β
I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it. People think pleasing God is all God cares about. But any fool living in the world can see it always trying to please us back.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
The first stab of love is like a sunset, a blaze of color -- oranges, pearly pinks, vibrant purples...
β
β
Anna Godbersen (The Luxe (Luxe, #1))
β
Time moves slowly, but passes quickly.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
I think us here to wonder, myself. To wonder. To ask. And that in wondering bout the big things and asking bout the big things, you learn about the little ones, almost by accident. But you never know nothing more about the big things than you start out with. The more I wonder, the more I love.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
...have you ever found God in church? I never did. I just found a bunch of folks hoping for him to show. Any God I ever felt in church I brought in with me. And I think all the other folks did too. They come to church to share God, not find God.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Soon it got dusk, a grapy dusk, a purple dusk over tangerine groves and long melon fields; the sun the color of pressed grapes, slashed with burgandy red, the fields the color of love and Spanish mysteries.
β
β
Jack Kerouac (On the Road)
β
Everything want to be loved. Us sing and dance and holler, just trying to be loved.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
But when I touch you, your aura β¦ it smolders. The colors deepen, it burns more intensely, the purple increases. Why? Why, Sydney?β He used that hand to pull me closer. βWhy do you react that way if I donβt mean anything to you?β There was a desperation in his voice, and it was legitimate.
β
β
Richelle Mead (The Indigo Spell (Bloodlines, #3))
β
I am an expression of the divine, just like a peach is, just like a fish is. I have a right to be this way...I can't apologize for that, nor can I change it, nor do I want to... We will never have to be other than who we are in order to be successful...We realize that we are as ourselves unlimited and our experiences valid. It is for the rest of the world to recognize this, if they choose.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
People think pleasing God is all God care about. But any fool living in the world can see it always trying to please us back.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
The more I wonder, the more I love.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Life is like a box of crayons. Most people are the 8 color boxes, but what you're really looking for are the 64 color boxes with the sharpeners on the back. I fancy myself to be a 64 color box, though I've got a few missing. It's okay though, because I've got some more vibrant colors like periwinkle at my disposal. I have a bit of a problem though in that I can only meet the 8 color boxes. Does anyone else have that problem? I mean there are so many different colors of life, of feeling, of articulation. So when I meet someone who's an 8 color type...I'm like, hey girl, Magenta! and she's like, oh, you mean purple! and she goes off on her purple thing, and I'm like, no I want Magenta!
β
β
John Mayer
β
Oh, Celie, unbelief is a terrible thing. And so is the hurt we cause others unknowingly.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
All my life I had to fight. I had to fight my daddy. I had to fight my brothers. I had to fight my cousins and my uncles. A girl child ain't safe in a family of men. But I never thought I'd have to fight in my own house. She let out her breath. I loves Harpo, she say. God knows I do. But I'll kill him dead before I let him beat me.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
A grown child is a dangerous thing.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Everything want to be loved.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
It hurts to live after someone has died. It just does. It can hurt to walk down a hallway or open the fridge. It hurts to put on a pair of socks, to brush your teeth. Food tastes like nothing. Colors go flat. Music hurts, and so do memories. You look at something youβd otherwise find beautifulβa purple sky at sunset or a playground full of kidsβand it only somehow deepens the loss. Grief is so lonely this way.
β
β
Michelle Obama (Becoming)
β
I'm pore, I'm black, I may be ugly and can't cook, a voice say to everything listening. But I'm here.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Why any woman give a shit what people think is a mystery to me.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
The sky is already purple; the first few stars have appeared, suddenly, as if someone had thrown a handful of silver across the edge of the world.
β
β
Alice Hoffman (Here on Earth)
β
Who am I to tell her who to love? My job just to love her good and true myself. P. 237
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Tea to the English is really a picnic indoors.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Us sing and dance, make faces and give flower bouquets, trying to be loved. You ever notice that trees do everything to get attention we do, except walk?
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Man corrupt everything, say Shug. He on your box of grits, in your head, and all over the radio. He try to make you think he everywhere. Soon as you think he everywhere, you think he God. But he ain't. Whenever you trying to pray, and man plop himself on the other end of it, tell him to git lost, say Shug. Conjure up the flowers, wind, water, a big rock.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
...and so many colors
I will have seen...
the menacing greys
and pine greens
the soft pink and purples
of spring
and summer blue
and so many others
without you.
