20 notes "If the sea had no waves to uproot it
and give it back to the sea, if the sea had
too many waves (but not enough) to
overrun the horizon, enough (but just barely)
to disturb the earth, if the sea had no
ears to hear the sea, no eyes to be forever
the look of the sea, and if the sea had neither
salt nor foam, it would be a grey sea
of death in the sun cut off from its roots.
It would be a dying sea amid branches
cut off from the sun. It would be a mined
sea whose explosions would threaten the
world in its elephant memory. But the fruit.
What would become of the fruit? But man.
What would become of man?"
Edmond Jabès, from The Book of Questions (via)
914 notes "Again a long period has elapsed in which I have been unable to pull myself together for the least little thing - I shall now try to get going again."
Søren Kierkegaard, April 1838, from The Diary of Søren Kierkegaard
8 notes

“Filled with people, Gravitron feels completely empty. Poor even. Unable
to experience what he is the source of, unable to avoid what he eliminates, unable to exist

in the place that he is, Gravitron…
knows only that the grass can’t lie down in the grass.”

    -Chris Tonelli, from “Greener than the grass I am…” (title from Sappho)