If a book has anything to say, it burns with a quiet laugh, because any book worth its salt points up and out of itself.
BOHUMIL HRABALOr I sip it like a liqeur until the thought dissolves in me like alcohol, infusing brain and heart and coursing on through the veins to the root of each blood vessel.
More Bohumil Hrabal Quotes
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No book worth its salt is meant to put you to sleep, it’s meant to make you jump out of your bed in your underwear and run and beat the author’s brains out.
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To spend our days betting on three-legged horses with beautiful names
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Because real thoughts come from outside and travel with us like the noodle soup we take to work; in other words, inquisitors burn books in vain.
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Because when I read, I don’t really read; I pop a beautiful sentence into my mouth and suck it like a fruit drop.
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I expect them to tell me things about myself I don’t know.
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He was a gentle and sensitive soul, and therefore had a short temper, which is why he went straight after everything with an ax.
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Lost in my dreams, I somehow cross at the traffic signals, bumping into street lamps or people, yet moving onward, exuding fumes of beer and grime, yet smiling, because my briefcase is full of books and that very night I expect them to tell me things about myself I don’t know.
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It’s interesting how young poets think of death while old fogies think of girls.
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All streets, all squares, and all the people walking through them; I even had the feeling that I was a handsome young man.
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I pop a beautiful sentence into my mouth and suck it like a fruit drop.
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Or I sip it like a liqeur until the thought dissolves in me like alcohol, infusing brain and heart and coursing on through the veins to the root of each blood vessel.
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And so everything I see in this world, it all moves backward and forward at the same time, like a black-smith’s bellows, like everything in my press, turning into its opposite at the command of the red and green buttons, and that’s what makes the world go round.
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As I helped him up, I felt him shake all over, so I asked him to forgive me, without knowing what for, but that was my lot, asking forgiveness.
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I even asked forgiveness of myself for being what I was, what it was my nature to be.
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Today’s Gypsies, who have lived in Prague for only two generations, light a ritual fire wherever they work, a nomads’ fire crackling only for the joy of it, a blaze of roughhewn wood like a child’s laugh.
BOHUMIL HRABAL