β
β
Sanober Khan (A touch, a tear, a tempest)
β
It was octarine, the colour of magic. It was alive and glowing and vibrant and it was the undisputed pigment of the imagination, because wherever it appeared it was a sign that mere matter was a servant of the powers of the magical mind. It was enchantment itself.
But Rincewind always thought it looked a sort of greenish-purple.
β
β
Terry Pratchett (The Color of Magic (Discworld, #1; Rincewind, #1))
β
Here's the thing, say Shug. The thing I believe. God is inside you and inside everybody else. You come into the world with God. But only them that search for it inside find it. And sometimes it just manifest itself even if you not looking, or don't know what you looking for. Trouble do it for most folks, I think. Sorrow, lord. Feeling like shit. It? I ask. Yeah, It. God ain't a he or a she, but a It. But what do it look like? I ask. Don't look like nothing, she say. It ain't a picture show. It ain't something you can look at apart from anything else, including yourself. I believe God is everything, say Shug. Everything that is or ever was or ever will be. And when you cam feel that, and be happy to feel that, you've found it.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Every time I conjure up a rock, I throw it.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Purple is the last of the rainbow colors, so it means I will love and trust u for a long time
β
β
kim taehyung
β
I believe God is everything, say Shug. Everything that is or ever was or ever will be. And when you can feel that, and be happy to feel that, you've found It.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
The Olinka girls do not believe girls should be educated. When I asked a mother why she thought this, she said: A girl is nothing to herself; only to her husband can she become something.
What can she become? I asked.
Why, she said, the mother of his children.
But I am not the mother of anybody's children, I said, and I am something.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
The world is changing. It is no longer a world just for boys and men
β
β
Alice Walker
β
Like I said...fine with me.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
And I thank God let me gain understanding enough to know love can't be halted just cause some peoples moan and groan. P.238
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Wait, I want more green. I hope I did not imply I only wanted your colors. We can't turn a cold shoulder to green, and blue, and purple, for the sake of all ordered things, how can you dismiss purple? Celi, call Nom back and tell him of my need for purple!
β
β
Shannon Hale (River Secrets (The Books of Bayern, #3))
β
You were red,
and you liked me because I was blue,
but you touched me and suddenly I was a lilac sky,
and you decided purple just wasn't for you.
β
β
Halsey
β
I try to teach my heart not to want nothing it can't have.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Just cause I love her don't take away none of her rights.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
On my canvas of life, you bring colors of love and joy,
Just like in winters,
The setting sun brings beams of red and purple to the sky.
β
β
Hareem Ch (Muse Buzz)
β
If she come, I be happy. If she don't, I be content.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
If Bacchus ever had a color he could claim for his own, it should surely be the shade of tannin on drunken lips, of John Keat's 'purple-stained mouth', or perhaps even of Homer's dangerously wine-dark sea.
β
β
Victoria Finlay
β
His little whistle sound like it lost way down a jar, and the jar in the bottom of the creek. P. 64
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Sofia the kind of woman no matter what she have in her hand she make it look like a weapon.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
It didn't take long to realize I didn't hardly know nothing. And that if you ast yourself why you black or a man or a woman or a bush it don't mean nothing if you don't ast why you here, period
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Purple? Boy, what kind of a homosexual are you, anyway? That's not purple, Mary, that color up there is mauve.
β
β
Tony Kushner (Angels in America)
β
I love his dear eyes in which the vulnerability and beauty of his soul can be plainly read.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
But it ain't easy, trying to do without God even if you know he ain't there, trying to do without him is a strain
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Listen, God love everything you love - and a mess of stuff you don't. But more than anything. God loves admiration.
You saying God vain? I ast.
