominate, and that the old faces are fading away and vanishing, never to be seen again.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
The happening and telling are very different things. This doesnβt mean that the story isnβt true,
only that I honestly donβt know anymore if I really remember it or only remember how to tell it. Language does this to our memories, simplifies, solidifies, codifies, mummifies. An off-told story is like a photograph in a family album. Eventually it replaces the moment it was meant to capture.
β
β
Karen Joy Fowler (We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves)
β
It was the face of spring, it was the face of summer, it was the warmness of clover breath. Pomegranate glowed in her lips, and the noon sky in her eyes. To touch her face was that always new experience of opening your window one December morning, early, and putting out your hand to the first white cool powdering of snow that had come, silently, with no announcement, in the night. And all of this, this breath-warmness and plum-tenderness was held forever in one miracle of photographic is chemistry which no clock winds could blow upon to change one hour or one second; this fine first cool white snow would never melt, but live a thousand summers.
β
β
Ray Bradbury (Dandelion Wine)
β
The whole point of taking pictures is so that you donβt have to explain things with words.
β
β
Elliott Erwitt
β
You have your wonderful memories," people said later, as if memories were solace. Memories are not. Memories are by definition of times past, things gone. Memories are the Westlake uniforms in the closet, the faded and cracked photographs, the invitations to the weddings of the people who are no longer married, the mass cards from the funerals of the people whose faces you no longer remember. Memories are what you no longer want to remember.
β
β
Joan Didion (Blue Nights)
β
I know these will all be stories some day, and our pictures will become old photographs. We all become somebodyβs mom or dad. But right now, these moments are not stories. This is happening. I can see it. This one moment when you know youβre not a sad story. You are alive. And you stand up and see the lights on the buildings and everything that makes you wonder. And youβre listening to that song, and that drive with the people who you love most in this world. And in this moment, I swear, we are infinite.
β
β
Stephen Chbosky
β
It is photography itself that creates the illusion of innocence. Its ironies of frozen narrative lend to its subjects an apparent unawareness that they will change or die. It is the future they are innocent of. Fifty years on we look at them with the godly knowledge of how they turne dout after all - who they married, the date of their death - with no thought for who will one day be holding photographs of us.
β
β
Ian McEwan (Black Dogs)
β
The secret to modeling is not being perfect. What one needs is a face that people can identify in a second. You have to be given whatβs needed by nature, and whatβs needed is to bring something new.
β
β
Karl Lagerfeld
β
The biggest mistake I made is the one that most of us make while doing this. I did not live in the moment enough. This is particularly clear now that the moment is gone, captured only in photographs. There is one picture of the three on them sitting in the grass on a quilt in the shadow of the swing set on a summer day, ages 6, 4, and 1. And I wish I could remember what we ate, and what we talked about, and how they sounded, and how they looked when they slept that night. I wish I had not been in a hurry to get on to the next things: dinner, bath, book, bed. I wish I had treasured the doing a little more and the getting it done a little less.
β
β
Anna Quindlen (Loud and Clear)
β
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.
β
β
Deborah Harkness (A Discovery of Witches (All Souls, #1))
β
When we fall in love with someone there's a moment when we take a picture of that person, an emotional snapshot, that we carry with us forever. If we're lucky, if we're very, very lucky, the person we fall in love with will always resemble that snapshot.
β
β
Jim Geoghan (Light Sensitive)
β
... so this is for us.
This is for us who sing, write, dance, act, study, run and love
and this is for doing it even if no one will ever know
because the beauty is in the act of doing it.
Not what it can lead to.
This is for the times I lose myself while writing, singing, playing
and no one is around and they will never know
but I will forever remember
and that shines brighter than any praise or fame or glory I will ever have,
and this is for you who write or play or read or sing
by yourself with the light off and door closed
when the world is asleep and the stars are aligned
and maybe no one will ever hear it
or read your words
or know your thoughts
but it doesnβt make it less glorious.
It makes it ethereal. Mysterious.
Infinite.
For it belongs to you and whatever God or spirit you believe in
and only you can decide how much it meant
and means
and will forever mean
and other people will experience it too
through you.
Through your spirit. Through the way you talk.
Through the way you walk and love and laugh and care
and I never meant to write this long
but what I want to say is:
Donβt try to present your art by making other people read or hear or see or touch it; make them feel it. Wear your art like your heart on your sleeve and keep it alive by making people feel a little better. Feel a little lighter. Create art in order for yourself to become yourself
and let your very existence be your song, your poem, your story.
Let your very identity be your book.
Let the way people say your name sound like the sweetest melody.
So go create. Take photographs in the wood, run alone in the rain and sing your heart out high up on a mountain
where no one will ever hear
and your very existence will be the most hypnotising scar.
Make your life be your art
and you will never be forgotten.
