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Ken Kesey

Read through the most famous quotes from Ken Kesey




Loved. You can't use it in the past tense. Death does not stop that love at all.


— Ken Kesey


#does #in the past #love #loved #past

Nowhere else in history has there ever been a flag that stands for the right to burn itself. This is the fractal of our flag. It stands for the right to destroy itself.


— Ken Kesey


#burn #destroy #else #ever #flag

The '60s aren't over; they won't be over until the Fat Lady gets high.


— Ken Kesey


#gets #high #lady #over #until

The frontiers we broke into in the '60s are still largely unexplored.


— Ken Kesey


#frontiers #into #largely #still #unexplored

The fundamentalists have taken the fun out of the mental.


— Ken Kesey


#fundamentalists #mental #out #taken

The Haight is just a place; the '60s was a spirit.


— Ken Kesey


#place #spirit

When Shakespeare was writing, he wasn't writing for stuff to lie on the page; it was supposed to get up and move around.


— Ken Kesey


#get #lie #move #page #shakespeare

Allen Ginsberg is a tremendous warrior as time goes by. He's a warrior first and a poet second.


— Ken Kesey


#first #ginsberg #goes #poet #second






About Ken Kesey

Ken Kesey Quotes




Did you know about Ken Kesey?

Experimentation with psychoactive drugs
At the instigation of Perry Lane neighbor and Stanford psychology graduate student Vik Lovell (heretofore acquainted with Richard Alpert and Allen Ginsberg) Kesey volunteered to take part in a CIA-financed study under the aegis of Project MKULTRA at the Menlo Park Veterans Hospital where he worked as a night aide. In 1997 health problems began to take their toll starting with a stroke that year. as a threat to civilization and intellectualism and sobriety" and rejected Kesey's Stegner Fellowship applications for the 1959-60 and 1960-61 terms.

: /ˈkiːziː/; September 17 1935 – November 10 2001) was an American author best known for his novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1962) and as a counter-cultural figure who considered himself a link between the Beat Generation of the 1950s and the hippies of the 1960s. Kenneth Elton "Ken" Kesey (pron.

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