Naw, she say. Not vain, just wanting to share a good thing. I think it pisses God off if you walk by the colour purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
God is different to us now, after all these years in Africa. More spirit than ever before, and more internal. Most people think he has to look like something or someone- a roofleaf or Christ- but we don't. And not being tied to what God looks like, frees us.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Do you know what I see in you now? The usual aura. A steady golden yellow, healthy and strong, with spikes of purple here and there. But when I do this. . . .β
He rested a hand on my hip, and my whole body tensed up. That hand moved around my hip, slipping under my shirt to rest on the small of my back. My skin burned where he touched me, and the places that were untouched longed for that heat.
βSee?β he said. He was in the throes of spirit now, though with me at the same time. βWell, I guess you canβt. But when I touch you, your aura . . . it smolders. The colors deepen, it burns more intensely, the purple increases. Why? Why, Sydney?β He used that hand on me to pull me closer. βWhy do you react that way if I donβt mean anything to you?β There was a desperation in his voice, and it was legitimate.
β
β
Richelle Mead (The Indigo Spell (Bloodlines, #3))
β
I can't fix my mouth to say how I feel.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Listen, God love everything you love - and a mess of stuff you don't. But more than anything else, God love admiration.
You saying God vain? I ast.
Naw, she say. Not vain, just wanting to share a good thing. I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it.
What it do when it pissed off? I ast.
Oh, it make something else. People think pleasing God is all God care about. But any fool living in the world can see it always trying to please us back.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
We all have to start somewhere if us want to do better, an d out of self is what us have to hand
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
She look like she ain't long for this world but dressed well for the next.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Be different. Be original. Nobody will remember a specific flower in a garden filled with thousands of the same yellow flower, but they will remember the one that managed to change its color to purple.
β
β
Suzy Kassem (Rise Up and Salute the Sun: The Writings of Suzy Kassem)
β
When the starry sky, a vista of open seas, or a stained-glass window shedding purple beams fascinate me, there is a cluster of meaning, of colors, of words, of caresses, there are light touches, scents, sighs, cadences that arise, shroud me, carry me away, and sweep me beyond the things I see, hear, or think, The "sublime" object dissolves in the raptures of a bottomless memory. It is such a memory, which, from stopping point to stopping point, remembrance to remembrance, love to love, transfers that object to the refulgent point of the dazzlement in which I stray in order to be.
β
β
Julia Kristeva (Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection (European Perspectives: a Series in Social Thought & Cultural Ctiticism) (English and French Edition))
β
Here's the thing, say Shug. The thing I believe. God is inside you and inside everybody else. You come into the world with God. But only them that search for it inside find it. And some-times it just manifest itself even if you not looking, or don't know what you looking for l. Trouble do it for most folks, I think. Sorrow, Lord. Feeling like shit.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Some colored people so scared of whitefolks they claim to love the cotton gin.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
There is so much we donβt understand. And so much unhappiness comes because of that.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Let βim hear me, I say. If he ever listened to poor colored women the world would be a different place, I can tell you.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
What will people say, you running off to Memphis like you don't have a house to look after?
Shug say, Albert. Try to think like you got some sense. Why any woman give a shit what people think is a mystery to me.
Well, say Grady, trying to bring light. A woman can't git a man if peoples talk.
Shug look at me and us giggle. Then us sure nuff. Then Squeak start to laugh. Then Sofia. All us laugh and laugh.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
You got to fight them, Celie, she say. I can't do it for you.
You got to fight them for yourself.
I don't say nothing. I think bout Nettie, dead. She fight, she run away. What good it do? I don't fight, I stay where I'm told. But I'm alive.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Her fingers moved among barnacles and mussels, blue-black, sharp-edged. Neon red starfish were limp Dalis on the rocks, surrounded by bouquets of stinging anemones and purple bursts of spiny sea urchins.
β
β
Janet Fitch (White Oleander)
β
Well, sometime Mr ββ git on me pretty hard. I have to talk to Old Maker. But he my husband. I shrug my shoulders. This life soon be over, I say. Heaven last all ways.
You ought to bash Mr ββ head open, she say. Think bout heaven later.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
And I don't believe you dead. How can you be dead if I still feel you? Maybe, like God, you changed into something different that I'll have to speak to in a different way, but you not dead to me Nettie. And never will you be.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
You a low down dog is whatβs wrong. Itβs time to leave you and enter into the creation. And your dead body just the welcome mat I need.
