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Almost all of our relationships begin and most of them continue as forms of mutual exploitation, a mental or physical barter, to be terminated when one or both parties run out of goods.
W. H. Auden
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W. H. Auden
Age: 66 †
Born: 1907
Born: February 21
Died: 1973
Died: September 28
Author
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Essayist
Librettist
Literary Critic
Literary Historian
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Poet
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University Teacher
Writer
Jórvík
Wystan Hugh Auden
Wystan Auden
Wystan H Auden
W. H. Wystan Hugh Auden
Party
Forms
Terminated
Running
Relation
Barter
Money
Continue
Exploitation
Form
Physical
Parties
Love
Begin
Mutual
Couple
Goods
Relationship
Relationships
Almost
Mental
Bartering
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You will be a poet because you will always be humiliated.
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What the poet says has never been said before, but, once he has said it, his readers recognize its validity for themselves.
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One can only blaspheme if one believes.
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The commonest ivory tower is that of the average man, the state of passivity towards experience.
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Had Greek civilization never existed ... we would never have become fully conscious.
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Learn from your dreams what you lack.
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All I have is a voice to undo the folded lie, the romantic lie in the brain of the sensual man-in-the-street and the lie of Authority whose buildings grope the sky: There is no such thing as the State and no one exists alone Hunger allows no choice to the citizen or the police We must love one another or die.
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Dance, dance, dance till you drop.
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Every American poet feels that the whole responsibility for contemporary poetry has fallen upon his shoulders, that he is a literary aristocracy of one.
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You need not see what someone is doing to know if it is his vocation, you have only to watch his eyes: a cook mixing a sauce, a surgeon making a primary incision, a clerk completing a bill of lading wear the same rapt expression, forgetting themselves in a function. How beautiful it is, that eye-on-the-obje ct look.
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Adjectives are the potbelly of poetry.
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Those to whom evil is doneDo evil in return.
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Language is the mother, not the handmaiden, of thought words will tell you things you never thought or felt before.
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Most people enjoy the sight of their own handwriting as they enjoy the smell of their own farts.
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No hero is mortal till he dies.
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Like everything which is not the involuntary result of fleeting emotion but the creation of time and will, any marriage, happy or unhappy, is infinitely more interesting than any romance, however passionate.
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Life is a picnic on a precipice.
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There is a great deal of difference in believing something still, and believing it again.
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A poor American feels guilty at being poor, but less guilty than an American rentier who has inherited wealth but is doing nothingto increase it what can the latter do but take to drink and psychoanalysis?
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Art is born of humiliation.
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