Did he really say that?

The kind of humor I like is the thing that makes me laugh for five seconds and think for ten minutes = GEORGE CARLIN...Stained glass, engraved glass, frosted glass–give me plain glass = JOHN FOWLES...Music is the mathematics of the gods = PYTHAGORAS...Nothing is more fluid than language = R.L.SWIHART

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

From A Drinking Buddy Of Scott & Zelda


The poet who wrote
In the room
Women come and go
Talking of Michaelangelo
won the Nobel Prize in 1948 when he was sixty years old.
Two years later, T.S. Eliot had this to say:






The years between fifty and seventy are the hardest. You are always being asked to do things and yet are not decrepit enough to turn them down.








The verse is from The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock. The red ink above links to the text of the poem. For a virtual video of T.S. Eliot reciting Prufrock, click here.



Bloger's Note
The age quote appears on this day in A Book of Days for the Literary Year

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