β
β
Alice Walker
β
She look so stylish it like the trees all round the house draw themself up tall for a better look.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
But I don't know how to fight. All I know how to do is stay alive.
β
β
Alice Walker
β
If you was my wife, she say, I'd cover you up with kisses stead of licks, and work hard for you too.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Your life is your artwork and you are to paint life as a beautiful struggle. With your brush, paint the colors of joy in vibrant shades of red. Color the sky a baby blue, a color as free as your heart. With rich, earthy tones shade the valleys that run deep into the ground where heaven meets hell. Life is as chaotic as the color black, a blend of all colors, and this makes life a beautiful struggle. Be grateful for the green that makes up the beautiful canvas, for nature has given you everything that you need to be happy. Most of all, donβt ever feel the need to fill the entire canvas with paint, for the places left blank are the most honest expressions of who you are.
β
β
Forrest Curran (Purple Buddha Project: Purple Book of Self-Love)
β
He beat me like he beat the children. Cept he don't never hardly beat them. He say, Celie, git the belt. The children be outside the room peeking through the cracks. It all I can do not to cry. I make myself wood. I say to myself, Celie, you a tree. That's how come I know trees fear man.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
Fade to black. Or whatever color you like. If you can find a way to fade to pink or purple, please do.
β
β
David Levithan (Hold Me Closer: The Tiny Cooper Story)
β
no matter what anyone says or does, my task is to be good. like gold or emerald or purple repeating to itself, "no matter what anyone says or does, my task is to be emerald, my color undiminished.
β
β
Marcus Aurelius (Meditations)
β
If we go that way, it seems less like weβll be shot for trespassing. We canβt be low profile because of your shirt.β
βAquamarine is a wonderful color, and I wonβt be made to feel bad for wearing it,β Gansey said. But his voice was a bit thin, and he glanced back at the church again. Just then he looked younger than sheβd ever seen him, his eyes narrowed, hair messed up, features unstudied. Young and, strangely enough, afraid.
Blue thought: I canβt tell him. I can never tell him. I have to just try to stop it from happening.
Then Gansey, suddenly charming again, flipped a hand in the direct of her purple tunic dress. βLead the way, Eggplant.β
She found a stick to poke at the ground for snakes before they set off through the grass. The wind smelled like rain, and the ground rumbled with thunder, but the weather held. The machine in Ganseyβs hands blinked red constantly, only flickering to orange when they stepped too far away from the invisible line.
βThanks for coming, Jane,β Gansey said.
Blue shot him a dirty look. βYouβre welcome, Dick.β
He looked pained. βPlease donβt.
β
β
Maggie Stiefvater (The Raven Boys (The Raven Cycle, #1))
β
Hard times' is a phrase the English love to use, when speaking of Africa. And it is easy to forget that Africa's 'hard times' were made harder by them.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
What if the water that came out of the shower was treated with a chemical that responded to a combination of things, like your heartbeat and your body temperature and your brainwaves, so that your skin changed color according to mood? If you were extremely excited your skin would turn green, and if you we're angry you'd turn red, obviously, and if you felt like shiitake you'd turn brown and if you we're blue you'd turn blue.
Everyone could know what everyone else felt and we could be more careful with each other, because you'd never want to tell someone who skin was purple that you're angry at her for being late, just like you'd want to pat a pink person on the back and say, "Congratulations!
β
β
Jonathan Safran Foer (Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close)
β
He snorted into his radicchio, which I admired because it was a pretty purple. The radicchio was purple, not his snort. Just in case you got confused there. I don't think it's possible for people to snort colors. We're not unicorns, after all.
β
β
T.J. Klune (Tell Me It's Real (At First Sight, #1))
β
The sun goes down long and red. All the magic names of the valley unrolled - Manteca, Madera, all the rest. Soon it got dusk, a grapy dusk, a purple dusk over tangerine groves and long melon field; the sun the color of pressed grapes, slashed with burgundy red, the fields the color of love and Spanish mysteries. I stuck my head out the window and took deep breaths of the fragant air. It was the most beautiful of all moments.
