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#looms

Read through the most famous quotes by topic #looms




When the flower blooms, the bees come uninvited.


Ramakrishna


#blooms #come #flower #uninvited

The Rose is without an explanation; She blooms, because She blooms.


Angelus Silesius


#blooms #explanation #rose #she #without

The 'swapping' is interesting. This practice one had thought confined to certain earnest Americans in the smaller, more tedious cities, to those wives and husbands who had read sex manuals and radically wanted more of life even if it had to be, like pizza, brought in from around the corner--all of this was accomplished by Bloomsbury in the lightest, most spontaneous and good-natured manner.


Elizabeth Hardwick


#virginia-woof #writing #life

Life comes before literature, as the material always comes before the work. The hills are full of marble before the world blooms with statues.


Phillips Brooks


#before #blooms #comes #full #hills

Though there is growing division among the Ukrainian military ranks as to loyalty in this revolution, the possibility of violence looms over the entire situation.


Bob Schaffer


#division #entire #growing #looms #loyalty

I think it's one of the main negative emotional ingredients that fuels show business, because there's so much at stake and the fear of failure looms large.


Garry Shandling


#business #emotional #failure #fear #fuels

The Bloomsbury Group has been characterised as a liberal, pacifist, and at times libertine, intellectual enclave of Cambridge-based privilege. The Cambridge men of the group (Bell, Forster, Fry, Keynes, Strachey, Sydney-Turner) were members of the elite and secret society of Cambridge Apostles. Woolf’s aesthetic understanding, and broader philosophy, were in part shaped by, and at first primarily interpreted in terms of, (male) Bloomsbury’s dominant aesthetic and philosophical preoccupations, rooted in the work of G. E. Moore (a central influence on the Apostles), and culminating in Fry’s and Clive Bell’s differing brands of pioneering aesthetic formalism. ‘The main things which Moore instilled deep into our minds and characters,’ Leonard Woolf recalls, ‘were his peculiar passion for truth, for clarity and common sense, and a passionate belief in certain values.’ Increasing awareness of Woolf’s feminism, however, and of the influence on her work of other women artists, writers and thinkers has meant that these Moorean and male points of reference, though of importance, are no longer considered adequate in approaching Woolf’s work, and her intellectual development under the tutelage of women, together with her involvement with feminist thinkers and activists, is also now acknowledged.


Jane Goldman


#cambridge #literary-criticism #men






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