What did Hilda Doolittle mean by: The things I have are nameless, old and true; they may not be named; few may live and know. - Hilda Doolittle Copy
+ No one knows, the heart of a child, how it grows until it is too late. Feraz Zeid, January 17, 2024January 17, 2024, Hilda Doolittle, Children, Heart, Knowledge, 0 - Hilda Doolittle
+ Love is a garment riven in the light that rises from Parnassus, showing the night is over. Feraz Zeid, January 17, 2024January 17, 2024, Hilda Doolittle, Light, Love, Night, 0 - Hilda Doolittle
+ You are wind in a stark tree, you are the stark tree unbent, you are a strung bow, you are an arrow. Feraz Zeid, January 17, 2024January 17, 2024, Hilda Doolittle, Arrows, Dancing, Wind, 0 - Hilda Doolittle
+ You will not see that desire begets love, until it all flames into one concise and metallic blaze. Feraz Zeid, January 17, 2024January 17, 2024, Hilda Doolittle, Desire, Flames, 0 - Hilda Doolittle
+ O happy, happy each man whom predestined fate leads to the holy rite of hill and mountain worship. Feraz Zeid, January 17, 2024January 17, 2024, Hilda Doolittle, Fate, Mountain, 0 - Hilda Doolittle
+ We don’t have to know,only to be:let go the jumble of worn words,reason and vanity. Feraz Zeid, January 17, 2024January 17, 2024, Hilda Doolittle, Letting go, Vanity, 0 - Hilda Doolittle
+ The elixir of life, the philosopher’s stone is yours if you surrender sterile logic, trivial reason. Feraz Zeid, January 17, 2024January 17, 2024, Hilda Doolittle, Faith, Magic, Stones, 0 - Hilda Doolittle
+ I spit honey out of my mouth: nothing is second-best after the sweet of Eros. Feraz Zeid, January 17, 2024January 17, 2024, Hilda Doolittle, Love, Mouths, Sweet, 0 - Hilda Doolittle
Women, in general, are not attracted to art at all, nor knowledge, and not at all to genius. Explain - Jean-Jacques Rousseau Philosopher · Switzerland
Let fools the studious despise, There’s nothing lost by being wise. - Jean de La Fontaine Poet · France
Example is a dangerous lure: where the wasp got through the gnat sticks fast. - Jean de La Fontaine Poet · France
The color of the object illuminated partakes of the color of that which illuminates it. Explain - Leonardo da Vinci Painter · Italy
Cunning is the art of concealing our own defects, and discovering other people’s weaknesses. - William Hazlitt Essayist · England
It is sometimes important for science to know how to forget the things she is surest of. - Jean Rostand Biologist · France
Omniscience … is an excellent quality in God, but suspect in everyone else. - Jennifer Lee Carrell Author
a time has come in our history when what is known has little connection with what is done. - Jennifer Stone Actress · USA