β
β
Jack Kerouac (On the Road)
β
The years have come and gone without a single word from you. Only the sky above us do we hold in common. I look at it often as if, somehow, reflected from its immensities, I will one day find myself gazing into your eyes.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
I wish I could be traveling with her, but thank God she able to do it. Sometimes I feel mad at her. Feel like I could scratch her hair right off her head. But then I think, Shug got a right to live too. She got a right to look over the world in whatever company she choose. Just cause I love her don't take away none of her rights.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
I had the great idea of using markers to gently color the ants so I could tell them apart, but I learned that this is exactly like somebody trying to gently color on you with a thirty-story building.
Without dwelling on the tragedy, I'd just like to say that I'm deeply sorry to Mr. Purple and the surviving Purple family.
β
β
Jim Benton (Okay, So Maybe I Do Have Superpowers (Dear Dumb Diary #11))
β
Be different. Be original. Nobody will remember a specific flower in garden loaded with thousands of the same yellow flower, but they will remember the one that managed to change its color to purple.
Being different and thinking differently make a person unforgettable. History does not remember the forgettable. It honors the unique minority the majority cannot forget.
β
β
Suzy Kassem (Rise Up and Salute the Sun: The Writings of Suzy Kassem)
β
I feel a little peculiar around the children. For one thing, they grown. And I see they think me and Nettie and Shug and Albert and Samuel and Harpo and Sofia and Jack and Odessa real old and don't know much what going on. But I don't think us feel old at all. And us so happy. Matter of fact, I think this the youngest us ever felt.
β
β
Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
β
The white missionaries brought us their god,β Amaka was saying. βWhich was the same color as them, worshiped in their language and packaged in the boxes they made. Now that we take their god back to them, shouldnβt we at least repackage it?
β
β
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (Purple Hibiscus)
β
I sometimes think my vision of the sea is the clearest thing I own. I pick it up, exile that I am, like the purple βlucky stonesβ I used to collect with a white ring all the way round, or the shell of a blue mussel with its rainbowy angelβs fingernail interior; and in one wash of memory the colors deepen and gleam, the early world draws breath.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams: Short Stories, Prose and Diary Excerpts)
β
All of them had been give a makeover. Leo was wearing pinstriped pants, black leather shoes, a white collarless shirt with suspenders, and his tool
belt, Ray-Ban sunglasses, and a porkpie hat.
βGod, Leo.β Piper tried not to laugh. βI think my dad wore that to his last premiere, minus the tool belt.β
βHey, shut up!β
βI think he looks good,β said Coach Hedge. ββCourse, I look better.β
The satyr was a pastel nightmare. Aphrodite had given him a baggy canary yellow zoot suit with two-tone shoes that fit over his hooves. He had a
matching yellow broad-brimmed hat, a rose-colored shirt, a baby blue tie, and a blue carnation in his lapel, which Hedge sniffed and then ate.
βWell,β Jason said, βat least your mom overlooked me.β
Piper knew that wasnβt exactly true. Looking at him, her heart did a little tap dance. Jason was dressed simply in jeans and a clean purple T-shirt, like
heβd worn at the Grand Canyon. He had new track shoes on, and his hair was newly trimmed. His eyes were the same color as the sky. Aphroditeβs
message was clear: This one needs no improvement.
And Piper agreed.
β
β
Rick Riordan (The Lost Hero (The Heroes of Olympus, #1))
β
It hurts to live after someone has died. It just does. It can hurt to walk down a hallway or a open the fridge. It hurts to put on a pair of socks, to brush your teeth. Food tastes like nothing. Colors go flat. Music hurts, and so do memories. You look at something you'd otherwise find beautiful - a purple sky at sunset or a playground full of kids and it only somehow deepens the loss. Grief is so lonely this way.
β
β
Michelle Obama (Becoming)
β
On occasion, it occurs to adults that they are allowed to do all the things that being a child prevented them from doing. But those desires change when you're not looking. There was a time when your favorite color transferred from purple to blue to whatever shade it is when you realize having a favorite color is a trite personality crutch, an unstable cultivation of quirk and a possible cry for help. You just don't notice the time of your own metamorphosis. Until you do. Every once in a while time dissolves and you remember what you liked as a kid. You jump on your hotel bed, order dessert first, decide to put every piece of jewelry you own on your body and leave the house. Why? Because you can. Because you're the boss. Because . . . Ooooh. Shiny.