β
β
Charlotte Eriksson (Another Vagabond Lost To Love: Berlin Stories on Leaving & Arriving)
β
You see the first thing we love is a scene. For love at first sight requires the very sign of its suddenness; and of all things, it is the scene which seems to be seen best for the first time: a curtain parts and what had not yet ever been seen is devoured by the eyes: the scene consecrates the object I am going to love. The context is the constellation of elements, harmoniously arranged that encompass the experience of the amorous subject...
Love at first sight is always spoken in the past tense. The scene is perfectly adapted to this temporal phenomenon: distinct, abrupt, framed, it is already a memory (the nature of a photograph is not to represent but to memorialize)... this scene has all the magnificence of an accident: I cannot get over having had this good fortune: to meet what matches my desire.
The gesture of the amorous embrace seems to fulfill, for a time, the subject's dream of total union with the loved being: The longing for consummation with the other... In this moment, everything is suspended: time, law, prohibition: nothing is exhausted, nothing is wanted: all desires are abolished, for they seem definitively fulfilled... A moment of affirmation; for a certain time, though a finite one, a deranged interval, something has been successful: I have been fulfilled (all my desires abolished by the plenitude of their satisfaction).
β
β
Roland Barthes (A Lover's Discourse: Fragments)
β
There was a scuffling and a great thump: someone else had clambered out of the tunnel, overbalanced slightly and fallen. He pulled himself up on the nearest chair, looked around through lopsided horn - rimmed glasses and said, 'Am I too late? Has it started? I only just found out, so I - I -'
Percy spluttered into silence. Evidently he had not expected to run into most of his family. There was a long moment of astonishment, broken by Fleur turning to Lupin and saying, in a wildly transparent attempt to break the tension, 'So - 'ow eez leetle Teddy?'
Lupin blinked at her, startled. The silence between the Weasleys seemed to be solidifying, like ice.
'I - oh yes - he's fine!' Lupin said loudly. 'Yes, Tonks is with him - at her mother's.'
Percy and the other Weasleys were still staring at one another, frozen.
'Here, I've got a picture!' Lupin shouted, pulling a photograph from inside his jacket and showing it to Fleur and Harry, who saw a tiny baby with a tuff of bright turquoise hair, waving fat fists at the camera.
'I was a fool!' Percy roared, so loudly that Lupin nearly dropped his photograph 'I was an idiot, I was a pompous prat, I was a - a -'
'Ministry - loving, family - disowning, power - hungry moron,' said Fred.
Percy swallowed.
'Yes I was!
β
β
J.K. Rowling (Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Harry Potter, #7))
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Your salary is not love and your word is not love. Your clothes are not love and holding hands is not love. Sex is not love and a kiss is not love. Long letters are not love and a text is not love. Flowers are not love and a box of chocolates is not love. Sunsets are not love and photographs are not love. The stars are not love and a beach under the moonlight is not love. The smell of someone else on your pillow is not love and the feeling of their skin touching your skin is not love. Heart-shaped candy is not love and an overseas holiday is not love. The truth is not love and winning an argument is not love. Warm coffee isn't love and cheap cards bought from stores are not love. Tears are not love and laughter is not love. A head on a shoulder is not love and messages written at the front of books given as gifts are not love. Apathy is not love and numbness is not love. A pain in your chest is not love and clenching your fist is not love. Rain is not love.
Only you. Only you, are love.
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pleasefindthis (I Wrote This For You (I Wrote This For You #4))
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people used to tell me that i had beautiful hands
told me so often, in fact, that one day i started to believe them until i asked my photographer father, βhey daddy could i be a hand modelβ
to which he said no way,
i dont remember the reason he gave me and i wouldve been upset,
but there were far too many stuffed animals to hold
too many homework assignment to write,
too many boys to wave at
too many years to grow,
we used to have a game, my dad and i about holding hands cus we held hands everywhere, and every time either he or i would whisper a great
big number to the other, pretending that we were keeping track of how many times we had held hands that we were sure, this one had to be 8 million 2 thousand 7 hundred and fifty three.
hands learn more than minds do,
hands learn how to hold other hands,
how to grip pencils and mold poetry,
how to tickle pianos and dribble a basketball,
and grip the handles of a bicycle
how to hold old people, and touch babies ,
i love hands like i love people,
they're the maps and compasses in which we navigate our way through life, some people read palms to tell your future,
but i read hands to tell your past,
each scar marks the story worth telling,
each calloused palm,
each cracked knuckle is a missed punch
or years in a factory,
now ive seen middle eastern hands clenched in middle eastern fists pounding against each other like war drums, each country sees theyre fists as warriors and others as enemies.
even if fists alone are only hands. but this is not about politics, no hands arent about politics, this is a poem about love, and fingers. fingers interlock like a beautiful zipper of prayer.
one time i grabbed my dads hands so that our fingers interlocked perfectly but he changed positions, saying no that hand hold is for your mom.
kids high five, but grown ups, we learn how to shake hands, you need a firm hand shake,but dont hold on too tight, but dont let go too soon, but dont hold down for too long,
but hands are not about politics, when did it become so complicated. i always thought its simple.
the other day my dad looked at my hands, as if seeing them for the first time, and with laughter behind his eye lids, with all the seriousness a man of his humor could muster, he said you know you got nice hands, you couldβve been a hand model, and before the laughter can escape me, i shake my head at him, and squeeze his hand, 8 million 2 thousand 7hundred and fifty four.
