February 2012
12 posts
LOVE WON'T SAVE US: “Credo” by by Andrew Zawacki... →
ahuntersheart: “Credo” by by Andrew Zawacki You say wind is only wind & carries nothing nervous in its teeth. I do not believe it. I have seen leaves desist from moving although the branches move, & I believe a cyclone has secrets the weather is ignorant of. I believe in the violence of not knowing.
Feb 17th
35 notes
1 tag
“you dream in the language of dodging bullets and artillery fire. new, sexy...”
– (via grammatolatry; rosiee)
Feb 17th
90 notes
1 tag
“It’s not slang that bothers me, as it does so many oldsters, nor is it even all...”
– Sarah Nicole Prickett, on language, style, and the fashionification of expression. (via millionsmillions)
Feb 5th
34 notes
“I dreamt you naked in the creek Your skin all stars and crying gulls – Your...”
–  Bethany van Rijswijk, from ‘Water Hyacinths’. (via caveofhypnos)
Feb 5th
133 notes
Feb 4th
1,090 notes
Feb 4th
633 notes
“Look here Vita — throw over your man, and we’ll go to Hampton Court and dine on...”
– Virginia Woolf, from a letter to Vita Sackville-West (via brainpickings) oh god. I am head over heels for my man, but if I received this letter I would probably throw him over. <3
Feb 4th
307 notes
1 tag
Lust For Lascaux: The Icelandic Language →
poetbabble: In this language, no industrial revolution; no pasteurized milk; no oxygen, no telephone; only sheep, fish, horses, water falling. The middle class can hardly speak it. In this language, no flush toilet; you stumble through dark and rain with a handful of rags. The door groans; the old…
Feb 4th
60 notes
Feb 4th
3,662 notes
1 tag
A Different Stripe: "High Dike" by Li Ho →
nyrbclassics: Continuing with a celebration of Chinese New Year, we’re sharing poems from Poems of the Late T’ang, translated and edited by A.C. Graham. This one is called “High Dyke” by Li Ho (791-817; also spelt Li He), another member of Han Yü’s circle whose work was ignored in the eighteenth-century…
Feb 4th
7 notes
1 tag
Marjorie Hakala Gives You 7 Reasons to Read A... →
millionsmillions: Reason #1: They are unique. Reason #2: They’re playfully, livably literary Reason #3: Do you like England? These books are completely, uniquely, and ineluctably English. Reason #4: They are wonderfully funny. Reason #5: There is a judicious amount of world history. Reason #6: Widmerpool. Reason #7: The books are both discreet and entertainingly frank.
Feb 4th
12 notes
1 tag
“Erard… begins by visiting Bologna, Italy, the hometown of one of history’s most...”
– From the New York Times review of Babel No More: The Search for the World’s Most Extraordinary Language Learners. (via wingsandfins)
Feb 4th
12 notes