β
β
Sloane Crosley (How Did You Get This Number: Essays)
β
How did you know?β
βIβ¦β Thomas swallowed hard, his attention fixed on the painting. βThe truth?β
βPlease.β
βYouβve got a dress with orchid blossoms embroidered on it. Ribbons in the deepest purple. You favor the color, but not nearly as much as I find myself favoring you.β He took a deep breath. βAs to the stars? Those are what I prefer. More than medical practices and deductions. The universe is vast. A mathematical equation even I have no hope of solving. For there are no limits to the stars; their numbers are infinite. Which is precisely why I measure my love for you by them. An amount too boundless to count.
β
β
Kerri Maniscalco (Hunting Prince Dracula (Stalking Jack the Ripper #2))
β
Here's the thing, say Shug. The thing I believe. God is inside you and inside everybody else. You come into the world with God. But only them that search for it inside find it. And sometimes it just manifest itself even if you not looking, or don't know what you looking for. Trouble do it for most folks, I think. Sorrow, lord. Feeling like shit.
It? I ast.
Yeah, It. God ain't a he or a she, but a It.
But what do it look like? I ast.
Don't look like nothing, she say. It ain't a picture show. It ain't something you can look at apart from anything else, including yourself. I believe God is everything, say Shug. Everything that is or ever was or ever will be. And when you can feel that, and be happy to feel that, you've found It.
Shug a beautiful something, let me tell you. She frown a little, look out cross the yard, lean back in her chair, look like a big rose. She say, My first step from the old white man was trees. Then air. Then birds. Then other people. But one day when I was sitting quiet and feeling like a motherless child, which I was, it come to me: that feeling of being part of everything, not separate
at all. I knew that if I cut a tree, my arm would bleed. And I laughed and I cried and I run all around the house. I knew just what it was. In fact, when it happen, you can't miss it. It sort of like you know what, she say, grinning and rubbing high up on my thigh.
Shug! I say.
Oh, she say. God love all them feelings. That's some of the best stuff God did. And when you know God loves 'em you enjoys 'em a lot more. You can just relax, go with everything that's going, and praise God by liking what you like.
God don't think it dirty? I ast.
Naw, she say. God made it. Listen, God love everything you love? and a mess of stuff you don't. But more than anything else, God love admiration.
You saying God vain? I ast.
Naw, she say. Not vain, just wanting to share a good thing. I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it.
What it do when it pissed off? I ast.
Oh, it make something else. People think pleasing God is all God care about. But any fool living in the world can see it always trying to please us back.
Yeah? I say.
Yeah, she say. It always making little surprises and springing them on us when us least expect.
You mean it want to be loved, just like the bible say.
Yes, Celie, she say. Everything want to be loved. Us sing and dance, make faces and give flower bouquets, trying to be loved. You ever notice that trees do everything to git attention we do, except walk?
Well, us talk and talk bout God, but I'm still adrift. Trying to chase that old white man out of my head. I been so busy thinking bout him I never truly notice nothing God make. Not a blade of corn (how it do that?) not the color purple (where it come from?). Not the little wildflowers. Nothing. Now that my eyes opening, I feels like a fool. Next to any little scrub of a bush in my yard, Mr. ____s evil sort of shrink. But not altogether. Still, it is like Shug say, You have to git man off your eyeball, before you can see anything a'tall.
Man corrupt everything, say Shug. He on your box of grits, in your head, and all over the radio. He try to make you think he everywhere.
Soon as you think he everywhere, you think he God. But he ain't. Whenever you trying to pray, and man plop himself on the other end of it, tell him to git lost, say Shug. Conjure up flowers, wind,water, a big rock.
But this hard work, let me tell you. He been there so long, he don't want to budge. He threaten lightening, floods and earthquakes. Us fight. I hardly pray at all. Every time I conjure up a rock, I throw it.
