bookmate game
Lia Purpura

All the Fierce Tethers

Notify me when the book’s added
To read this book, upload an EPUB or FB2 file to Bookmate. How do I upload a book?
  • Ivana Melgozahas quoted3 years ago
    And going down to the hardware store, I was thinking how much I really liked that—just walking, being in the sun, alone. Just being in the sun alone. You know? How nice that is? How you can feel that’s the whole reason to live. And it’s enough.
  • Ivana Melgozahas quoted3 years ago
    How accustomed I am to being emplaced. To fashioning a place in words.
  • Ivana Melgozahas quoted3 years ago
    The crape myrtle was, as he says of his tree, “no play of my imagination, no aspect of a mood”—and then, yes, “it confronts me bodily.” Certain modes of apprehending, seeing, or contemplating (the taxonomizing of forms, for example), aren’t wrong, Buber says—just not necessary, in order to be in relation to a tree.
  • Ivana Melgozahas quoted3 years ago
    In the steepness, I was unshimmed, root-cut, all pith. The tree sealed itself up with—what? Solitude? A presence so insistently here, it was ungrazed, unsnared, stripped clean
  • Ivana Melgozahas quoted3 years ago
    Just, there it was.

    And what filled that very long moment unfolding?
  • Ivana Melgozahas quoted3 years ago
    a letter’s a space where presence extends.
  • Ivana Melgozahas quoted3 years ago
    What’s the word for an elegy that mourns a thing it never knew?

    My tallow candle, its buttery crackle.
  • Ivana Melgozahas quoted3 years ago
    Cooking was then, for the most part, no longer a poetic, but merely a chemic process. It will soon be forgotten, in these days of stoves, that we used to roast potatoes in the ashes, after the Indian fashion. The stove not only took up room … but it concealed the fire, and I felt as if I had lost a companion.”

    Thoreau

  • Ivana Melgozahas quoted3 years ago
    It’s always been the habit of conquering imaginations to call a place empty, and build there.
  • Ivana Melgozahas quoted3 years ago
    Spots that look bare at first—stretch of back, upper arm—are, if you slow your looking way down, sites of endless microscenes: angles thrown by sudden flexing, shadows cast by turning and bending, folds lit by sweat, outcrops catching wind.
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)