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Sarah Kay
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I'm going to ask you to remember the prostituted, the homeless, the battered, the raped, the tortured, the murdered, the raped-then-murdered, the murdered-then-raped; and I am going to ask you to remember the photographed, the ones that any or all of the above happened to and it was photographed and now the photographs are for sale in our free countries. I want you to think about those who have been hurt for the fun, the entertainment, the so-called speech of others; those who have been hurt for profit, for the financial benefit of pimps and entrepreneurs. I want you to remember the perpetrator and I am going to ask you to remember the victims: not just tonight but tomorrow and the next day. I want you to find a way to include them -- the perpetrators and the victims -- in what you do, how you think, how you act, what you care about, what your life means to you.
Now, I know, in this room, some of you are the women I have been talking about. I know that. People around you may not. I am going to ask you to use every single thing you can remember about what was done to you -- how it was done, where, by whom, when, and, if you know -- why -- to begin to tear male dominance to pieces, to pull it apart, to vandalize it, to destabilize it, to mess it up, to get in its way, to fuck it up. I have to ask you to resist, not to comply, to destroy the power men have over women, to refuse to accept it, to abhor it and to do whatever is necessary despite its cost to you to change it.
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Andrea Dworkin
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We drove 22 miles into the country around Farmington. There were meadows and apple orchards. White fences trailed through the rolling fields. Soon the sign started appearing. THE MOST PHOTOGRAPHED BARN IN AMERICA. We counted five signs before we reached the site. There were 40 cars and a tour bus in the makeshift lot. We walked along a cowpath to the slightly elevated spot set aside for viewing and photographing. All the people had cameras; some had tripods, telephoto lenses, filter kits. A man in a booth sold postcards and slides -- pictures of the barn taken from the elevated spot. We stood near a grove of trees and watched the photographers. Murray maintained a prolonged silence, occasionally scrawling some notes in a little book.
"No one sees the barn," he said finally.
A long silence followed.
"Once you've seen the signs about the barn, it becomes impossible to see the barn."
He fell silent once more. People with cameras left the elevated site, replaced by others.
We're not here to capture an image, we're here to maintain one. Every photograph reinforces the aura. Can you feel it, Jack? An accumulation of nameless energies."
There was an extended silence. The man in the booth sold postcards and slides.
"Being here is a kind of spiritual surrender. We see only what the others see. The thousands who were here in the past, those who will come in the future. We've agreed to be part of a collective perception. It literally colors our vision. A religious experience in a way, like all tourism."
Another silence ensued.
"They are taking pictures of taking pictures," he said.
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Don DeLillo (White Noise)
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An incomplete list:
No more diving into pools of chlorinated water lit green from below. No more ball games played out under floodlights. No more porch lights with moths fluttering on summer nights. No more trains running under the surface of cities on the dazzling power of the electric third rail. No more cities. No more films, except rarely, except with a generator drowning out half the dialogue, and only then for the first little while until the fuel for the generators ran out, because automobile gas goes stale after two or three years. Aviation gas lasts longer, but it was difficult to come by.
No more screens shining in the half-light as people raise their phones above the crowd to take pictures of concert states. No more concert stages lit by candy-colored halogens, no more electronica, punk, electric guitars.
No more pharmaceuticals. No more certainty of surviving a scratch on one's hand, a cut on a finger while chopping vegetables for dinner, a dog bite.
No more flight. No more towns glimpsed from the sky through airplane windows, points of glimmering light; no more looking down from thirty thousand feet and imagining the lives lit up by those lights at that moment. No more airplanes, no more requests to put your tray table in its upright and locked position β but no, this wasn't true, there were still airplanes here and there. They stood dormant on runways and in hangars. They collected snow on their wings. In the cold months, they were ideal for food storage. In summer the ones near orchards were filled with trays of fruit that dehydrated in the heat. Teenagers snuck into them to have sex. Rust blossomed and streaked.
No more countries, all borders unmanned.
No more fire departments, no more police. No more road maintenance or garbage pickup. No more spacecraft rising up from Cape Canaveral, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, from Vandenburg, Plesetsk, Tanegashima, burning paths through the atmosphere into space.
No more Internet. No more social media, no more scrolling through litanies of dreams and nervous hopes and photographs of lunches, cries for help and expressions of contentment and relationship-status updates with heart icons whole or broken, plans to meet up later, pleas, complaints, desires, pictures of babies dressed as bears or peppers for Halloween. No more reading and commenting on the lives of others, and in so doing, feeling slightly less alone in the room. No more avatars.
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Emily St. John Mandel (Station Eleven)