Amen
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Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
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I used to think there were two kinds of Crayola artists: Ones who color inside the lines and ones who donβt stay within the rigid boundaries set by thick black perimeters that make up a cuddly koala. But it seems that inside and outside the lines is just the main basis for comparison. You also have those who color lightly inside and fill each space according to the chosen and appropriate shade. Then you have those who scribble and slap any color anywhere. And sometimes these people have purple turkeys and shit that drives me absofreakinglutely crazy because, seriously
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Amber L. Johnson (Puddle Jumping (Puddle Jumping, #1))
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We became acquainted with starry skies the girls had gazed at while camping years before, and the boredom of summers traipsing from back yard to front to back again, and even a certain indefinable smell that arose from toilets on rainy nights, which the girls called "sewery." We knew what it felt like to see a boy with his shirt off, and why it made Lux write the name Kevin in purple Magic Marker all over her three-ring binder and even on her bras and panties, and we understood her rage coming home one day to find that Mrs. Lisbon had soaked her things in Clorox, bleaching all the "Kevins" out. We knew the pain of winter wind rushing up your skirt, and the ache of keeping your knees together in class, and how drab and infuriating it was to jump rope while the boys played baseball. We could never understand why the girls cared so much about being mature, or why they felt compelled to compliment each other, but sometimes, after one of us had read a long portion of the diary out loud, we had to fight back the urge to hug one another or to tell each other how pretty we were. We felt the imprisonment of being a girl, the way it made your mind active and dreamy, and how you ended up knowing which colors went together. We knew that the girls were our twins, that we all existed in space like animals with identical skins, and that they knew everything about us though we couldn't fathom them at all. We knew, finally, that the girls were really women in disguise, that they understood love and even death, and that our job was merely to create the noise that seemed to fascinate them.
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Jeffrey Eugenides (The Virgin Suicides)
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And somewhere in that crimson-colored never-never land where i pirouetted madly, in a wild and crazy effort to exhaust myself into insensibility, i saw that man, shadowy and distant, half-hidden behind towering white columns that rose clear up to a purple sky. In a passionate pas de deux he danced with me, forever apart, no matter how hard i sought to draw nearer and leap into his arms, where i could feel them protective about me, supporting me ... and with him i'd find, at last, a safe place to live and love.
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V.C. Andrews (Flowers in the Attic (Dollanganger, #1))
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Jelly beans! Millions and billions of purples and yellows and greens and licorice and grape and raspberry and mint and round and smooth and crunchy outside and soft-mealy inside and sugary and bouncing jouncing tumbling clittering clattering skittering fell on the heads and shoulders and hardhats and carapaces of the Timkin works, tinkling on the slidewalk and bouncing away and rolling about underfoot and filling the sky on their way down with all the colors of joy and childhood and holidays, coming down in a steady rain, a solid wash, a torrent of color and sweetness out of the sky from above, and entering a universe of sanity and metronomic order with quite-mad coocoo newness. Jelly beans!
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Harlan Ellison ("Repent, Harlequin!" Said the Ticktockman)
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Anyhow, he say, you know how it is. You ask yourself one question, it lead to fifteen. I start to wonder why us need love. Why us suffer. Why us black. Why us men and women. Where do children really come from. It didnβt take long to realize I didnβt hardly know nothing. And that if you ast yourself why you black or a man or a woman or a bush it donβt mean nothing if you donβt ask why you here, period. So what you think? I ask. I think us here to wonder, myself. To wonder. To ask. And that in wondering bout the big things and asking bout the big things, you learn about the little ones, almost by accident. But you never know nothing more about the big things than you start out with. The more I wonder, he say, the more I love.
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Alice Walker (The Color Purple)
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What the hell is that?" yelled Lord Maccon. He had turned to anger so swiftly; Alexia could only stare at him, speechless.
She let out her pent-up breath in a whoosh. Her heart was beating a marathon somewhere in the region of her throat, her skin felt hot and stretched taut over her bones, and she was damp in places she was tolerably certain unmarried gentlewomen were not supposed to be damp in.
Lord Maccon was glaring at her coffee-colored skin, discolored between the neck and shoulder region by an ugly purple mark, the size and shape of a man's teeth.
"that is a bite mark, my lord," she said.
Lord Maccon was ever more enraged. "Who bit you?" he roared.
