Date: April 1955
"'The something gloom,' she declaimed triumphantly, 'Of my soul's irremediable tomb.'"
preview | full record— Huxley, Aldous (1894-1963)
Date: 1956
"All the old people I know have had their minds locked up like grey, scaly oysters since they were in their teens."
preview | full record— Durrell, Gerald (1925-1995)
Date: September, 1956
Je veux saisir les choses avec l'esprit comme le pénis est saisi par le vagin. [I want to grasp things with the mind the way the penis is grasped by the vagina.]
preview | full record— Duchamp, Marcel (1887-1968)
Date: 1957
"This direction, of course, is towards the delineation of the domestic life and the private experience of the characters who belong to it: the two go together--we get inside their minds as well as inside their houses."
preview | full record— Watt, Ian (1917-1999)
Date: 1958
"I believe it was your colleague Hospers who proposed this useful figure: that whereas both thoughts and words have meaning, just as both the sun and moon send light to us, the meaning of the words is related to the meaning of the thoughts just as the light of the moon is related to that of the s...
preview | full record— Chisholm, Roderick (1916-1999)
Date: 1958
"Consciousness is like a bottomless lake in which ideas are suspended at different depths."
preview | full record— Peirce, Charles Sanders (1839-1914)
Date: Jan. 9, 1958
"This in haste to get something off my muckheap of a mind."
preview | full record— Beckett, Samuel (1096-1989)
Date: 1955, 1958
"It [the title of this book] is used out of context but expresses the way I felt about these poems when I wrote them---as if they were, taken together, a kind of Coney Island of the mind, a kind of circus of the soul."
preview | full record— Ferlinghetti, Lawrence. (b. 1919)
Date: 1955, 1958
"It will be dark out there / with the Salvation Army Band. / And the mind its own illumination."
preview | full record— Ferlinghetti, Lawrence. (b. 1919)
Date: 1958
"Such hectic extremes of gloom and gaiety are, indeed, characteristic of the manic-depressive, as with poor Crabbe's wife; in such persons the superego sits, as it were, like a great baleful cat, while the poor little cowed mouse of an ego creeps about with its tail between its legs; but at inter...
preview | full record— Lucas, F. L. (1894-1967)