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People have separated from each other with walls of concrete that blocked the roads to connection and love. and Nature has been defeated in the name of development.
Yasunari Kawabata
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Yasunari Kawabata
Age: 72 †
Born: 1899
Born: June 11
Died: 1972
Died: April 16
Novelist
Poet
Screenwriter
Writer
Ōsaka
Nature
Concrete
Love
Walls
Connection
People
Connections
Development
Blocked
Wall
Separated
Name
Roads
Names
Defeated
More quotes by Yasunari Kawabata
And I can't complain. After all, only women are able really to love.
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From the way of Go the beauty of Japan and the Orient had fled. Everything had become science and regulation.
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The snow on the distant mountains was soft and creamy, as if veiled in a faint smoke.
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They were words that came out of nothing, but they seemed to him somehow significant. He muttered them over again.
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The road was frozen. The village lay quiet under the cold sky. Komako hitched up the skirt of her kimono and tucked it into her obi. The moon shone like a blade frozen in blue ice.
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The winter moon becomes a companion, the heart of the priest, sunk in meditation upon religion and philosophy, there in the mountain hall, is engaged in a delicate interplay and exchange with the moon and it is this of which the poet sings.
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But a haiku by Buson came into his mind: 'I try to forget this senile love a chilly autumn shower.' The gloom only grew denser.
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Lunatics have no age. If we were crazy, you and I, we might be a great deal younger.
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Put your soul in the palm of my hand for me to look at, like a crystal jewel. I'll sketch it in words.
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A child walked by, rolling a metal hoop that made a sound of autumn.
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The true joy of a moonlit night is something we no longer understand. Only the men of old, when there were no lights, could understand the true joy of a moonlit night.
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Does pain go away and leave no trace, then?’ ‘You sometimes even feel sentimental for it.
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Seeing the moon, he becomes the moon, the moon seen by him becomes him. He sinks into nature, becomes one with nature. The light of the clear heart of the priest, seated in the meditation hall in the darkness before the dawn, becomes for the dawn moon its own light.
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Our language is primarily for expressing human goodness and beauty.
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A poetess who had died young of cancer had said in one of her poems that for her, on sleepless nights, 'the night offers toads and black dogs and corpses of the drowned.
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I wonder what the retirement age is in the novel business. The day you die.
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Because you cannot see him, God is everywhere.
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Maybe vagueness has been good for me. The word means two different things in Tokyo and Osaka, you know. In Tokyo it means stupidity, but in Osaka they talk about vagueness in a painting and in a game of Go.
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Now, even more than the evening before, he could think of no one with whom to compare her. She had become absolute, beyond comparison. She had become decision and fate.
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The labor into which a heart has poured its whole love--where will it have its say, to excite and inspire, and when?
Yasunari Kawabata