Alexia tilted her head to one side in amazement. "You did." She was then treated to the spectacle of an Alpha werewolf looking downright hangdog.
"I did?"
She raised both eyebrows at him.
"I did.
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Gail Carriger (Soulless (Parasol Protectorate, #1))
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The final stretch of drive ended at a small cottage nestled in a grove of ancient live oaks. The weathered structure, with chipping paint and shutters that had begun to blacken at the edges, was fronted by a small stone porch framed by white columns. Over the years, one of the columns had become enshrouded in vines, which climbed toward the roof. A metal chair sat at the edge, and at one corner of the porch, adding color to the world of green, was a small pot of blooming geraniums.
But their eyes were drawn inevitably to the wildflowers. Thousands of them, a meadow of fireworks stretching nearly to the steps of the cottage, a sea of red and orange and purple and blue and yellow nearly waist deep, rippling in the gentle breeze. Hundreds of butterflies flitted about the meadow, tides of moving color undulating in the sun.
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Nicholas Sparks (The Best of Me)
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Perhaps I ought to remember that she is very young, a mere girl and make allowances. She is all interest, eagerness, vivacity, the world is to her a charm, a wonder, a mystery, a joy; she canβt speak for delight when she finds a new flower, she must pet it and caress it and smell it and talk to it, and pour out endearing names upon it. And she is color-mad: brown rocks, yellow sand, gray moss, green foliage, blue sky; the pearl of the dawn, the purple shadows on the mountains, the golden islands floating in crimson seas at sunset, the pallid moon sailing through the shredded cloud-rack, the star-jewels glittering in the wastes of space β none of them is of any practical value, so far as I can see, but because they have color and majesty, that is enough for her, and she loses her mind over them. If she could quiet down and keep still a couple of minutes at a time, it would be a reposeful spectacle. In that cases I think I could enjoy looking at her; indeed I am sure I could, for I am coming to realize that she is a quite remarkably comely creature β lithe, slender, trim, rounded, shapely, nimble, graceful; and once when she was standing marble-white and sun-drenched on a boulder, with her young head tilted back and her hand shading her eyes, watching the flight of a bird in the sky, I recognized that she was beautiful.
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Mark Twain (The Diaries of Adam and Eve)
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A little while ago, I stood by the grave of the old Napoleonβa magnificent tomb of gilt and gold, fit almost for a dead deityβand gazed upon the sarcophagus of rare and nameless marble, where rest at last the ashes of that restless man. I leaned over the balustrade and thought about the career of the greatest soldier of the modern world.
I saw him walking upon the banks of the Seine, contemplating suicide. I saw him at ToulonβI saw him putting down the mob in the streets of ParisβI saw him at the head of the army of ItalyβI saw him crossing the bridge of Lodi with the tri-color in his handβI saw him in Egypt in the shadows of the pyramidsβI saw him conquer the Alps and mingle the eagles of France with the eagles of the crags. I saw him at Marengoβat Ulm and Austerlitz. I saw him in Russia, where the infantry of the snow and the cavalry of the wild blast scattered his legions like winter's withered leaves. I saw him at Leipsic in defeat and disasterβdriven by a million bayonets back upon Parisβclutched like a wild beastβbanished to Elba. I saw him escape and retake an empire by the force of his genius. I saw him upon the frightful field of Waterloo, where Chance and Fate combined to wreck the fortunes of their former king. And I saw him at St. Helena, with his hands crossed behind him, gazing out upon the sad and solemn sea.
I thought of the orphans and widows he had madeβof the tears that had been shed for his glory, and of the only woman who ever loved him, pushed from his heart by the cold hand of ambition. And I said I would rather have been a French peasant and worn wooden shoes. I would rather have lived in a hut with a vine growing over the door, and the grapes growing purple in the kisses of the autumn sun. I would rather have been that poor peasant with my loving wife by my side, knitting as the day died out of the skyβwith my children upon my knees and their arms about meβI would rather have been that man and gone down to the tongueless silence of the dreamless dust, than to have been that imperial impersonation of force and murder, known as 'Napoleon the Great.
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Robert G. Ingersoll (The Liberty Of Man, Woman And Child)